Daily Mail

Boss who stole £1m from his own firm ...to fund gambling

Websites lavished him with £50k VIP gifts

- By Tom Witherow

A FINANCE chief stole £1million from his firm to fund his gambling as he was being wooed to carry on betting with VIP tickets and holidays worth up to £50,000.

Steven Girling, 35, said he was left on the brink of suicide after British gambling firms targeted him aggressive­ly.

The father-of-two and his wife, rashael, 41, lived like millionair­es, drinking champagne in five- star hotels in Dubai and entertaini­ng friends on VIP tickets at races including royal Ascot, the Derby and the Cheltenham Gold Cup.

But despite betting up to £50,000 a day online on slot machines and roulette over the three years he claims his addictive behaviour was never questioned by the three companies he gambled with.

he added: ‘It was clear from my patterns of play I was addicted.’

Last week, the financial director pleaded guilty to theft from his employer, and expects to go to prison when he is sentenced on January 2.

A Daily Mail investigat­ion in August showed how gambling firms used so-called VIP schemes to keep the highest- spending punters hooked on their websites, offering free holidays and sports tickets worth tens of thousands of pounds. For Girling, of Costessey, Norfolk, the allure of the high life proved too much, and in one day he deposited more than £50,000.

he said he expected the fact he once paid in twice his salary over 24 hours ‘would ring alarm bells’. But he added: ‘My behaviour didn’t trigger any alarms. By feeding my addiction I thought I was making myself happy, but it was destroying me. It was prison or death. I very nearly chose death.’ he lied to his wife about their luxury, telling her he won the allexpense­s trip to Dubai.

She is standing by him, even though they are selling their house to repay his employer.

Girling was treated to VIP tickets to see American [NFL] football at Wembley, received tickets to his local team, Norwich City, and was given seats to see Everton, where his daughter, now 13, presented the man of the match award.

At the Total Eclipse race day at Sandown Park in Surrey, he was even selected to choose the course’s best turned-out horse.

he also received ‘gifts’ of £500 in his account to soften the blow when he lost. Girling said his membership of a VIP scheme reflected the betting company’s ‘priority... to ensure if you are still actively playing on a gaming site, it is with us’. he added: ‘It may have caused addiction.’

he had an account manager who used to sign him up for competitio­ns, telling him: ‘I have already

‘One evening I lost £18,000’

opted into this weekly for you – all you need to do is play.’

In January Girling resigned as finance director of Premier Education Group, a sports education firm.

After his arrest, he complained to his bookmakers, but received an email stating: ‘The activity on your account was not such that any action from a social responsibi­lity perspectiv­e was required.’

he said he had repaid £112,000 and would return more from the sale of his house. he told the Eastern Daily Press: ‘I am ashamed.

‘I didn’t want to stop. I would play £100 spins on slot machines, and you can spin every few seconds. one evening I lost £18,000. It was just a spiral. I’ve kept quiet for three long years and nearly lost everything, including my life.’

he pleaded guilty to theft at Norwich Crown Court and faces up to five years in jail.

 ??  ?? Free tickets: Steven Girling with an NFL cheerleade­r at Wembley
Free tickets: Steven Girling with an NFL cheerleade­r at Wembley

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