The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Multi-million-pound fine for betting giant in wake of fraud case

William hill: Penalty over money laundering failings

- Paulmalik

Bookmaker William Hill has been fined £6.2 million for failing in its “social responsibi­lity” and tackling money laundering.

The company last year handed Dundee City Council £500,000 after IT fraudster Mark Conway stole more than £1 million from the public purse to fund his online gambling habit.

Despite the massive fine for multiple instances of failing to do so, William Hill insist they are committed to evaluating risk and protecting customers.

William Hill refused to answer any questions put to them by The Courier after a freedom of informatio­n investigat­ion revealed them as the company who had paid a “moral obligation” to the council following Conway’s fraud.

The Gambling Commission has now fined the company £6.2m following its own investigat­ion. The commission said that between November 2014 and August 2016 the bookmaker breached anti-money laundering and social responsibi­lity regulation­s.

It also found senior management failed to mitigate risks and to have sufficient staff to ensure that processes for adhering to the regulation­s were effective.

The failures also resulted in 10 customers being allowed to deposit large sums of money linked to criminal offences which saw gains for William Hill of more than £1.2 million.

Conway was only caught in March 2017, following a council investigat­ion.

The Gambling Commission said some of the issues it found included William Hill not adequately seeking informatio­n about the source of punters’ funds or establishi­ng whether they were problem gamblers.

Further examples of the bookmaker’s failures include one customer being allowed to deposit £654,000 over nine months without any source fund checks being carried out. The commission said the customer was employed within the accounts department of a business and earned around £30,000 a year.

William Hill CEO Philip Bowcock said: “William Hill has fully cooperated with the commission throughout this process, introducin­g new and improved policies and increased levels of resourcing.

“We have also committed to an independen­t process review and will work to implement any recommenda­tions that emerge from that review. We are fully committed to operating a sustainabl­e business that properly identifies risk and better protects customers.”

pamalik@thecourier.co.uk

 ??  ?? Brechin man Mark Conway fraudulent­ly took more than £1m from Dundee City Council to gamble with.
Brechin man Mark Conway fraudulent­ly took more than £1m from Dundee City Council to gamble with.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom