NI social welfare cheats to face tougher sanctions

Benefit cheats in Northern Ireland are swindling nearly £77,000 a day and will be hunted down, the British government vowed today…

Benefit cheats in Northern Ireland are swindling nearly £77,000 a day and will be hunted down, the British government vowed today.

Even though only a fraction of the huge fraud has been uncovered, Social Development Minister David Hanson warned those caught could be jailed.

Investigators will study bank accounts and other financial records in a bid to detect any unwarranted cash, he pledged.

Mr Hanson said: "There is nothing romantic about doing the double (working while claiming benefit) or fiddling the social security system in any other way.

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"This is serious theft and is not socially acceptable. The courts are increasingly recognising this and we have had a number of prison sentences imposed this year.

"Benefit fraud costs around £28 million a year in Northern Ireland and this is money that could be better spent on schools, hospitals or housing."

False claims totalling £688,000 have been detected during 141 successful prosecutions since January. And with more set to go before the courts, the total could pass £1 million by the end of the year.

In one of the latest cases Co Antrim man Wesley Todd, 48, received more than £18,000 worth of Income Support and Carer's Allowance while working.

Todd, of Ballybentragh Road, Muckamore was given a six-month suspended jail sentence at Antrim magistrates' court on Monday.