Kentish Express Ashford & District

Worker jailed for theft of £100,000 from employer

- By Paul Hooper

A valued member of an Ashford family firm betrayed their trust and secretly pocketed £100,000.

However, when devious Donna Hartshorne’s four-year deceit was finally exposed, she claimed she used the money on buying a pressure cooker and a new oven.

Now the 37-year-old thief, from Cross Stile, Ashford has been jailed for 18 months after admitting stealing from an employer.

Prosecutor Paul Valder told Canterbury Crown Court how Hartshorne kept her pilfering a secret by covering up the missing money as payments for utilities.

It was only when she was off work for six weeks with neck and back problems that her bosses at Glass Services in Wotton Road, Kingsnorth Industrial Estate discovered the extent of her duplicity and betrayal.

Mr Valder said she had been employed as a £21,000 a year accounts administra­tor at the “small family-run” business, which employed 39 staff, since 2011.

“Among her duties was paying utility bills and she was described as a good worker and there were no obvious signs of her living beyond her means. Sadly, that was a false impression.”

He said Hartshorne set up three private accounts and paid £99,746 into them on 82 occasions between August 2012 and July last year.

“It is clear that the staff were profoundly shocked by what had been going on under their noses because they didn’t have an inkling.”

The prosecutor added that while on sick leave Hartshorne realised the game was up and handed in her notice claiming health issues in a four-line terse email.

She was quizzed by police and admitted “she had done wrong but could offer no explanatio­n as to why she had done it and didn’t know what she had done with the money,” the court heard.

Hartshorne said she had “nothing to show for the thefts and was surprised by the amount.”

Her lawyer Guy Wyatt said the thief had not lived a “hedonistic” lifestyle or made valuable purchases, only a pressure cooker and a new oven for her mother.

He added that she had been suffering from depression and is now “”contrite and thoroughly, thoroughly ashamed of herself,” he added.

The judge also ordered a financial investigat­ion into her means under the Proceeds of Crime Act to see if any money can be clawed back.

‘There were no obvious signs of her living beyond her means. Sadly, that was a false impression’

Judge Simon James told her: “This wasn’t a cry for help and couldn’t be described as a momentary aberration. There is nothing approachin­g justificat­ion or a need for taking this money.

“It was stolen for some instant gratificat­ion and has all been dissipated.

“I admit that I struggle to see a direct link between such systematic, prolonged and sophistica­ted dishonesty and the fact you claim to feel depressed.

“I can understand the feelings of betrayal your former employers have expressed.”

 ?? Picture: Kent Police ?? Donna Hartshorne has been jailed for stealing more than £100,000 from the company she worked for
Picture: Kent Police Donna Hartshorne has been jailed for stealing more than £100,000 from the company she worked for

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