November 24, 2024
LN BUTTON

UK – Woman pleads guilty to GBP 50,000 insurance fraud

A woman who submitted GBP 50,000 in bogus travel and home insurance claims has pleaded guilty to fraud at the Old Bailey. 

Anita Debnath reported robberies to three different police forces in London, Leeds and Dublin before filing 12 identical claims to 11 insurers for cash and personal items she said had been stolen. 

A statement from the Insurance Fraud Enforcement Department (IFED) said the items included an Asus laptop, Chloé handbag, Louis Vuitton purse and Blackberry Bold 9900 and Motorola Aura phones. 

DC Cynthia Rushie, who led IFED’s investigation of the fraud, said: “In a bid to avoid detection, Debnath spread her reports out across two countries, three police forces and 11 insurers.” 

“Unfortunately for her, the new reality for fraudsters is that IFED is working in alliance with insurers and police forces to clamp down on people who still think they can make easy money at someone else’s expense, with little or no risk of ever being caught.” 

In February 2012, Debnath told the Metropolitan Police Service that she had been robbed close to London’s Trafalgar Square, before making a claim to an insurer. A month later, she reported to West Yorkshire Police that she had fallen victim to robbers in Leeds city centre, later submitting a claim to three further insurers.

In June, while on holiday in Dublin, she informed the Garda that she had been robbed, prior to entering a claim with seven other insurers. 

One month on, she contacted the Metropolitan Police Service and stated that she had been robbed again, this time in Kingston upon Thames, before making another claim to the insurer she had contacted in February. 

IFED said that to make her claims appear genuine, Debnath sent the insurers a copy of the relevant police report. IFED said Debnath’s deception was exposed when an insurer identified one of the claims as fraudulent and passed it on to IFED. In August, IFED detectives arrested Debnath in her flat on Haymarket in London. A search of her home revealed insurance claims documents, an Asus laptop and the police reports supplied to the insurers. Debnath was subsequently charged with 12 counts of fraud by false representation. 

ANITA DEBNATH 

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