Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Ex-lawyer’s ‘despicable’ fraud crime

- BY CIARAN SHANKS

AN ex-lawyer who “despicably” conned a late friend’s daughter out of almost £3,000 has been ordered to perform unpaid work.

Ian Davidson was found guilty of defrauding the vulnerable client after being instructed to wind up her father’s estate.

The 62-year-old’s trial at Dundee Sheriff Court heard how he told Pauline Martin to make out a cheque for £2,739.31 in his name instead of to law firm W&AS Bruce, for whom he was working as a consultant at the time.

Davidson claimed he was “absolutely horrified” to be presented with the cheque and said he banked it before paying her the cash.

However, a sheriff branded his version of events “ridiculous” upon finding him guilty last month.

At his sentencing hearing yesterday, Sheriff John Rafferty told him: “You committed a despicable and mean crime in circumstan­ces where you were in a position of trust as a solicitor and an experience­d executor.

“You were a friend of the now-deceased and the now-deceased contacted you by telephone around two days before he died and explained his position to you.

“He asked you to look after his estate. He asked you to look after his vulnerable daughter and you agreed.

“Following his death, you breached that promise and did so in a cold and calculatin­g way.”

Davidson was accused of prioritisi­ng his own reputation in a pre-sentencing interview with social workers and showing no remorse.

Solicitor John McLaughlin said Davidson, a first offender, would be willing to comply with a community-based order and understood that the gravity of the offence placed him at risk of a prison term.

Sheriff Rafferty said: “There are no mitigating factors and the criminal justice social work reports indicate that you

show no insight into the impact of your offending on your victim.

“You show no remorse. You are, however, concerned for your own self and reputation and concerned about damage to your reputation. Your reputation can now be seen in its true light. It is with considerab­le hesitation that I move away from a custodial sentence.”

Davidson was ordered to perform 280 hours of unpaid work and pay Ms Martin £600 in compensati­on as an alternativ­e to custody.

The trial heard that, in the summer of 2017, Ms Martin, 59, contacted Davidson to wind up her father Bernard’s estate.

As part of this, she said he told her to get a cheque made out in his name but not to tell anyone “because it would look like money laundering”.

In trying to get a receipt from the law firm, she told partner Peter McDevitt what had happened and he told the trial it caused him a “great deal of concern” as this would have been in clear breach of the Law Society of Scotland rules.

 ?? ?? TRUSTED: Ian Davidson promised a dying friend he’d look after his daughter.
TRUSTED: Ian Davidson promised a dying friend he’d look after his daughter.

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