Cardsinner Poker
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Search
 
 

Display results as :
 


Rechercher Advanced Search

Powered by WebRing®.

Psychic and sex chatline worker's benefit fraud sentence

Go down

Psychic and sex chatline worker's benefit fraud sentence Empty Psychic and sex chatline worker's benefit fraud sentence

Post  Mr007 Sat Nov 05, 2011 4:10 am


Dawn Pearson Dawn Pearson said she'd suffered financial difficulties
Continue reading the main story
Related Stories

* Psychic claimed £33,000 benefits

A woman who fraudulently claimed £33,000 in benefits while working on a sex chatline and as a tarot reader has been given a suspended sentence.

Dawn Pearson, 50, from Neath advertised her services on the Psychic TV website.

Customers were charged £1.53 per minute while the 50-year-old claimed to be too ill to work.

A judge at Swansea Crown Court gave her a 12-week jail sentence, suspended for 18 months, and ordered her to do 180 hours unpaid work in the community.

Pearson admitted four charges of benefits fraud when she appeared at Neath magistrates' court in September.

The court heard that she unlawfully claimed a total of £33,206.82 in income support, Jobseekers' Allowance, housing benefit and council tax benefit over 16 months.

Nuhu Gobir, prosecuting, said Department of Work and Pensions officials began looking into Pearson's background after a tip-off.
Chatline worker
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

"You richly deserve an immediate prison sentence. The majority of the British public who work hard and pay their taxes would rightly demand such a sentence.”

End Quote Christopher Clee QC Recorder

They found her initial benefit claims, dating from October 2004, were legitimate.

But they found that she had worked for two companies between 2005 and 2009.

One firm said that she had been paid around £600 a month as a sex-chat operator, while the second said she earned an unconfirmed amount as a self-employed psychic and tarot reader.

Pearson was arrested in October 2009 but denied she had been working, claiming she still suffered from anxiety and panic attacks.

She eventually admitted fraud, saying she had been in financial difficulties.

Ridiculed

Her barrister, Frank Phillips, said she had repaid £1,000 and would try to repay the rest.

However, in a pre-sentence report, Pearson complained that her business had suffered due to adverse publicity about the case.

Recorder Christopher Clee QC, passing sentence, said: "You claim that you have been ridiculed in the press and, as a result of which, work has diminished, and that is no great surprise.

"You richly deserve an immediate prison sentence. The majority of the British public who work hard and pay their taxes would rightly demand such a sentence."

But he said that sentencing guidelines meant he could jail Pearson only for a matter of days, adding that it was better that she gave something back to the community.

galway hotels
salvia divinorum for sale

Mr007

Number of posts : 117
Registration date : 2010-12-24

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum