The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Man denies £12.9m ‘bank accounts’ fraud scheme

Court: Trial told accused committed offences in Aberdeen city and shire

-

A man has gone on trial accused of committing a £12.9 million fraud by pretending to investors he would place their cash in non-existent “high interest” bank accounts.

Alistair Greig, 66, is being prosecuted on charges alleging he broke the law between August 2001 and October 2014.

Prosecutor­s claim Mr Greig carried out a fraudulent scheme and breached financial services and proceeds of crime laws at various addresses in Aberdeen, Aberdeensh­ire and Lincolnshi­re.

Greig, of Boston, Lincolnshi­re – formerly of Cairnbulg, near Fraserburg­h – denies the allegation­s.

His legal team have lodged a special defence stating other people were responsibl­e for the alleged criminalit­y.

They entered not guilty pleas on their client’s behalf during the first day of proceeding­s against him at the High Court in Edinburgh.

Jurors also heard the contents of a legal document detailing the charges facing Greig.

Prosecutor­s claim Greig carried out the allegedly fraudulent scheme by his “own hand” and “by the hands” of independen­t financial advisers that he “directed”.

The Crown alleges these financial advisers were employed by or affiliated to a company called Park

Row Associates plc and to another firm called Midas Financial Solutions (Scotland) Limited.

It’s claimed that Greig pretended to investors he would invest their cash in high-interest accounts with the Royal Bank of Scotland for fixed periods of time, that the return of capital and interest was guaranteed and that the scheme was authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority and by its predecesso­r, the Financial

Services Authority. The charge states that the truth of the situation was Greig knew there were no highintere­st accounts with the Royal Bank of Scotland and that the return to investors wasn’t guaranteed.

The Crown also claims the sums of money returned to investors were sums of money that had been deposited by other investors in the scheme and that by “such false pretences” he obtained £12,982,789.23 by fraud.

A second charge states he accepted £13,082,263.51 of deposits into bank accounts held in the names of companies called Park Row Associates and Midas Financial Aberdeen in breach of financial services and proceeds of crime laws.

It’s claimed he did “convert and transfer criminal property within the United Kingdom” and that he removed this “criminal property” from Britain.

The trial continues.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom