Manchester Evening News

Fraudster stole £350k from NHS

- By ANDREW BARDSLEY newsdesk@men-news.co.uk @MENnewsdes­k

A MAN who scammed £350,000 from the NHS to fund his ‘lavish lifestyle’ has been jailed.

Phillip Hufton, 52, also pretended to have cancer and owned fake army medals while working at a hospital in Cambridges­hire.

He worked for the Cambridges­hire and Peterborou­gh NHS Foundation Trust (CPFT) for 17 months, but was fired after staff discovered his lies.

Hufton, from Stockport, created a fake email account to approve expenses of more than £13,000, and racked up a £9,000 bill for what he pretended was a work trip when he was actually in the US.

The lies continued on his CV, where he claimed to be a doctor and said he had a PhD, Cambridge Crown Court heard.

Hufton also lied about having cancer and took time off work for surgery that never happened. He claimed to have joined the army and saved ‘countless lives in the UN,’ buying fake medals off the internet.

Hufton was employed from September 2014 to January 2016 as a business developmen­t manager for the trust, based at Fulbourn Hospital. He was hired to promote the trust’s business in the Middle East.

When staff uncovered ‘several discrepanc­ies’ in his working time and expenses, internal investigat­ions were launched.

Hufton told the trust he was working in Amman, the capital of Jordan, in October 2015. He even emailed a colleague a picture of a refugee camp with the title ‘off to the office.’

But GPRS from his phone placed him in the US and the Caribbean at the time and further investigat­ions revealed the refugee camp image was taken on Google.

Hufton booked a stay at the Marriott Hotel in Cambridge and a flight to Doha for a four-day trip in December 2015. He was off work sick at the time and the unauthoris­ed booking cost the trust £2,837.

Hufton was sacked in January 2016 after more internal investigat­ions, and the trust then involved the police.

Most of the educationa­l claims on his CV, which said he had a PhD, a master’s and five other diplomas, were revealed to be false. He had only a Bachelor of Nursing degree, despite calling himself a doctor.

Hufton also claimed to be a member of a number of profession­al bodies, including the Royal Society of Medicine, but the membership­s were all found to have lapsed or been false.

Throughout his time working for the trust, the total sum of money gained by and paid to Hufton was £349,383.

He was arrested and admitted in a police interview that he had never paid any income or corporatio­n tax.

He said it was ‘very hard to remem- ber’ all the lies he had told, and said the deception began when he was living in a tent in Cambridge due to marital difficulti­es.

He admitted claims that he had been in the army were untrue and said he had bought his medals online. He had actually been an acting captain in the Territoria­l Army, the volunteer reserve force for the British Army.

Hufton, of Ack Lane West, Cheadle Hulme, told police a large amount of his adult life had been lived as a lie, and said he had ‘sort of expected’ a knock at the door. He said he had tied himself in knots and had built a coping mechanism to keep people at home happy.

At a previous court hearing, Hufton pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud by false representa­tion on the basis that the financial benefit to him was only £173,000 and not the full amount of £349,383. But Cambridge Crown Court considered the full loss in the case and on Thursday, Hufton was sentenced to five years in prison.

Judge Jonathan Cooper told Hufton during sentencing that the crimes had helped him fund a lavish lifestyle, and said the fraudster took steps to make it harder for his employer to report him.

 ??  ?? Phillip Hufton
Phillip Hufton

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