Kentish Express Ashford & District

Postman ‘stole from mail to see children’

Thief claimed his ex-partner kept asking for money

- By Paul Hooper

A thieving postman took cash from birthday cards because he was desperate to see his estranged children.

Darren Tredget, 32, claimed his expartner was putting pressure on him to stump up money – or he wouldn’t be able to visit the youngsters.

Now the former postman, who had lived in Ashford while working at the Folkestone sorting office, has escaped an immediate jail sentence after admitting the thefts.

His lawyer Phillip Rowley told Canterbury Crown Court how the mother of the children had left the “hardworkin­g postman”.

He then moved from Ashford to Folkestone and was living “socially isolated and alone” in a flat, where he received “repeated requests for money”.

Mr Rowley said: “His ex-partner made more and more demands for more money and made it clear that seeing his children was dependent on him satisfying these demands.”

Tredget, now of Anglers Drive, Sholden, Deal, admitted stealing £650 and an unknown number of gift vouchers as well as 237 postal packets and delaying the delivery of 654 and 3,305 door-to-door items of mainly junk mail between January 2013 and February this year.

Natalie McNamee, prosecutin­g, said during routine checks in January it was noticed that at Tredget’s station some greetings cards had not been dealt with properly and some were opened.

The Royal Mail placed Tredget under surveillan­ce and he was seen to put items into his jacket and walk to the toilets on several occasions.

Ms McNamee told the court test packets had been included and during one check only “two of four packets had been dealt with properly”.

After he was first quizzed by post office investigat­ors, when he admitted his thieving, another bag of mail was handed in containing another 232 Royal Mail packets of which 126 had been unopened by Tredget.

Mr Rowley said: “His behaviour arose from the deteriorat­ion of his long-term relationsh­ip after the lady in questioned formed a relationsh­ip with another individual and as a consequenc­e the defendant was no longer living with his children.”

The judge, Recorder John Freeman told Tredget, who now works as a kitchen porter at a golf club: “The Royal Mail and also the public expect the safe delivery of the mail and any theft by a postman is inevitably serious and must carry a prison sentence.”

But he suspended the eight month prison term for two years and ordered him to do 150 hours of unpaid work for the community and pay £1,360 in costs.

Tredget had admitted three theft charges and a fourth of illegally delaying the mail.

 ?? Picture: Gary Browne FM3315572 ?? Darren Tredget at Folkestone Magistrate­s Court
Picture: Gary Browne FM3315572 Darren Tredget at Folkestone Magistrate­s Court

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