East Kilbride News

Children’s worker is struck off over fraud

Greenhills mum fraudulent­ly claimed £59,000 in benefits

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Two brothers accused of assaulting another sibling in East Kilbride have had the charges against them dropped.

Michael Robertson, 48, a prisoner, and Ralph Robertson, 50, of Cypress Crescent in the town, were said to have attacked brother James in Cypress Crescent in October last year.

It was alleged they punched him repeatedly on the head and body, grabbed him and caused him to fall.

The attack was said to have continued with James’s head and body being kicked and stamped on repeatedly and his head being struck repeatedly against the ground.

The men allegedly threatened to kill their brother during the attack.

Michael Robertson was also accused of punching a fourth brother, Colin, on the head.

Both men had pleaded not guilty, with Michael Robertson claiming he acted in self-defence.

They were due to stand trial at Hamilton Sheriff Court, but the prosecutio­n asked for a delay as neither James nor Colin Robertson had been traced and cited as witnesses.

The request was opposed by solicitors acting for the accused and rejected by Sheriff Ray Small.

The prosecutio­n then said it would be taking no further action against the accused.

FRASER WILSON

A Greenhills woman convicted of fraud has been struck off as a carer by social services.

Tracey McHugh admitted pocketing £59,000 in benefits she was not entitled to between 2010 and 2017.

The 38-year-old claimed she was a single mother of twins when in fact her husband, who worked, lived at the family home at the time.

McHugh failed to declare her conviction to her employers or the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC).

The SSSC last month struck her off from their register citing an ‘impairment to practice’ and lack of ‘public confidence’ if she were to be kept on.

The decision stops McHugh – who worked as a practition­er in care of children services – from ever working as a carer again.

McHugh admitted fraudulent­ly claiming working tax credit and child tax credits at Hamilton Sheriff Court last November, claiming she was single.

In December 2018 she was sentenced to 300 hours unpaid work and was told it was “a direct alternativ­e to custody”.

At her SSSC disciplina­ry, McHugh was told: “You agreed to tell the SSSC as soon as reasonably practicabl­e about any event that could call into question your good character, including a charge.

“But you did not inform the SSSC of your charge or conviction, your emplyer did on December 7. Your husband was intermitte­ntly absent from home at the time, which had an adverse impact on you.

“But your behaviour was so serious that the mitigating circumstan­ces are not sufficient to mitigate public confidence concerns.

“In cases where there are concerns that relate to values and attitudina­l concenrs, those concerns are more difficult to remediate, and less weight should be attached to remedial action.

“Your behaviour would undermine public confidence in the profession if no action were taken. Your conviction is very serious which is evident from the sentence imposed.

“You are a member of a profession in which principles of honesty are at its core and your behaviour is incompatib­le with profession­al practice.”

The report stated that McHugh has since completed 260 hours of the 300 hours expects and was due to complete these six-months ahead of schedule.

It also stated that, as well as working as a volunteer in a charity shop, she has set up her own cleaning business.

However, this was not enough for the presenter of the report to consider a suspension order, which would last for two years.

This was called “punitive” in the report, which stated that a ‘removal order’ was appropriat­e.

It continued: “A removal order is the most serious sanction available and should only be applied where no other order would adequately protect the public.

“A removal order is where this case finds itself, in that your behaviour is fundamenta­lly incompatib­le with being a social service worker.”

 ??  ?? Removal order McHugh was removed from the Scottish Social Services Council register and will no longer be able to work in care
Removal order McHugh was removed from the Scottish Social Services Council register and will no longer be able to work in care

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