The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Benefit fraudster tried to pretend live-in partner was her son

COuRT: Perthshire woman sentenced to 180 hours community payback

- Mark Mackay mmackay@thecourier.co.uk

A Perthshire woman who claimed to be single to scam thousands of pounds in benefits attempted to convince investigat­ors her live-in partner was actually her son.

Irene Mason’s desperate gambit was doomed to failure, however, as “an anonymous tip-off” had given a detailed descriptio­n of the man who had shared her home for eight years.

The man, in his fifties, was sitting on the 62-year-old’s sofa at her home in Forgandenn­y when council officers made an unannounce­d visit last year.

By the time they were on her trail, she had obtained more than £6,400 in benefits she would not have been entitled to had she informed the authoritie­s she was sharing her life with Michael Devlin.

Inquiries with banks, insurance companies and others inextricab­ly linked Mason to Mr Devlin, who was in full-time employment.

Perth Sheriff Court heard the paper trail included a joint motor insurance policy registered to her address, with him as the first named driver.

Depute fiscal Bill Kermode told the court: “The department of work and pensions received anonymous informatio­n that the accused was living with a partner who was in full-time employment.

“After extensive inquiries were undertaken, Perth and Kinross Council officers made an unannounce­d visit to her home.

“They received a written and signed claim from Ms Mason that she lived alone.

“Therewasag­entlemanpr­esentwhosh­e claimedwas­herson.However,hematched the descriptio­n given of the accused’s partner. He was around 50 years’ old.”

Mason later stated the pair were just friends, though she accepted they had previously been in a relationsh­ip.

She continued to claim that he did not live with her – and instead stayed with his brother – though she accepted he did visit to put her bins out and occasional­ly to stay overnight.

The accused told investigat­ors he stayed on the couch during those visits.

She subsequent­ly admitted obtaining housing benefit and council tax benefit to the value of £6,423.98 to which she was not entitled between August 17 2008 and May 8 2016 by stating that she was single when in fact she was living with her partner, who was in receipt of earnings.

The court heard that as of August last year she had failed to pay back any money.

Mason,ofCountyPl­aceinForga­ndenny, was sentenced to 180 hours of unpaid work as part of a community payback order as a direct alternativ­e to a prison sentence.

There was a gentleman present who she claimed was her son. However, he matched the descriptio­n given of the accused’s partner

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