Coventry Telegraph

City mum tried to open bank accounts with fake passport

- By PAUL BEARD & BEN ECCLESTON news@coventryte­legraph.net Tatiana Tehe leaves court

A CHURCH-GOING woman was to be paid £1,000 for using a forged passport and a utility bill to open as many accounts as possible in a false name at banks in Coventry.

But mother-of-two Tatiana Tehe escaped being jailed after pleading guilty at Warwick Crown Court to possessing a false identity document with improper intent and fraud.

Tehe, 27, of Pearson Avenue, Bell Green, Coventry, was sentenced to 12 months in prison suspended for two years.

She was also ordered to take part in a rehabilita­tion activity and 150 hours of unpaid work.

Prosecutor Madhu Rai said Tehe posed as a woman called Stephanie Williams when she went into the HSBC in Corporatio­n Street, Coventry, on February 16.

She asked to open personal and business accounts in the fake name, the court heard.

She was asked for identity documents and handed over a UK passport in the name of Stephanie Williams and a water utility bill in the same name.

But when a member of the bank staff checked the passport, she noticed the hologram on the identity page was not glowing, which made her suspect it was forged. So she informed the manager who contacted the police and Tehe was arrested. She was asked whether the passport was hers and whether Stephanie Williams was her name, and at first replied ‘yes’ – but after further enquiries, she was asked again and answered ‘no.’

And in her handbag were a number of documents relating to bank cards in other names, pointed out Miss Rai.

When she was interviewe­d, Tehe, who gave her nationalit­y in court as French, explained that she was desperate to get money so she could send it to her grandmothe­r.

She said the passport and bill had been given to her with instructio­ns to open as many bank accounts as she could with them, in return for which she was to be paid £1,000.

Sentencing Tehe, Judge Anthony Potter told her: “You intended to open a bank account using someone else’s identity in a bid to make money for other people.

“You provided not just a passport in the name of Stephanie Williams, but a utility bill to back up your applicatio­n not only for a personal account but also a business account.

“You knew the people who were asking you to do this were going to defraud people, to use it as a scam, and you were willing to assist them.

“Fortunatel­y the bank realised the passport was false, and there were other documents and other cards, apparently with a view to committing similar offences.”

The judge stated that Tehe had been in this country for eight years and had “lived a largely productive life and have involved yourself in the local church community and assisted others”.

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