The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Fake babies man faces paying back thousands

COURT: Conman told to pay back just £1 but order carries a sting in the tail

- Jamie Beatson and alanwilson

A businessma­n who faked the birth of 26 non-existent babies using phony birth certificat­es for fictitious home births as part of a massive, organised benefit scam was yesterday ordered to pay back just £1 of the stolen cash.

Rory McWhirter, director of property firm Capital Residentia­l Ltd, concocted the complicate­d scheme while living with his paediatric doctor girlfriend in Dundee, who had charges against her dropped.

He duped people into applying for fake jobs at a Glasgow hotel through an ad on Gumtree – then used their identity details and those of other couples to get copies of their marriage certificat­es.

He then used those and forged letters claiming the children had been born in home births before using them to register the non-existent children.

McWhirter, 29, then used the birth certificat­es for non-existent children to claim for tax credits, child benefit and maternity grants – raking in a total of £34,381.18.

McWhirter was jailed for 28 months for the “sophistica­ted fraud” – and prosecutor­s lodged a Proceeds of Crime Act action in a bid to recoup the cash.

Dundee Sheriff Court earlier heard McWhirter earned £80,000 a year – but yesterday it heard he has no assets of his own and that even his home is in girlfriend Kiyo Adya’s name, meaning he had no way of paying back the money.

Depute fiscal Joanne Smith told the court an agreement had been reached with defence lawyers for an order to be made for just £1.

However, the existence of the order means McWhirter will be liable in the future for the full £38,381.18 that he stole if he returns to work after his release from prison.

Sheriff George Way said: “This is quite a complicate­d fraud.

“He is saying in his answers that the only asset is the family home that is in his partner’s name.

“I will make a confiscati­on order in the sum of £1.”

McWhirter’s scheme was only rumbled after he returned to the scene of one of his early false birth registrati­ons at Aberdeen registry office where he was recognised by staff.

Around the same time, an “organised attack” on HMRC’s computer systems – which showed around 350 requests had been received for tax credits applicatio­n forms from an address in Dundee and others in Campbellto­wn linked to McWhirter – triggered other alarms.

In the end it was McWhirter’s BMW Z4 convertibl­e car that he used to travel to the registrar offices across Scotland that led police to his door.

 ??  ?? Rory McWhirter used birth certificat­es for non-existent children to claim for tax credits, child benefit and maternity grants – raking in a total of £34,381.18.
Rory McWhirter used birth certificat­es for non-existent children to claim for tax credits, child benefit and maternity grants – raking in a total of £34,381.18.

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