A good scam or wot? Not! But it worked for SEVEN YEARS and 164 times and was successful in diverting over 825k into his personal account before he got caught.
"Ian Revue"? "I Revue?" "Inland Revenue?"
From
http://www.timesonline.co.uk
April 27, 2005
Lawyer called himself Ian Revue to steal 800,000 in stamp duty
By Simon de Bruxelles
A CROOKED solicitor who set up a bank account using the name Ian Revue stole more than 800,000 intended for the Inland Revenue, a court was told yesterday.
Ian Macfarlane, 44, a senior partner in a company of specialist conveyancing solicitors, deposited 164 cheques from clients intended to pay their stamp duty into the account. He used the money to cover his daughters school fees, take his family on exotic holidays and even to pay his own tax bill.
The deception was simple. Clients would write a cheque for stamp duty made payable to the company. Macfarlane would then write out a company cheque made payable to I. Revue, in sloppy handwriting so it looked as though the payment was being made to the Inland Revenue, and deposited into his own account.
In total Macfarlane diverted 825,064 into the account, which he then withdrew and spent. Macfarlane earned 138,000 a year as a senior partner at Traill & Co based in Blandford, Dorset. But it was not enough. Over a period of seven years he got away with the fraud until a member of staff at the company became suspicious.
Detective Constable Paul Sullivan, of Dorset Police, said: What he did was open an account in the name of Ian Revue, who didnt exist. Because Macfarlane was an existing customer and a solicitor he didnt have to provide any identification for Mr Revue. On the day he opened the account he deposited a 635 cheque and was given a passbook. Over seven years and eight months he lodged another 163 cheques totalling 825,000.
Macfarlane was caught last July when a colleague became suspicious because he had written out a cheque on a property that did not require stamp duty. An investigation by the bank where the account was registered found that Ian Revue and his address in Bournemouth did not exist. Constable Sullivan described Macfarlane as a polished, calculating thief. He said: When we arrested him he had no idea he was under suspicion but was very calm and cool a true gentleman.
Macfarlane lived in the Dorset village of Winterborne Kingston in a five-bedroom converted barn and drove a Mercedes.
The judge at Bournemouth Crown Court, where Macfarlane admitted 26 charges of theft and asked for another 137 offences to be taken into consideration, told him that he faces a jail sentence.