The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Serial fraudster conned friend out of thousands with Clinton show lies

- BY JOANNE WARNOCK

Aserial fraudster has been convicted of scamming her friend into handing over tens of thousands of pounds by pretending to make a documentar­y about Hillary Clinton.

Anne Mulloy, also known as Anne Leuser, sat unmoved as the jury returned a unanimous guilty verdict at Peterhead Sheriff Court yesterday.

The Press and Journal can now reveal that the 61-year-old, of Fraserburg­h, was jailed in November 2017 after admitting a similar scam involving a London TV production company, who also believed her lies about the nonexisten­t Clinton project.

In that case, she even paid an actress £5,000 to impersonat­e a member of the former US first lady’s communicat­ions team in order to convince a British filmmaker that she was legitimate.

Mulloy, who used her Leuser surname back then, was jailed for three years and eight months at Southwark Crown Court.

This week’s case in Peterhead has many similariti­es with the earlier fraud trial.

The jury heard evidence from former friend Helena Robertson, who told how she sent Mulloy thousands of pounds between 2011 and 2017, and kept a running total of the loans on a spreadshee­t.

During her evidence, one of these totals was shown to the court and displayed a figure of £114,026.30, dated April 1 2016.

Ms Robinson continued to send Mulloy money until April 2017, so the final figure could be even higher.

The original charge claimed Mulloy had swindled her friend out of £85,710.02, but that figure was amended to “money”.

In his closing speech, fiscal depute Ruaridh McAllister urged the jury

to convict “calculatin­g” Mulloy. He said: “The evidence shows she is simply a cynical fraudster taking advantage of a caring friend. She told lies and fabricatio­ns.”

Mr McAllister also spoke of fake court cases involving Aberdeensh­ire Council that Mulloy had fabricated as a way to put off paying her friend back.

He added: “It was just lies to scam more money from Helena.”

Jordanna Blockley, Mulloy’s defence counsel, told the jurors that Ms Robinson should not be found credible because she was an “establishe­d actress” and suggested they had not been told the “truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth”.

However, the jury of six women and eight men took

just one hour to find Mulloy unanimousl­y guilty of fraud.

Mulloy claimed she knew Hillary Clinton and would be getting behind-thescenes access to her 2016 presidenti­al campaign and team – even faking an access letter from Mrs Clinton to back up her lies.

A member of Mrs Clinton’s team told the court that no one had ever heard of Anne Leuser or Mulloy and no such access had been granted.

In sometimes tearful evidence, Ms Robinson explained she thought she was loaning her friend cash to pay for a flat in London, living expenses and travel costs for business meetings with commission­ing editors at BBC Scotland in Glasgow.

After the guilty verdict

was returned, the jury was told Mulloy was previously found guilty of embezzleme­nt in 2014 at Peterhead Sheriff Court.

And she was jailed in November 2017 after admitting using a ringer to impersonat­e a member of Mrs Clinton’s campaign team to swindle British filmmaker Alison Birley.

She negotiated and signed a contract with the producer, claiming she could offer behind-thescenes access to the Democrat candidate’s election drive in exchange for £120,000.

The deal, including four payments of £30,000, dishonestl­y stated that she personally knew Mrs Clinton and other members of her staff.

Leuser also arranged a £3,434 all-expenses-paid

trip to New York as part of the scam, which was carried out between April 1 2016 and January 31 2017.

She subsequent­ly admitted she never had any type of relationsh­ip with Mrs Clinton, apart from a brief encounter at an event.

Ms Robinson reported her own scam at the hands of Mulloy after becoming aware of the 2017 case in London.

Before the jury returned its verdict, Mulloy delivered a foul-mouthed rebuke to The P&J’s photograph­er, saying: “I haven’t even been found guilty yet.”

Sheriff Craig Findlater said “all options” were open, including custody.

He deferred sentence for reports and ordered Mulloy, of Topping Gardens, Fraserburg­h, to return to court on May 20.

 ?? ?? SCAM: Anne Mulloy, top, faked a letter claiming to grant access to the presidenti­al campaign of Hillary Clinton, above.
SCAM: Anne Mulloy, top, faked a letter claiming to grant access to the presidenti­al campaign of Hillary Clinton, above.

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