Detective 'bought Dales holiday with force's credit card'

A SCOTLAND Yard detective used a corporate credit card to pay for a weekend stay in a luxury Yorkshire hotel with his wife while he was on leave, a court heard today.

Detective Constable Christopher Fernley, 42, allegedly used an American Express charge card issued by the Metropolitan Police to pay for two nights in the Yorkshire Dales while he and his wife attended a wedding party.

He charged 746.80 to the card that was intended for police expenses incurred in the course of duty, a jury was told.

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Fernley, who dealt with extradition cases for the Specialist Crime Directorate, denies five counts of false accounting over transactions made on the card including one for a French theme park.

John Traversi, prosecuting, said it must have been "abundantly clear" to Fernley that they were personal expenses and not legitimate police expenses.

Mr Traversi told Southwark Crown Court records showed Fernley used the AmEx card to pay for two nights at the Devonshire Arms Country House Hotel in Yorkshire over the August Bank Holiday in 2006.

But he said records of Fernley's hours showed he was on leave over the same period.

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"It must have been abundantly clear to DC Fernley, from the nature and amount of the expense, the occasion for which he incurred it, the presence of his wife, the character of the hotel, none of which can have slipped his mind, and from the information and documents that he had in his possession when he filled out the form on December 12, 2007 that this was not legitimate police expenditure but personal expenditure.

"The entry on the 288 (form) was therefore false and he knew it. He claimed it as a legitimate police expense in the hope that the real nature of the spend would not be uncovered."

Fernley's AmEx statement also showed 71.62 spent at the Novotel Poitiers Futuroscope theme park in France, the court heard.

The prosecution said he had claimed the money as "overnight accommodation France" despite being on leave at the time.

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Mr Traversi said the other transactions included 31.85 at a pub almost three hours after Fernley finished his shift, 85.50 at the National Liberal Club in central London when Fernley claimed to be in Staines, Surrey, and 61.75 from an ATM at Tesco in Potters Bar, which the detective claimed was spent in Gatwick Airport.

After his expenditure was initially queried, Fernley handed a cheque for just over 1,000 to a detective inspector, the jury was told.

The court heard Fernley said he had made mistakes on his expenses forms because he was hung over from a Christmas lunch.

Mr Traversi said: "He admitted that he had also used the card for personal expenditure on a number of occasions, he said it was generally allowed but had to be paid back at the relevant opportunity."

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He continued: "In relation to the events of December 11 and 12 2007, he said that he had been called into work following a Christmas lunch the previous day and ordered to complete his reconciliation of expenses.

"When asked about why he had entered personal expenditure as operational, he stated that he had made mistakes as he was hung over and felt under enormous pressure to complete the paperwork.

"He identified the mistakes, as he said they were, but denied any dishonesty in respect of the entries he had made on the forms."

Mr Traversi added: "It is the prosecution case that he knew the entries were false at the time he made them and that he only accepted that they were personal expenditure when challenged about them by senior officers."