Jail for solicitor's wife who stole £80,000 for
gambling habit
Source: Times Online, Simon de Bruxelles, May 28,
2008.
A
solicitor's wife who stole nearly £80,000 from her
husband's law firm to spend up to £500 a night on
bingo-hall fruit machines has been jailed for ten
months.
Susanne Orton, 63, was a conveyancing assistant at
Harold G. Walker, in Bournemouth, where her husband
was a senior partner. She had already spent £100,000
of her family's savings when she took the money from
the firm's account, a court was told.
She
was said to have become addicted to gambling as a
way of relieving the stress of long hours at work
and would go out five nights a week.
James Patrick, for the prosecution, said that Orton
began frittering away her family's savings in 2004.
She spent £30,000 that she and her husband had saved
for a deposit on a buy-to-let property, their fourth
such home.
Mr
Patrick said: “The £30,000 had been spent by Mrs
Orton, who had gambled it away on fruit machines.
She moved £30,000 from a client account into their
account and she kept moving money.”
He
said that this continued until she was found out, by
which time the total stolen had reached £79,655.
In
2006, while the couple were on holiday in Egypt, the
firm noticed financial irregularities and began an
investigation. Mr Patrick said: “When they returned,
Mrs Orton became aware of the investigation and as a
result set up a transfer of money to another account
to repay £63,000.”
The
couple were both arrested but Mr Orton was released
without charge. He has since repaid all the money
plus interest, but has lost his job.
Mrs
Orton admitted four charges of theft and four of
false accounting at an earlier hearing.
Susan Evans, in mitigation, said that Orton, from
Bournemouth, was a “pathologic gambler” who was
“utterly appalled” by her behaviour. She said that
the stress and long hours of her job led her to seek
relief by gambling on fruit machines at Gala Bingo
in the town.
She
said: “Such was the stress that she turned to
gambling and was out up to five nights a week
spending up to £500 a night. She spent £100,000 of
their own money.”
She
added: “Everything snowballed and she robbed Peter
to pay Paul. Her real fear was that her husband
would find out.”
Sentencing her, Judge Christopher Harvey Clark, QC,
said: “The offences involve so much money and took
place over such a long period and involved such
duplicity on your part that the court has no
alternative but to pass a custodial sentence. This
is a sad day for you and I'm sorry I've had to pass
this sentence.”
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