The Scotsman

Charity worker embezzled thousands for gambling

● Employee stole £360k from Red Cross accounts

- By RORY CASSIDY

A finance worker embezzled more than £350,000 from the British Red Cross under the guise of sending money to former delegates and staff.

Mary Booth was “a trusted and valued” British Red Cross employee for 34 years and initially worked at the charity’s headquarte­rs in London.

She earned £45,000 per year and retired with a full pension and lump sum after working at the charity’s Scottish headquarte­rs in Paisley, Renfrewshi­re. The 56-yearold siphoned £359,551.27 from the charity’s accounts, which she paid into her own bank accounts.

She claims she scammed the charity so that she could continue to fund her online gambling habit after splitting from her husband.

She now faces jail and may have to sell her £350,000 home to pay back the money.

The details emerged yesterday when Booth, of Croyden, South London, appeared in the dock at Paisley Sheriff Court to admit her guilt.

She pleaded guilty to embezzling £359,551.27 between 1 November, 2008 and 31 August, 2015, at the British Red Cross offices in Smith- hills Street, Paisley, Renfrewshi­re, and Moorfields in London, near the Barbican complex in the city.

Booth had access to the charity’s bank accounts and BACS payment systems, allowing her to send money to herself.

In February 2016, once Booth had retired, Deborah Mcbean, the charity’s head of control and compliance, noticed irregulari­ties in payments from the year before.

Eamonn O’donnell, the charity’s head of transactio­nal operations, discovered there was “no appropriat­e paperwork” attached to a number of suspect transactio­ns.

Procurator Fiscal Depute Scot Dignan said: “Mrs Booth had embezzled sums from the charity’s accounts, and salary payments, for foreign delegates’ payments and current and former employees, in to bank accounts in her own name.”

Once they discovered the money had been embezzled, the British Red Cross had the bank accounts the money had been paid into frozen.

Mike Adamson, chief executive of the British Red Cross, said: “We were devastated to discover that a long-serving employee in a position of trust had defrauded us.

“Every day we strive to help some of the most vulnerable people in the UK and overseas and for our trust to be abused in this way is really, really disappoint­ing.”

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