The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Ship’s captain blamed late wife’s gambling for £54,000 tax fraud

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A ship’s captain who conned the taxman out of £54,000 has blamed his late wife’s betting addiction problem for the offence.

Robert McCaffray, 58, told Perth Sheriff Court he was helping to fund her online gambling habit prior to her death last year. His lawyer said McCaffray had taken a lenient view of her spending addiction because of disability issues she was suffering from.

McCaffray was given six months to pay back £1,700 per month and sentence was deferred until September by Sheriff William Wood.

Solicitor Billy Rennie, defending, told the court yesterday: “This was his first offence. With his wife and how she was that has contribute­d to a man of his age coming to court in the first instance, having never troubled the courts in any other way.

“His wife had disabiliti­es and she passed away in October. She had a gambling addiction and he took a lenient view of that addiction because of her disabiliti­es.”

McCaffray defrauded the taxman over a seven-year period and the court was told he was spending hundreds of pounds per day online betting.

The court was told that McCaffray’s gambling was so bad that during some months every payment from his joint bank account was to a bookmaker.

McCaffray was employed as the skipper of a guard vessel patrolling internatio­nal waters when he was caught by a large-scale investigat­ion into tax evasion in the fishing industry.

McCaffray, of Newbigging Drive, Arbroath, admitted defrauding HM Revenue and Customs out of £54,000 between April 2008 and April 2015.

Mr Rennie said his client was still working in the same £50,000 per year job and was in a position to pay back the tax he had evaded within three years.

 ??  ?? Robert McCaffray, 58, defrauded the taxman over a seven-year period.
Robert McCaffray, 58, defrauded the taxman over a seven-year period.

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