Scottish Daily Mail

Conman told to pay back £300k or face more jail time

- by James Salmon

a COnMan who per- suaded friends and family to plough £3m into a bogus investment scheme has been ordered to pay back almost £300,000 to his victims – or face another two and a half years in jail.

a confiscati­on order of £291,070.36 has been made against Mark starling in southwark Crown Court, in the latest twist in a long and colourful saga.

starling, 58, was jailed for five years last november after spending almost a decade convincing investors, including his daughter rosalie (pictured

with him) and nephew, to let him manage their savings.

Between 2008 and 2017 he collected £3m from investors, including millionair­e members of his rowing club near his home in Farnham, surrey.

He claimed the money was being put into three funds – the Pilot Dax Fund, the shadow Dax Fund and the Pilot Eurostoxx Fund. investors were told to expect returns of up to 18pc a year.

in fact he traded just £8,000 of the £3m – on which he made a loss of £2,450 – and spent more than £1m maintainin­g his own luxury lifestyle.

this included £222,000 on property, £165,000 on school fees, £46,000 on shopping and £30,000 on cars.

He also spent £42,000 on family holidays, including ski trips and summer breaks in a southern European villa.

He even took investors to the Le Mans racing circuit in France, without letting them know they were funding it.

Mark steward, executive director of enforcemen­t and market oversight at the FCa, said: ‘We will continue to take steps to ensure proceeds of criminal activity are confiscate­d so victims can be compensate­d as far as possible.’

the court found that starling, who is in Wandsworth Prison in London, derived a benefit of £3,010,982.18 from his conduct, but it was possible to claw back only £291,070.36 from his bank accounts and the sale of a car and jewellery. He has until February 25 to repay the money, or spend another two and a half years in prison.

if he pays up, it will be used to compensate 14 victims who lost £1.8m. starling’s daughter rosalie, 28, and nephew Christophe­r Bullett, 30, who both put in at least £8,500, were removed from an original list of 17 victims owed compensati­on.

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