The Pak Banker

Crime agency under fire over bank signature forgery

- MUMBAI -AFP

The National Crime Agency is facing criticism for failing to investigat­e reports alleging that banks forged signatures and fabricated evidence in court actions to repossess homes. MPs urged the NCA a year ago to investigat­e the matter following a BBC News investigat­ion.

The NCA has received at least 19 boxes of evidence relating to 362 incidents. But anti-corruption campaigner­s and MPs say victims haven't been contacted and no investigat­ion has been started. The NCA says it is making a "thorough assessment" of the material submitted to determine whether a criminal investigat­ion was necessary.

"We are continuing to assess the material, including additional informatio­n supplied in May 2020," said an NCA spokesman. "Together with partners in the FCA and SFO, we are making a thorough assessment to determine whether there are grounds for a criminal or regulatory investigat­ion."

In July 2019, an investigat­ion by the BBC set out evidence of signature forgery on court documents used by banks and their representa­tives to repossess. Handwritin­g experts confirmed that in many cases sent to the NCA, signatures used over the same name could not have been signed by the same person; and that the same signature had been signed over different names.

MPs say the extensive documentat­ion submitted to the NCA supports allegation­s, denied by the banks, that evidence has been fabricated or concealed in court actions to recover personal and business debts. But anti-corruption campaigner­s say not a single complainan­t has been contacted by the NCA among hundreds of victims.

In one example, Anna Britton, 49, from

Portishead, was forced to sell her home and move back with her two daughters to her parents' two-bed flat after a dispute with a bank over business debts. The three had to share a room and were homeless for more than three years. Anna says the trauma led to her then-12year-old daughter becoming severely anorexic.

"We have been to hell and back. When I realised that I'd been put through that using a fabricated document, you think - you gave me 12 weeks to sell my house. You sold my furniture, you sold my clothes, you sold my children's teddies. You left us with one bag each of clothing. You've destroyed every hope and dream we had.

"I've watched my daughter being tube-fed. She was hospitalis­ed for three months, her heart rate was at 33, her sugar levels dangerousl­y low - we almost lost her. She's now 14 and still recovering from what she's been through."

As the bank pursued the business debts through the courts, it relied on a personal guarantee document which Anna says she never signed. Personal guarantees allow banks to pursue individual­s' personal assets, including their family homes, to repay debts owed by a business. No original was produced of the personal guarantee document. Instead the bank's lawyers produced what they said was a photocopy of the original document, showing a £47,000 personal guarantee dated 26 October 2012, appearing to bear her signature.

Ms Britton says the signature must have been photocopie­d and pasted on from other paperwork. The document was purportedl­y witnessed by her financial adviser.

However, after the judgment against her had been given, the financial adviser confirmed that he had stopped working for her by that date - and had flown to Spain on 21 October for a two-week holiday. Flight tickets proved that he could not have been present on the date the document was signed.

Like many defendants in bank disputes, Anna couldn't afford legal representa­tion and instead represente­d herself, eventually losing her case against the bank's highly-paid team of solicitors and barristers.

Since the Treasury committee's letter to the NCA last year, it has received 19 box files of documentar­y evidence accumulate­d by the Bank Signature Forgery Campaign to support customers' allegation­s, which they say amounts to serious, organised criminal activity which must be investigat­ed.

Yet campaigner­s say in the year since then, the NCA has failed to contact any of the victims to investigat­e their claims, ignoring calls to act from anti-corruption campaigner­s including Thames Valley Police and Crime Commission­er, Anthony Stansfeld.

 ?? ISLAMABAD
-APP ?? Ambassador designate of Pakistan to Afghanista­n, Mansoor A. Khan calls on Foreign Minister Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi at Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
ISLAMABAD -APP Ambassador designate of Pakistan to Afghanista­n, Mansoor A. Khan calls on Foreign Minister Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi at Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

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