The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Fraudster will sell records to pay fine

Benefits cheat claimed £34,000 he was not entitled to

- KIRSTY MCINTOSH

A benefits cheat said he will pay a massive £18,000 fine by selling his record collection.

Alisdair Duff fraudulent­ly claimed £34,000 while working full-time for government quango Scottish Enterprise in Dundee.

The 51-year-old spent more than six years defrauding the benefits agency of the cash.

Perth Sheriff Court heard yesterday wheelchair­bound Duff, from Longforgan, would be unfit for prison and a fine was imposed instead.

His solicitor said: “He has a record collection he is starting to sell. He may be being optimistic but he thinks between £6,000 and £10,000. He has £3,614 in his current account. He is awaiting payment for items he has sold through Ebay amounting to £478.”

He said Duff’s pensioner parents, who paid back the stolen money, could help with the rest.

A benefits cheat who claimed more than £30,000 while working for a government agency has avoided jail by pledging to sell his record collection to pay a hefty fine.

Alisdair Duff from Longforgan narrowly dodged prison when a sheriff was told unpaid work was not a realistic option for the wheelchair-bound double amputee.

However his solicitor said he was “optimistic” the sale of his music collection could raise up to £10,000 towards a financial penalty.

Duff, 51, carried out the fraud over a period of six years – working full-time for Scottish Enterprise in Dundee while claiming incapacity and employment benefits. During that time he claimed £34,000 to which he was not entitled.

He had originally been accused of taking more than £50,000 over 10 years.

At Perth Sheriff Court, solicitor David Holmes, defending, said jailing Duff would pose difficulty for prison staff due to his care needs.

He said: “He is on 16 different medication­s. It is difficult to see what provision could be made in prison.”

Asking instead that a financial penalty be imposed, he added: “He has £3,614 in his current account. He is awaiting payment for items he has sold on eBay to the value of £478. He has a record collection he is starting to sell.

“He may be being optimistic but he thinks (it is worth) between £6,000 and £10,000.”

He said his client’s parents – aged 84 and 78 – had helped repay the stolen money and could contribute further funds to help pay a fine.

Sheriff Lindsay Foulis said the fraud was a “serious matter” but determined the 51-year-old was unsuitable for unpaid work and a curfew would not be sufficient punishment.

He said: “The guidelines indicate that for the amount which was dishonestl­y appropriat­ed and the period involved custody is appropriat­e.

“The obvious alternativ­e to custody is not really open to me – for obvious reasons unpaid work is not an option and a restrictio­n of liberty order in the circumstan­ces doesn’t cause him a punitive effect.”

He fined Duff £18,000.

Duff, of Wallace Place, admitted fraudulent­ly obtaining £34,000 from the Department of Work and Pensions between 1 January 2011 and 20 July 2017.

He admitted failing to tell the agency about a change in his circumstan­ces when he was claiming incapacity benefit and employment support allowance despite working full-time.

 ??  ?? Alisdair Duff will sell his record collection to pay his fine for cheating the benefits agency.
Alisdair Duff will sell his record collection to pay his fine for cheating the benefits agency.
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