South Wales Echo

POLICE OFFICER NICKED

COP JAILED FOR STEALING £29K OF SPORTS CLUB FUNDS AND CHARITY CASH

- PHILIP DEWEY Reporter philip.dewey@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A POLICE officer stole nearly £30,000 from sports clubs he ran for South Wales Police – including money for a charity fund set up by a dying colleague.

Former detective constable Justin Lott, 40, of Bridgend, pocketed thousands of pounds from the force’s triathlon club and athletics club funds over a period of four years.

The defendant’s wife Sharyn Lott, also a police officer, had also been accused of acquiring criminal property in relation to the theft but her not guilty plea was accepted by the CPS.

The couple, from Oaklands Road in Bridgend, were in charge of running sports and social clubs.

Justin Lott admitted stealing £9,439.25 from the South Wales Police Bridgend Triathlon Club between 2014 and 2016.

The officer also pleaded guilty to the theft of £10,542.95 from the South Wales Police Central Division Athletics Club fund over the same period. He also admitted stealing £9,280 from December 2011, making a total of £29,262.20.

A sentencing hearing at Newport Crown Court yesterday heard Lott was living “beyond his means” and is currently in debt to the tune of £325,000 despite his offending.

The defendant used his position as treasurer to transfer money from the athletics and triathlon club accounts to his own personal account with transactio­ns made shortly afterwards.

His offending came to light after his failure to deal with requests to replace a broken television at the Bridgend Bridewell police gym in 2016. He was served with a regulation notice of investigat­ion and later resigned from his position with South Wales Police before being officially dismissed by the force.

As well as paying for events, equipment, and training, the clubs’ membership money was used towards charities and good causes supported by the police.

Lott’s friend and colleague Mike Evans, a serving police officer, was diagnosed with a terminal brain tumour in 2016.

Prosecutor Robin Rouch told the court it was Mr Evans’ ambition to to raise money for Veindre Cancer Centre in Cardiff and the athletics club agreed to donate £500 to a JustGiving page set up for this purpose. The defendant transferre­d £500 to his own account and, although the charity received £500, this came from the triathlon club’s fund.

He was also responsibl­e for money donated by club members to the 2 Wish Upon a Star foundation but this money also failed to reach the charity it was intended for.

When Lott was arrested and interviewe­d by police he claimed that his actions had not been dishonest and he had no intention to prevent or deprive the organisati­ons of its money. He said it had been an oversight, a mistake, or had been earmarked for further expenditur­e. He later admitted three counts of theft.

Mr Evans died in May 2017 and in a victim personal statement his widow Louise Evans described how Lott’s dishonesty had affected her family.

She said after her husband had been hospitalis­ed in 2016 with the brain tumour, her daughter had set up a fundraisin­g page to assist with Mr Evans’ treatment.

He later met with Velindre and agreed to donate the money to them through his own charity “Heads up to brain tumours”, which in total raised £75,000.

Mrs Evans said: “When Justin Lott was congratula­ting my husband with the fundraisin­g he was stealing money from the charity. This makes me angry and upset because Mike was vulnerable at the time. We found out about the money six weeks prior to Mike’s death but I made the decision not to tell him about it.”

Defence barrister Jonathan Rees apologised on behalf of Lott to those affected by his offending including his former clubmates, colleagues, and the charities affected.

He said the defendant had found himself in debt and had every intention to “make good” the money he had taken but, as his mental health and financial circumstan­ces worsened, the “situation spiralled out of control” and he was unable to repay the money.

Sentencing, Judge Jeremy Jenkins said: “You are living well beyond your means and you resorted to stealing from others to partly fund it.

“This was systematic repeated dishonesty of the worst kind. Such conduct passes the custodial threshold and only an immediate custodial sentence can be justified – nothing else would be appropriat­e.”

Lott, who wore a short-sleeved white shirt and jeans, bowed his head as he was sentenced to a total of 16 months imprisonme­nt.

Speaking after the sentencing, Superinten­dent Esyr Jones from South Wales Police Profession­al Standards Department said: “We welcome today’s sentencing, which is a reflection of the gravity of Justin Lott’s actions.”

Mrs Evans said: “I found out about the fact that Justin hadn’t paid the donations to Velindre about six weeks prior to Mike’s death. We decided not to tell Mike as at this time he was gravely ill and to have told him would have devastated him because despite his illness and weakness the sense of what he had achieved had made him proud and to find out it wasn’t what he thought would have had a huge impact on his mental state.

“Justin was once a close friend and colleague of Mike and to find out the true extent of what has happened in this court case is devastatin­g. This has affected Mike’s legacy and what we were working towards.

“I feel betrayed, let down and humiliated. Charities are for good things to be said and not publically humiliated, which is what Justin has done.”

The case has been listed for mention under the Proceeds of Crime Act on October 15 with a full-day hearing scheduled on October 26.

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 ?? WALES NEWS SERVICE ?? Justin Lott
WALES NEWS SERVICE Justin Lott

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