The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

JUSTICE FOR MY AUNT BETTY

Shameless carer who stole over £40,000 from dying 78-year-old Niece who cracked the case on her own when police didn’t want to know

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

A WOMAN turned detective to expose a carer who stole thousands from the elderly after being “repeatedly fobbed off by the police”.

Disgusted Lynn Harrison discovered carer Margo Alongi drained more than £40,000 from her dying auntie Betty Lynch’s bank account.

She reported the matter to Police Scotland but claims she felt “virtually ignored” – despite a weight of evidence proving Alongi had stolen from Betty, 78, and another elderly gentleman.

Undeterred, Lynn investigat­ed the case herself, gathering evidence and even enlisting local MP George Kerevan to help, until she was taken seriously.

“I was fobbed off continuall­y by the police with excuses.

“Other more serious crimes were taking a priority,” said Lynn.

“Since when was robbing a vulnerable person not a crime.”

“At one point I was even told the Commonweal­th Games were consuming police time.”

Fearless Lynn’s constant badgering resulted in officers being able to send a report to the procurator fiscal, but only after a nine-month tussle.

Heartless Alongi, 54 – who continued to care for Betty because the family did not want to break her heart and tell her a person she trusted had stolen from her – received a two- year sentence last week to Lynn’s quiet satisfacti­on.

Her remarkable quest for justice was sparked days before frail Betty died in January 2014.

As executor of her will, Lynn was passed Betty’ s final bank statement.

But when she looked at it, she was shocked.

She immediatel­y spotted a pattern of ATM withdrawal­s – all for the maximum permitted sum, £300 – which could not have been made by Betty.

The figures were astronomic­al and ran to thousands of pounds.

The card had been used countless times to pay for goods at Tesco and even to pay for new car tyres, which was highly fishy as Betty didn’t drive.

“It was clear someone had been helping themselves to thousands of pounds from my aunt’s account,” said Lynn.

The total sum taken came to £43,600.

Suspicion immediatel­y fell on Alongi, who worked for Allan-Ross Home Care, and had been appointed Betty’s carer in 2010.

Alongi had quickly convinced Betty to get a cash card, something the cerebral palsy sufferer had never needed before, as her condition made it nigh on impossible to punch in a PIN number.

“Margo said she would collect her cash and get her shopping,” explained Lynn. “My aunt told the family she was happy with the arrangemen­t as she completely trusted her – loved her, even. As this woman was employed in a position of care, we had to respect my aunt’s wishes.”

But unknown to anyone, the woman who was meant to be caring for Betty was in fact helping herself to her money.

“From the minute Margo got her hands on my aunt’s card, she made constant cash withdrawal­s.

“She even withdrew £ 300 from my aunt’s account when she was lying on her death bed.

“It sickened me when I discovered that.”

Lynn wanted to blow the whistle on Alongi there and then but Betty’s sister Jessie, 86, insisted they wait and carry on as normal, as dying Betty “loved” Alongi and would have been heartbroke­n at the news her so-called friend had stolen from her.

“Betty had no idea her money had been taken and trusted her completely,” Lynn said.

“She had groomed my aunt pretending to be her best friend.

“So we had no option but to let Margo continue to care for her.

“Margo even attended my aunt’s funeral.

“I couldn’t bear it when the time came to stand in the family line to thank the mourners because it meant shaking Margo Alongi’s hand.

“At one point during the funeral tea, Margo suggested to my mum that she could look after her and take her to the bingo. That’s how it started with Betty, too. She groomed her.

“But my mum was wise to it obviously and thought, ‘ Why don’t I just hand you my bank card now and have done,’ to herself.

“I was so keen to tell the police that I left the funeral tea early and headed straight for Musselburg­h Police Office.”

But – following her initial threehour complaint, made in person at a police station – progress was slow and Lynn was left feeling repeatedly fobbed off.

“I had to do most of the detective work myself,” said Lynn, an executive PA from Port Seton, East Lothian.

She spent days examining bank statements.

Even then, despite presenting all the informatio­n to police, she felt she “wasn’t taken seriously”.

“For the majority of the time, we were running into the wind, with every obstacle that could be

thrown at us, coming our way,” said Lynn. “I reported the crime to the police on February 4, 2014, and provided them with substantia­l informatio­n, including four years of printed bank statements.

“I highlighte­d all the irregulari­ties and included details of who I suspected committed the crime and why.

“I had no previous dealings with the police and had assumed that when you reported a serious crime that it would be dealt with in a timely and efficient manner.

“That proved not to be the case.

“The police did very little to gather evidence, kept on postponing meetings with witnesses, fobbed me off continuall­y with excuses, and told me more serious crimes were taking priority.

“I had to jump through hoops to get the police to deal with it efficientl­y.

“In the end, I made a formal complaint against the police and took the matter to my MP.

“It took nine months for a report to go to the procurator fiscal and nearly a further two years from then to get the case to trial.

“Fighting to get it investigat­ed and then watching it proceed slowly showed the law is biased in favour of the criminal.

“Because of this, I feel compelled to tell my story, in the hope that changes will be made to the police and judicial system.”

Lynn is satisfied she took it upon herself to win justice for Betty.

“She always saw the best in people and Margo Alongi took full advantage of this,” said Lynn.

“I was determined to seek justice for my aunt and make sure this woman was never let near an elderly person’s bank account ever again.

“If I hadn’t acted in the way I did, it is likely she would have continued in her deceitful way.

“It would have been easy to give up but if you had known my aunt you would realise why we went all the way to get her justice.

“She was quite simply one of life’s good people.”

 ??  ?? ■ Margo Alongi.
■ Margo Alongi.
 ??  ?? Lynn, above, turned sleuth to track down her aunt’s money.
Lynn, above, turned sleuth to track down her aunt’s money.
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 ??  ?? Above, Betty Lynch with Lynn’s daughter Holly; and below with her sister, Jessie.
Above, Betty Lynch with Lynn’s daughter Holly; and below with her sister, Jessie.
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