The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Banker tricked in scam is cleared of theft charge

Jury finds worker not guilty of embezzling cash by transferri­ng it into bank accounts

- JAMIE BEATSON

A banker has been cleared of embezzling more than £820,000 from rich customers at his branch after a court was told he was “duped” by “profession­al fraudsters”.

Samuel Mackintosh transferre­d vast sums of cash out of the accounts of a series of wealthy individual­s into other accounts over the course of four months last year at the Bank of Scotland branch in High Street, Auchterard­er.

One woman had £475,000 transferre­d out of her accounts by Mackintosh over the course of six transactio­ns in three days in July last year.

Another man had £300,000 transferre­d out of an account on August 4 last year.

Mackintosh admitted carrying out the transactio­ns, which took place when people pretending to be the account holders turned up in the branch and asked for money to be moved by the 27-year-old, then employed as a personal banking adviser.

However, he denied being part of the gang, with his lawyer telling the court there was “no evidence” that he had benefited in any way from the scam.

The court heard the people he transferre­d the money to have never been traced.

Fiscal depute Saima Rasheed told the jury Mackintosh had used a specific computer system within the bank to bypass the requiremen­t for management authorisat­ion or suspicious activity reports when transferri­ng the money.

She said: “He was the only employee in this branch to carry out transactio­ns for fraudsters.

“That’s despite other employees being in the branch on all these dates. His position is that he was targeted by these people.

“The Crown’s position is that he was dishonest.”

The three-day trial at Dundee Sheriff Court heard evidence about a holiday Mackintosh took to Ibiza in the days before his arrest that he had paid for in cash.

It was suggested the money used to fund that trip may have been his proceeds from the massive scam.

But Mackintosh’s mother later told the court her son had been giving her cash to save for months before the holiday.

Defence lawyer David Holmes said his client had been targeted by “profession­als” carrying out an “act” to convince him to move money on their behalf.

Addressing the jury, he said: “What did he gain out of it?

“What we don’t have is any connection between Samuel Mackintosh and these people.”

Mackintosh, 27, of Evelyn Terrace, Perth, denied six charges of embezzleme­nt on indictment.

Mackintosh was found not guilty of five of the charges. A sixth was found not proven.

 ??  ?? Samuel Mackintosh claims he was targeted by fraudsters.
Samuel Mackintosh claims he was targeted by fraudsters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom