Conveyancer jailed for £350k stamp duty fraud
A conveyancer who stole almost £352,500 in stamp duty land tax from clients and HMRC, has been jailed for three years and four months.
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The HMRC investigation found that Anthony Maragh lied on paperwork to undervalue his clients’ properties meaning the amount of tax owed was reduced. But he charged them the full amount and kept the difference.
Between 2008 and 2013, he under-declared the stamp duty land tax due on 43 property transactions, transferring £297,000 directly from the solicitor’s company accounts into his personal bank account. He also spent a further £55,000 directly from the Client Account on collectable antique Chinese gold bonds.
Martin Brown, Fraud Investigation Service at HMRC said:
“As a conveyancer, Maragh knew only too well that he was breaking the law and what the consequences of his actions would be. He abused the trust of his clients, stealing money that had been paid by them in good faith to meet their tax liabilities, to line his own pockets.
"Maragh thought that his scheme would go undetected, but he was wrong and is now behind bars with his reputation and career in tatters."
On sentencing, Her Honour Judge Poulet said:
“This was repeated offending and an abuse of position and trust with a large number of victims exposed to risk."
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