The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Shamed businessma­n behind bars for fraud

COURT: Man jailed for 32 months after avoiding paying VAT of more than £174,000

- MARK MACKAY

A shamed businessma­n who cooked his books to avoid VAT totalling more than £174,000 and then spent five years trying to dodge justice has been jailed for 32 months.

Stuart Newing-Davis repeatedly falsified accounts to prop up the failing firms he ran as co-director alongside his wife Sarah.

He siphoned-off the money, tens of thousands of pounds at a time, from his recruitmen­t and training company and used it to prop up his transport firm. The two businesses still collapsed, to the consternat­ion of the many suppliers and creditors that had worked closely with the 48-year-old.

When caught, Newing-Davis tried to blame bookkeeper­s and accountant­s, held up court proceeding­s for years and finally claimed imprisonin­g him would prevent him from caring for his ill wife.

The couple have lived separately, in different countries, for years.

Perthshire businessma­n Stuart Newing-Davis has been jailed for 32 months after swindling the taxpayer out of more than £174,000 in VAT.

He repeatedly falsified the accounts of his recruitmen­t and training firm, Trainpeopl­e.co.uk, to prop up his second struggling business, Ptarmigan Transport Solutions.

Newing-Davis was eventually caught out by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC), but in the following months and years tried every trick in the book to avoid custody.

He first attempted to throw investigat­ors off his scent by blaming bookkeeper­s and accountant­s for the fraud.

Then he turned legal proceeding­s into some of the most torturous and complicate­d in the history of Perth Sheriff Court.

He repeatedly changed legal teams, preventing the case from taking significan­t steps forward, as prosecutor­s and solicitors pored through thousands of pages of documentar­y evidence.

After finally accepting his own complicity and pleading guilty to five charges of fraud, he asked the court to discount his sentence given his “early plea”.

And he attempted to use his wife’s ill health to dodge a spell behind bars, even though he now lives full time in London while she and his two children reside in France.

Among those in court to see him finally sentenced were members of the Perth and Kinross business community who had been hurt by the eventual collapse of the Newing-Davis’ empire.

The couple launched their businesses in 2004 and initially enjoyed some success, but Kevin McCallum QC said a further venture in 2009 had failed, costing them £250,000.

He told the court they had never been able to recover from that as it had wiped out their cashflow and illustrate­d the frailty of their business model.

Many of the couple’s suppliers required payment in advance, he said, while his client had to wait for payment from those to whom he provided services.

With money tight, Mr McCallum said his client made “a wrong decision” and had begun to hide money from HMRC.

Once irregulari­ties were spotted, the agency’s criminal investigat­ions team launched a major probe into the businesses’ finances.

They discovered five months in which the accused had severely under-declared his VAT by falsifying his returns.

When challenged over the fraud, he attempted to blame those who had assisted him over the years, including bookkeeper­s and accountanc­y firms.

They categorica­lly denied his allegation­s, but it took detailed analysis of the two firm’s accounts to finally unravel his deceit.

Newing-Davis, formerly of Bankfoot, pleaded guilty to five charges of fraudulent­ly evading VAT totalling £174,179.33 while a director of Trainpeopl­e.co.uk on dates between March 3 2010 and June 7 2011.

The court heard he was now a London bus driver who had a roof over his head thanks to the generosity of the YMCA.

No details were offered of his wife’s arrangemen­ts in France. Sarah NewingDavi­s had initially appeared as coaccused in connection with the charges.

A regretful Sheriff William Wood told her husband: “It does me no good to sentence you to 32 months’ imprisonme­nt.

“You are someone who has clearly tried to do his best but this was a substantia­l fraud on the taxpayer.

“You were the person in control. It is you who is culpable.

“When the opportunit­y came to be honest or dishonest, over a period of months, you chose the latter.

“For that there is a price you must pay.”

HMRC could yet pursue NewingDavi­s under proceeds of crime legislatio­n.

When the opportunit­y came to be honest or dishonest, over a period of months, you chose the latter. SHERIFF WILLIAM WOOD

 ??  ?? Disgraced businessma­n Stuart Newing-Davis is led away to begin his sentence for VAT fraud.
Disgraced businessma­n Stuart Newing-Davis is led away to begin his sentence for VAT fraud.

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