Ex-Wakefield policeman guilty in £5m escort agency scam

SIX people, including an ex-West Yorkshire police officer, have been convicted for their part in a £5.7 million fraud after a court heard they conned members of the public in an online escort agency scam.
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Among those convicted were former West Yorkshire Police fraud specialist Detective Sergeant Christopher Taylor and the gang’s linchpin, Antoni Muldoon, who had previously been convicted in Spain for his part in a Costa del Sol time-share scam.

The 10-week trial at Ipswich Crown Court heard how multiple companies were set up as part of a fraud and money laundering operation that encouraged victims to part with cash in return for work as non-sexual escorts and in a separate debt elimination scheme.

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During the investigation, it was found that money obtained through the fraud was used to buy property and boats for Muldoon, including a 10 bedroom villa worth over £500,000, Suffolk County Council said.

As jurors returned their final verdicts in the case, trading standards bosses said a total of 17,300 victims had lost out.

Taylor, 57, from Wakefield, and Bradley Rogers, 29, from Malaga, were found guilty of money laundering but cleared of conspiracy to defraud, the council said.

Mark Bell, 41, from Westerfield, near Ipswich, Colin Samuels, 61, of Redgrave, Suffolk, and Geraldine French, 60, from Spain, were earlier each found guilty of two counts of conspiracy to defraud.

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Muldoon had already admitted conspiracy to defraud and money laundering.

They will all be sentenced next month.

In the escort fraud cases, 14,000 UK victims were enticed to register for a £250 to £450 fee in the hope of earning income by accompanying clients on dates, events and dinners.

Once the fees were paid the dates were cancelled and no work would materialise.

In the debt elimination cases, some 3,300 victims were cold called and told that any credit agreements they had entered into prior to 2007 were unenforceable and that debts could be written off for an upfront fee of between £540 to more than £2,000.

Millions of pounds poured through various bank accounts linked to the frauds with some being funnelled to accounts in Spain.

Efforts will now be made to seize the gang’s assets through the courts.