Rochdale Observer

Health boss jailed for scam was rehired by

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AN NHS manager who was locked up for a £1m con went back to work for the health service after being freed.

Deborah Hancox, 48, formerly of Marland, was jailed with her partner John Leigh, 58, for a sophistica­ted IT fraud which started in 2003.

The couple, set up bogus firms to sell goods to the NHS at inflated prices.

It was ‘a well-orchestrat­ed and meticulous­ly planned conspiracy,’ detectives later said.

When their scam was exposed after several years, they fled abroad for five more years but were hauled back to the UK to face justice.

The pair, who had both worked for the NHS, admitted fraud. Leigh was jailed for 44 months and Hancox was handed a two-year sentence at Manchester Crown Court in 2014.

But after her release, she went back to work for the NHS - leaving her new colleagues horrified when they learned the truth about her past. It is understood she was employed as an ‘effective use of resources officer’ after being taken on via a recruitmen­t agency.

A source told the Observer’s sister title The Mirror she was in the job for almost a year, using the surname Mohsin, before being rumbled. It is believed she was asked to leave last month.

She was one of 350 staff employed with Greater Manchester Shared Services (GMSS), which gives support and advice to clinical commission­ers across the region. It has offices in both Oldham and Salford.

The source said: “I am appalled that someone with Hancox’s history who served time in prison for stealing from the NHS could get a job at the NHS again through an agency.

“What she did was dis- gusting but the fact she’s managed to get back in is horrifying.”

Hancox, now of Middleton, refused to comment when The Mirror approached both her and Leigh outside her terraced home in Middleton last week.

As she clambered behind the wheel of her red BMW, she said: “I’m sorry, I’ve got to go”, before driving off, with Leigh in the passenger seat. In 2014 a court heard the couple pocketed £300,000 by supplying the NHS with goods at inflated prices.

Items were marked up by as much as 60 per cent and their firms turned over at least £1m.

They splashed out on a luxury Jaguar, a holiday cottage in the Lake District and an apartment in Dubai.

When the scam was discovered in 2008, they fled to northern Cyprus, which had no extraditio­n treaty with the UK, where they were able to evade justice. But they were arrested during a visit to the southern half of the island in 2013 and brought back.

Manchester crown court was told Leigh worked for the NHS in purchasing. He was responsibl­e for buying computers equipment department­s.

Hancox also worked as an NHS manager. They both worked for the former North West Strategic Health Authority.

The court heard how, after they fled the country, Hancox’s frail mother died and for office various of a heart attack on a plane destined for the island, where she had hoped to visit her thenfugiti­ve daughter.

Hancox skipped her mother’s funeral and remained at large until her arrest.

After they were sentenced in September 2014, Sgt Laura Walters, of Greater Manchester Police, said: “This couple were involved in a well-orchestrat­ed and meticulous­ly planned conspiracy to defraud the NHS out of hundreds of thousands of pounds. This was not a getrich-quick scheme.

“This was a sustained criminal enterprise stretching over seven years.

“Seven years is a long time to see the error of your ways, but these individual­s showed no remorse for their actions.”

Sgt Walters added at the time of sentencing: “It is

 ??  ?? John Leigh and Deborah Hancox leaving court after a proceeds of crime hearing in 2016
John Leigh and Deborah Hancox leaving court after a proceeds of crime hearing in 2016

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