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A tax agent who stole more than £750,000 through tax and mortgage fraud has been jailed for 10 years.
Robin Moss was sentenced at Nottingham Crown Court for defrauding 16 victims in Nottingham –splashing out hundreds of thousands of pounds on luxury items, including more than £115,000 on collectible Moorcroft pottery, £89,251 on gold coins and £18,930 on jewellery.
The number of purchase fraud cases seen by TSB jumped by more than a third (35%) between January and October 2023, compared with the same period in 2022. According to TSB’s data, more than £500 was lost per case on average.
Purchase frauds happen when criminals trick people into paying for goods and services that do not exist, with scams often starting on social media, according to the bank. Vehicles and parts, tickets for events, trainers and clothing are often items being offered by scammers, TSB said. TSB is also urging consumers to be wary of adverts selling pets, holidays, cosmetics, jewellery and watches.
A brother and sister have been sentenced after they were found guilty of fraud over an amended will which would have seen them share an inheritance from their late father.
Rashpal Sandhu, 53, and her older brother Harjinder Singh, 60, were convicted by a jury at Bradford Crown Court of fraud by false representation over a codicil document which purported to amend their father’s will effectively disinheriting their two other brothers.
Two women from Tamworth who stole over £634,000 from the beneficiaries of wills, including money intended for life-saving charities, have been jailed for six and a half years between them.
A total of 23 estates were found to have money stolen from them by Laurna Porter and Julie Atkins over 13 years. They were arrested at their home address in 2018
Surrey Police are warning residents about a resurgence of the so-called "courier fraud" scam in the area. which involves people impersonating officers.
Since January, there have been 23 reported cases across East Surrey of criminals impersonating Surrey police officers to defraud victims out of cash and valuables.
Legislation will bring seismic change to the industry and aims to stamp out money laundering.
Not for the first time in the history of the European parliament, it all started in Belgium. An investigation into alleged bribery, money-laundering, forged transfer contracts and the involvement of organised crime at the highest levels of professional football that began in 2018 eventually implicated almost 60 agents, administrators, referees and coaches.
https://www.theguardian.com/football/2024/apr/23/european-union-money-laundering-crime-corruption-uefa
Sixteen people have been sentenced for their roles in a fraud conspiracy which saw thieves steal cars worth £2m.
Investigators said the group used stolen identities to create false credit agreements before a group of men called "strikers" collected the cars from different locations such as hotel car parks.
The fraud ran from February 2020 to July 2022 during which time 75 cars, including Porsches, Mercedes and BMWs were stolen.
Taylor Swift fans are being urged to avoid a cruel summer as mean ticket fraudsters take advantage of demand for the star’s Eras tour to con thousands of would-be concert-goers.
One of Britain’s biggest banking groups, Lloyds, said: “Fans of Taylor Swift are being targeted by a wave of concert ticket scams flooding social media.”
As the scammer gonna scam, Lloyds said that British fans are estimated to have lost more than £1 million since tickets for the UK dates went on sale.
The recent decision in CCP Graduate School Ltd v National Westminster Bank plc and another [2024] EWHC 581 (KB), demonstrates how Claimants are repositioning claims against banks arising from authorised push payment (APP) fraud from breach of Quincecare duty claims to so-called “retrieval duty” claims.
https://cms-lawnow.com/en/ealerts/2024/04/app-fraud-quincecare-duty-claims-against-banks-replaced-by-new-retrieval-duty-claims
The DWP is set to change how people are assessed for Personal Independence Payment (PIP) in a bid to crack down on benefit fraud.
It comes after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced he was worried that the current system was being 'misused'.
The Tory leader spoke of how PIP awards can come off the back of 'subjective and unverifiable claims' that physical or mental illnesses and disabilities are affecting a person's life. Some conditions don't show on medical scans or tests, so the department must take the word of the person claiming on the severity of their own specific condition, Birmingham Live reports.
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