Yorkshire Post

Fraudster could face jail over attempt to con NHS

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A FRAUDSTER who grossly exaggerate­d the effect of his comparativ­ely minor injuries in a bid to con the NHS of £837,109 faces a possible jail sentence.

The case brought against Sandip Singh Atwal, 33, of Huddersfie­ld, is believed to be the first time a health trust has applied to commit someone for contempt of court in such circumstan­ces.

In June 2008, Atwal, who worked in the family taxi business, went to the accident and emergency department at Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary after he was attacked with a baseball bat.

It was always admitted that his injuries – fractures of two fingers and a laceration of the lower lip – were negligentl­y treated and Calderdale and Huddersfie­ld NHS Foundation Trust offered £30,000 to settle the case.

But Atwal asked for £837,109, including substantia­l sums for future loss of earnings and care, on the basis he was unable to work and grossly incapacita­ted, said Mr Justice Spencer at London’s High Court yesterday.

The solicitors acting for the trust were suspicious as his claimed disabiliti­es were inconsiste­nt with entries in the contempora­neous medical records.

In 2015, they commission­ed covert video surveillan­ce of Atwal and investigat­ed his social media postings which “gave the lie” to much of what he was asserting, said the judge. The footage showed him working as a courier and his social media revealed that his music-making activities – he used to perform as a profession­al DJ – continued unabated.

All this led to an allegation of fraudulent exaggerati­on and, in March 2016, Atwal said he would now accept the offer made nearly five years earlier.

The whole of the £30,000 compensati­on was swallowed up in paying the trust’s costs so that, after eight years of litigation, Atwal came out with nothing and owing the trust £5,000.

Considerat­ion of sentence and any applicatio­n to set aside the finding of contempt was adjourned until June 1.

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