WOMAN STOLE DEAD CHILD'S IDENTITY AND PRETENDED TO BE A VICAR TO ILLEGALLY CLAIM £250,000 IN BENEFITS OVER 20 YEARS
A fraudster stole a dead child's identity
and pretended to be a vicar to claim £250,000 in benefits she was not entitled
to.
Yvonne Doyle conned the Department of Work
and Pensions and Milton Keynes Council for 20 years and has been ordered to pay
back £107,000 by a judge at Reading Crown Court.
The 64-year-old was jailed for seven years
in December after stealing a dead four-year-old's identity, using the name of
Carol Ann Naylor, who died in 1951.
She also posed as a vicar named Reverend
Naylor and took on the alias of Bridgette Meally, who died in 1999, to make the
claims.
Yvonne Doyle, who has been ordered to pay back £107,000 after illegally claiming £250,000 in benefits she was not entitled to |
The 64-year-old was jailed for seven years in December after stealing a dead four-year-old's identity, using the name of Carol Ann Naylor, who died in 1951 |
She was convicted of five counts of
possession of an identity document, (an improperly obtained UK/Irish driving
licence/passport) with intent, four counts of obtaining services by deception,
one count of obtaining a money transfer by deception and eight counts of
benefit frauds against the DWP and Milton Keynes Council, totalling £265,388
between 1990 and 2010.
Today the mother-of-two, from Milton
Keynes, Buckinghamshire, was ordered to repay £107,584 from her husband’s bank
account within six months or serve an extra two years imprisonment.
All the money recovered will be returned
to the victims as compensation.
During her trial, the court heard that
Doyle refused to appear before magistrates at an earlier hearing in January
2011, instead sending a letter claiming she was subject to a fatwa which had
led to the 'trumped-up' charges against her.
She claimed the charges against her were
fabricated and wrote: 'The alleged amounts have been manufactured and this was
done in order to give the false appearance of high value crime.'
Doyle fled South Africa in the 1980s after
being accused of dumping a swastika-emblazoned pig’s head on the steps of a
Synagogue.
The con-artist, who was then using then
going by the name Yvonne Malone, also faced a charge of attempted murder in
1988 after she allegedly shot and wounded a gardener at her property in Durban.
The conwoman, then 38, failed to appear
before a South African Court and was believed by the authorities to have fled
the country.
Doyle was branded 'clever, manipulative,
bold and wholly dishonest' by prosecutors during her trial.
Detective Inspector Gavin Tyrrell, from
Thames Valley Police, said: 'The Thames Valley Police Asset Recovery Team is
determined to remove assets from convicted criminals who benefit from their
crime.
'This case shows that anyone convicted of
acquisitive crimes will be pursued for their assets irrespective of where they
are held.
'This confiscation legislation is powerful
legislation for law enforcement agencies that where criminal assets are
identified they can be used to repay victims of crime and we will continue to
use it in this way.'
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