Peer convicted of expenses fraud

A former Tory peer has been found guilty of six counts of expenses fraud.

A former Tory peer has been found guilty of six counts of expenses fraud.

Lord Hanningfield (70) a former Lords opposition frontbencher and Essex County Council leader, was convicted by a jury of nine women and three men at Chelmsford Crown Court following an eight day trial.

They returned their verdicts after four hours of deliberation.

He had denied fraudulently claiming parliamentary expenses totalling nearly £14,000 (€16,192) between March 2006 and May 2009. The charges relate to six individual one month periods.

READ MORE

But the jury found that he unlawfully claimed expenses, including £13,379 (€15,476) for overnight stays in London when he was not in the capital.

He showed no emotion as the verdicts were returned. Mr Justice Saunders said he would pass sentence in three weeks at Chelmsford Crown Court.

As well as claiming overnight allowances, Lord Hanningfield, from West Hanningfield, near Chelmsford, Essex, also wrongfully claimed £382 (€441) in train fares and £147 (€170) in mileage by doubling the seven-mile distance from his house to the train station.

Lord Hanningfield, a frontbench spokesman on education until he had the Tory whip withdrawn following the allegations, had told the court 80 per cent of Lords were claiming the maximum allowance.

Referring to the overnight allowance, he said: “You could sleep in a park bench and claim the money.” He said he felt entitled to claim the allowance as he had needed to return to his home to look after his Burmese mountain dog Jefferson.

As a result he incurred costs, including £20 a day for a dog walking and housekeeping service which he could not claim. During his evidence he produced a picture of his dog and said it was his closest friend.

He said said he treated it as an allowance for living outside London and “spent a minute a month” completing his expenses form.

PA