Accrington Observer

‘Trusted’ Co-Op worker stole £6,000 from shop’s tills

- JON MACPHERSON

A‘TRUSTED’ supermarke­t worker who stole over £6,000 from the tills over a sevenmonth period has been spared jail.

Sarah Louise Power had worked at the Co-Op store in Oswaldtwis­tle for over four years and had risen to the role of team leader and key holder for the premises.

However, a court heard how she abused her position by tampering with till transactio­ns between January and July.

A‘TRUSTED’ supermarke­t worker who stole over £6,000 from the tills over a seven-month period has avoided jail.

Sarah Louise Power had worked at the Co-Op store in Oswaldtwis­tle for over four years and had risen to the role of team leader and key holder for the premises.

However, a court heard how she abused her position by tampering with till transactio­ns between January and July this year and pocketed £6,035.08 in cash.

The mum-of-one, who is pregnant with her second child, told company investigat­ors and police that she was struggling financiall­y and had started taking small amounts from the till but it ‘spiralled out of control’.

Power, 27, of Whalley Road, Clayton-le-Moors, pleaded guilty to theft and was given a sixmonth jail sentence, suspended for 12 months, and ordered to pay £1,000 compensati­on in £50 payments over the next 12 months.

Stephen Parker, prosecutin­g, told the court that over her years of service to the supermarke­t she had achieved a position with a ‘high degree of trust’ and had access to the tills.

The court heard how through a ‘relatively simple method’ she tampered with transactio­ns and pocketed the cash.

Mr Parker said in January this year she started by stealing £8, before then taking around £400 in February, £500 in March, £930 in April, £1,800 in May, £1,700 in June and £600 in July.

The court heard how the till monies were ‘out of sync’ but the ‘accounting books were in order because of the way she operated the till’.

Mr Parker said it was ‘unclear how the offending came to light’ but suspicions were raised by staff when Power was away on holiday.

Co-Op bosses initially thought only £3,000 had been stolen, however it was revealed to be ‘rather more than that’, the court heard.

Power was interviewe­d by the supermarke­t inves- tigations team and ‘fully admitted the offences’.

She has since been dismissed from her job.

When she was interviewe­d by police she told officers that she no longer had the money and that ‘finances had been tight at home’.

Mr Parker told the court that she was ‘really struggling to manage her finances and keep herself in the black’ and took the money from the tills to ‘tide her over’.

He said that she started taking money in ‘ small amounts and it spiralled out of control’.

The court heard how Power had tried to secure employment in the care industry but was forced to leave the position after her conviction became public.

 ??  ?? Sarah-Louise Power
Sarah-Louise Power
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 ??  ?? Sarah Louise Power (inset) pleaded guilty to stealing over £6,000 from the Co-Op in Oswaldtwis­tle
Sarah Louise Power (inset) pleaded guilty to stealing over £6,000 from the Co-Op in Oswaldtwis­tle

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