Scottish Daily Mail

Grenfall fraudster is jailed for 21 months

But illegal immigrant could be freed in just weeks

- By Rebecca Camber

A CONMAN comforted by Prince Charles after pretending his family died in the Grenfell Tower fire has been jailed for 21 months.

Anh Nhu Nguyen was pictured shaking the Prince’s hand in the days after the disaster when he spun an elaborate web of lies, claiming his wife and son were killed in the June 14 blaze.

The Vietnamese illegal immigrant, 53, pocketed £11,270 from charities and Kensington and Chelsea Council as he was put up in hotels and given clothing and cash.

Survivors told of their disgust at the fraud yesterday and it emerged that Nguyen is likely to be released from prison before the one-year anniversar­y of the disaster.

He admitted two counts of fraud by false representa­tion and one of making an untrue statement for the purpose of obtaining a passport.

But, because he has been in custody since his arrest last June, he is likely to be released at the halfway point of his sentence, which means he will be freed in May.

He had told police he had lost sight of his wife and 12-year-old son in a smoke-clogged stairwell.

But after giving tearful TV inter views about his own escape and the horror of climbing over dead bodies, it emerged that he was a convicted fraudster with 17 aliases who lived 12 miles away in Beckenham, south-east London.

Police discovered he had 28 previous conviction­s for 56 offences spanning more than 30 years, including theft, dishonesty offences, arson and grievous bodily harm. Southwark Crown Court heard Nguyen, who has never held British citizenshi­p, even tried to apply for a new passport by claiming his was incinerate­d.

In the aftermath of the disaster, he was given a £249 room in the Hilton Hotel and the council gave him handouts of £5,360 and paid for a £1,940 stay in a Holiday Inn.

The Rugby Portobello Trust was swindled out of a mobile phone and two laptops while Turn2us gave him £1,500. Another charity, People’s Potential Possibilit­ies, parted with £1,000. He also accepted at least £1,000 worth of food, clothes and toiletries donated by strangers.

Police only discovered his lies when he gave several false addresses, including a flat that belonged to a real victim.

Sentencing him yesterday Judge Philip Bartle, QC, said: ‘Your actions have had a lasting impact on others who have been appalled that somebody should seek to benefit for their own situation when others have lost their lives in this terrible tragedy.’

Nguyen was described as having an ‘unusually low IQ’ but the judge said: ‘I am sure from everything I have seen and everything I have read that despite your low IQ you knew full well what you were doing.’

Nguyen may be one of several fraudsters who benefited from donations after Grenfell.

Councillor Kim Taylor-Smith, deputy leader of Kensington and Chelsea Council, said probes into similar frauds are under way.

 ??  ?? Sympathy: Nguyen meets Prince Charles after the fire
Sympathy: Nguyen meets Prince Charles after the fire

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