The Sunday Post (Inverness)

BRAVE GRAN HELPS SNARE ARE £ 50,000 SWINDLERR

‘My evidence damned serial crook... but I forgive her’

- By Charlotte Thomson

A GRAN helped lock up a woman who robbed pensioners of their savings in a callous crimewave. Defiant Irene Lofthus, 79, insisted on facing conwoman Cheryl Mitchell in court.

The 35- yeyear- old was jailed for five years for scamming vulnerable OAPs out of more than £50,000.

Her oldest victim was 102.

Brave Irene has since forgiven the woman who stole £ 2500 from her to pay for foreign holidays.

She said of her fight for justice: “I didn’t want anyone else to be hurt.” A senior detective praised the “courage and dignity” of Irene and other victims.

A BRAVE grandmothe­r helpedelpe­d police catch a cruel crook who conned vulnerable pensioners­rs out of more than £50,000 – and then FORGAVE her.

Heartless Cheryl Mitchell, 35, of Aberdeen, targeted her elderly victimscti­ms by pretending to be a council andd util-utility company worker when she turnedurne­d up on the doorstep of their homes.s.

Many of the old age pensioners­rs she took cash off were living in care homes and sheltered housing accommoda-modation in the west end of Aberdeen. The oldest victim was 102 yearss old. Mitchell stole their bank detailss then spent the cash on high value car rent-rentals, mobile phone top- ups and luxuryuxur­y family holidays abroad.

She even hatched elaborate plansans to con her elderly neighbours, takingakin­g advantage of one woman – Irene Lofthus – who had confided inn her about the health of her 79- year-ar- old husband who was expected to diee after suffering a major stroke.

But it was Mrs Lofthus – who’s’s for-forgiven the woman who stole from herher – who played a key role in catchingng the conwoman.

She said: “I forgive her, but to forgetrget is difficult.”

The 79-year-old was living two doors down the street from Mitchell when her bank card details were taken last August.

But Mrs Lofthus only realised she had been duped out of £2538 when she noticed transactio­ns had been made on herr account for airport parking andnd hotel bookings in Amsterdam andnd Tenerife.

Police were called in to investigat­egate and the mother- of- three was deter-etermined to help the investigat­ing offic-fficers catch the woman responsibl­eble for the crimes to protect otherher pensioners.

She recalled how Mitchellll turned up on her doorstep with a fabricated story to gain access to her home a few days after introducin­g herself while passing.

“I had welcomed her to the street and told her about my husband who at that stage we had been told probably wouldn’t reach his 80th birthday which was August 4.”

Mrs Lofthus told Mitchell she was struggling to get access too Cyril’s bank account because therere was no power of attorney in place.e.

She was surprised to find her newew neighbour on her doorstep a fewew days later asking for advice, with claims that her own grandfathe­rr was in hospital after collapsing from a simi-similar stroke.

The grandmothe­r- of- four said:said: “That’s when the tears came. I helpedelpe­d her into the house and I told her to sit downdo and that I would make her a cup o of coffee.”

When Mrs Lofthus left the living room, Mitchell took a note of the pensioner’s personal financial details. She said: “She obviously had a mo mobile phone somewhere to take photog tographs. Within half an hour she had boo booked holidays, hotels and car hire.”

ButB the piece of paper with Mitchell’s handwritin­ghan on it would prove to be a vita vital piece of evidence that helped convictvic the conwoman who went on a spe spending spree with all the cash obt obtained through fraudulent schemes in 2016. in2M

Mrs Lofthus, a retired law office worker,wo initially hid the fact she had beenbee a victim of crime from her family

because she did not want them to worry — and did not let them know she would be appearing as a witness in court.

She said: “For months I couldn’t tell anyone, I had to suffer it all alone. It was upsetting. Then my daughter answered the phone one day while she was here: it was the police for me.

“I had to take the call and she sat with the door open and heard everything.

“They wanted a doctor to say that me taking the stand would be really too much for me but I said to the police that I was the person who had things in writing so I wanted to do this.

“So right up until about two days before the trial my family didn’t even know I was going to court.”

The pensioner, who said she was now more wary of strangers and had taken extra security measures in her home, said it was important that she gave evidence.

She said: “I decided that if I didn’t take the stand she would get off with it. I knew my evidence damned her.

“I wanted her to be on the front page so that when she got out of jail she wouldn’t be able to do it again.

“I did it to protect as many people as I could because I knew how convincing she was with me. “I didn’t want anyone else to be hurt. “It has not been an easy time.” Mrs Lofthus was fortunate to find that her bank refunded the missing money but it is not known if all the other victims were reimbursed.

Mitchell was found guilty of 13 fraud charges committed against pensioners following a three-week trial at Aberdeen Sheriff Court.

The jury took less than an hour to find her unanimousl­y guilty of the crimes as well as claiming more than £60,000 of benefits she was not entitled to. She was jailed for five years last week. Sheriff Alison Stirling told Mitchell, who previously served a nine- month jail sentence in 2015 after carrying out a £ 10,000 benefit fraud, that the evidence against her was “overwhelmi­ng”.

She said: “You forced elderly and frail victims to come and give evidence, some of them had to be helped into the witness box.

“A lengthy custodial sentence is appropriat­e.”

Police involved in investigat­ing the case also praised the effort of the pensioners who helped convict the fraudster.

Detective Inspector Lorna Ferguson said: “I would like to commend these individual­s.

“I would also like to acknowledg­e the courage and dignity they displayed when giving evidence.

“I hope this conviction gives them some comfort knowing she will not be at liberty to target and exploit others.”

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 ??  ?? From left, the road where Mrs Lofthus and Mitchell lived, Mrs Lofthus with her husband Cyril, and Mitchell arriving at court.
From left, the road where Mrs Lofthus and Mitchell lived, Mrs Lofthus with her husband Cyril, and Mitchell arriving at court.
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