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Ex-MEP Peter Skinner found guilty of expenses fraud | Ex-MEP Peter Skinner found guilty of expenses fraud |
(25 days later) | |
An MEP who dishonestly claimed about £100,000 in expenses has been warned he faces a prison sentence. | |
Peter Skinner, 56, who was Labour MEP for the South East from 1999 to 2014, was found guilty of three charges after a trial at Southwark Crown Court. | Peter Skinner, 56, who was Labour MEP for the South East from 1999 to 2014, was found guilty of three charges after a trial at Southwark Crown Court. |
Jurors heard he claimed thousands of pounds for support staff over a five-year period which actually funded hotel stays, restaurants and jewellery. | Jurors heard he claimed thousands of pounds for support staff over a five-year period which actually funded hotel stays, restaurants and jewellery. |
Skinner, of Snodland in Kent, will be sentenced on 29 April. | Skinner, of Snodland in Kent, will be sentenced on 29 April. |
The politician also made fraudulent payments of £10,000 a month to his wife from December 2007 until July 2009, which entitled him to claim secretarial or parliamentary assistance allowance. | The politician also made fraudulent payments of £10,000 a month to his wife from December 2007 until July 2009, which entitled him to claim secretarial or parliamentary assistance allowance. |
Skinner, who stood down as an MEP in 2014, also created a fake letter claiming his father was working for him, to justify his payments of £5,000 every three months, his trial heard. | Skinner, who stood down as an MEP in 2014, also created a fake letter claiming his father was working for him, to justify his payments of £5,000 every three months, his trial heard. |
He claimed he had been confused over the rules and blamed a lack of information given to him by the European Parliament. | He claimed he had been confused over the rules and blamed a lack of information given to him by the European Parliament. |
Skinner was found guilty of one count of making a false instrument, one count of fraud and one count of false accounting between 2004 and 2009. | Skinner was found guilty of one count of making a false instrument, one count of fraud and one count of false accounting between 2004 and 2009. |
He was cleared of one count of making a false instrument in relation to a form submitted to the European Parliament in 2006. | He was cleared of one count of making a false instrument in relation to a form submitted to the European Parliament in 2006. |
Correction 29 April 2016: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that the sum involved was £500,000 rather than £100,000. |
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