The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Blairgowri­e accountant jailed over £1.4m theft and fraud spree

- KIM PILLING

APerthshir­e accountant who committed “industrial scale dishonesty” to fund an extravagan­t lifestyle has been jailed for 11 years and five months.

Stephen Day, 51, of Quiech Mill, Blairgowri­e, plundered more than £1 million from several companies, defrauded three NHS organisati­ons he secretly worked for at the same time, and targeted a female friend in a romance fraud despite being in separate relationsh­ips with two men.

The judge who sentenced him at Leeds Crown Court yesterday told him “there was no boundary of dishonesty that you were not prepared to cross” as he tried to evade detection at various points by falsely claiming he had cancer.

Day purchased several properties in Scotland, including a 45-acre estate which had its own salmon fishing area on the River Annan, and another developmen­t in South Africa to let out as a holiday rental, according to investigat­ing detectives.

His ill-gotten gains funded a taste for luxury holidays, expensive furniture, car accessorie­s and his love interests, neither of whom knew of the other, the court heard.

Day, who previously lived in Aberford, Leeds, used his status to be appointed as director, financial director and company secretary of four organisati­ons, including a care home provider for vulnerable people and the management company of the block of flats where he lived in Manchester city centre.

Once in place, he sought to empty their bank accounts into his own and hide the trail with false ledger accounts and documents.

After he took over the accounts at Asia House in Manchester, where he owned a flat, he faked a bank mandate which gave him unfettered access to money belonging to members of the residents’ associatio­n.

Another victim was Gloucester-based Avida Care, where he became the financial director and took on the responsibi­lity for payroll and support services. When he failed to attend meetings and provide financial informatio­n, he lied that his mother had died and he had been diagnosed with cancer.

Day also admitted fraud by misreprese­ntation as he failed to disclose to three NHS trusts that he was working full-time for them all at the same time on a combined daily £2,000 salary, on top of his other interests.

The defendant resorted to more lies as he struggled to meet all his commitment­s by again claiming he had cancer, had been involved in car crashes and was mourning the loss of his father, who had actually died nine years earlier.

His deception cost Merseyside Commission­ing Support Unit, South East Staffordsh­ire and Seisdon Peninsula Clinical Commission­ing Group and Cheshire and Wirral Partnershi­p Trust a total of about £88,000.

Judge Simon Batiste said his most cynical fraud was committed on a female friend who he had met again many years later through a profession­al networking site.

Day said he had been widowed two years earlier and went on to groom her as he concocted reasons to borrow more than £4,500 from her when his financial dealings caught up with him.

The judge said: “There was no boundary of dishonesty that you were not prepared to cross. The consequenc­es have been enormous both financiall­y and in other respects, including businesses losing viability and being wound up, people losing their jobs, reputation­al damage, loss of credit rating and people unable to sell their homes.

“In short, you have caused misery, hardship and anxiety to many.

“This was industrial scale dishonesty purely to fulfil your own greed.”

Day, who pled guilty to 12 counts of fraud and theft totalling nearly £1.4 million between 2012 and 2015 was also disqualifi­ed from being a director for nine years.

Detective Sergeant Stephen Donohue, from Greater Manchester Police’s specialist fraud investigat­ion team, said: “We will now look at a proceeds of crime hearing to try and recoup some of the funds he stole, to recompense his numerous victims.”

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 ??  ?? Stephen Day committed fraud to fund a lavish lifestyle.
Stephen Day committed fraud to fund a lavish lifestyle.

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