ON GOVERNMENT BENEFITS, YET SCORED AS AN ONLINE
POKER PLAYER
18 September 2009
Sick player found himself in a world of
trouble
Alan Forsyth, an at times successful 36-year-old online
poker player who nevertheless continued to draw
government health benefits in the UK, faced his
comeuppance this week in a Norwich court.
The
magistrate was told that the benefits fraudster had
cheated the taxpayer out of thousands of pounds, and had
six secret bank accounts loaded with winnings from
online poker.
Forsyth once won $49 000 in a
single day gambling online - yet was claiming he could
not afford to pay his council tax. Last week he pleaded
guilty to seven charges of benefit fraud dating from
October 2003 when he first claimed to have no financial
reserves, although he actually had two bank accounts
that he did not declare.
While at the time they
had “relatively little” in terms of a positive balance,
he used the accounts to deposit the winnings from his
online poker efforts, continuing to claim the benefit
fraudulently until June 2007, by which time his number
of undeclared accounts had reached six, with two
accounts opened in 2005, one in 2006 and another in
2007.
Throughout this period, Forsyth was
registered as unable to work with ME, or Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome, with which he was diagnosed with in 1997.
Forsyth claimed that his medical condition had militated
against him filling in the benefit claim forms properly,
but prosecutor Yvonne Blake suggested to him: “If you
have the concentration to play poker to the extent that
you can win $49 000 in a single day, you have the
concentration to fill out a form.”
In total,
Forsyth is alleged to have fraudulently claimed GBP 3
706 in council tax benefits, a figure he has since paid
back in full.
In mitigation, it was pointed out
that Forsyth stayed in work for five years after his
initial diagnosis, and was described as "hard working."
Forsyth's legal representative said that he was not
a well man, suffering greatly from fatigue and pain, and
was without the ability to work again.
“He got
stuck in his own web of deceit. He did start winning
money and more accounts were opened. He was scared it
would be backtracked to the original offence.”
Magistrates ordered Forsyth to pay a total of GBP 1 400
in fines - GBP 200 for each offence, as well as GBP 15
surcharge and GBP 150 towards prosecution costs.
Presiding Magistrate Howard Gill said: “You've got
seven charges of making a false statement. This took
place over a long period of time and was premeditated.
There was a risk of substantial loss of money to the tax
payer.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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