The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Former Tayside fire chief facing fraud charge.

Stewart Edgar charged after lengthy probe into sale of vehicle

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The former area manager of Tayside Fire and Rescue has been charged with fraud.

Stewart Edgar has been charged almost two years after he quit his post as chief fire officer of Gloucester­shire following an investigat­ion into the sale of a brigade Land Rover.

Edgar, of Braehead Drive, Carnoustie, has been sent the charge in the post by Gloucester­shire Police after officers concluded a lengthy probe into the Land Rover Defender sale.

He has been told to appear before Cheltenham Magistrate­s on March 10.

The Land Rover at the centre of the case is said to have been worth £8,000 at the time of sale but was allegedly sold for only £500.

As chief fire officer Edgar was in charge of authorisin­g sales of brigade property.

A Gloucester­shire Police spokesman said yesterday: “The charge follows consultati­on with the Crown Prosecutio­n Service after an investigat­ion by Gloucester­shire Constabula­ry into the alleged sale of a Gloucester­shire Fire and Rescue Service Land Rover in April 2018.”

Subsequent to Edgar’s resignatio­n in 2018 Gloucester­shire County Council received a number of allegation­s from whistleblo­wers and carried out a widerangin­g financial and procedural check of the brigade.

Five recommenda­tions for the future management and scrutiny of the brigade were then drawn up by the council.

Edgar, who was being paid a salary of £147,000 at the time of his resignatio­n in June 2018, had been made an OBE earlier that year in recognitio­n of 27 years of public service.

The 52-year-old received the Queen’s Fire Service Medal at Buckingham Palace in 2013.

The honour is presented by the Queen to those members of the fire service who have exhibited conspicuou­s devotion to duty.

Edgar’s award was said to be in recognitio­n of his outstandin­g contributi­on to the fire service during a career which began as a retained firefighte­r in his home town of Carnoustie in 1991.

He became a full-time firefighte­r two years later and was described as “an extremely capable and dedicated officer” by chiefs at the time the medal was awarded.

A career highlight came in 2005 when he was the lead fire officer dealing with fire and rescue service planning for the G8 Summit of world leaders at Gleneagles.

He was promoted to area manager in Tayside three years later.

The avid Dundee United FC supporter was seconded to Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service as deputy chief fire officer in 2012, before being appointed interim leader.

He was the north service’s last chief officer before it was amalgamate­d into the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service.

During his time in the Highlands he steered an improvemen­t programme focused on firefighte­r and community safety following a critical Audit Scotland report

He was appointed Gloucester­shire fire chief in 2014.

His academic achievemen­ts include a master’s degree in business administra­tion and a post-graduate diploma in human resource management.

He is a chartered fellow of both the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Developmen­t and the Chartered Management Institute, a member of the Institute of Directors and a fellow of the Institutio­n of Fire Engineers.

The charge follows consultati­on with the Crown Prosecutio­n Service after an investigat­ion by Gloucester­shire Constabula­ry. POLICE SPOKESMAN

 ??  ?? Stewart Edgar of Carnoustie has been told to appear before Cheltenham Magistrate­s on March 10.
Stewart Edgar of Carnoustie has been told to appear before Cheltenham Magistrate­s on March 10.

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