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A Carer Stole £ 325,000 From Her Family, Including Grandmother Due to Gambling Addiction

Clare Roughley cheated her mother, father, grandmother, and the woman she looked after as a result of her gambling addiction.

Bank Cards Over a KeyboardThe dishonest caretaker betrayed his mother, father, grandmother, and the woman with special needs she cared for more than £ 325k.

For six years, she hunted down her family using Internet bank accounts to confiscate a large amount of money that she had used to meet her betting addiction expense.

A judge today criticized a previous bank worker for using her secret information to systematically, cruelly, and brutally withdraw “every penny” from accounts.

Roughley deceives a few of her family members to privately access his mother, father, and grandmother’s online bank accounts so that she can get money anytime.

Because their charges have been automatically paid electronically, and her family usually only withdraw cash when needed.

Peter Hussey Remarks

Attorney Peter Hussey told the Royal Court of Liverpool that she took £ 58,221 from her grandmother Theresa Leyland, £ 158,735 from her mother Delwyn Roughley, and £ 91,437 from her father Raymond Roughley.

Faced with issues, such as card rejection or questions about missed billing deadlines, she continued lying to her family.

Her offenses were not solved until March 2020, when the parents found that their bank accounts were empty, and Hussey recounted how Mr. Roughley was “shocked to find that his account balance had dropped to zero.”

The lawyer told the judge that Roughley stole money from her mother and father’s account. Roughley also created her loans and credit cards and linked them with her parent’s accounts.

Roughley, a mother of two, also stalked her grandmother both during her lifetime and after she died in 2019, leaving her struggling with her property even after leaving her £ 6,000.

Moreover, she also had access to Jean Almond’s account, the person she was a carer to and usually went shopping with. Roughley took £ 17,220 from her.

She also confessed to the scam by creating a credit card in the name of Ms. Almond. She used that credit card to withdraw £ 8,698.

The Statements of the Offense

Mr. Hussey read out emotional remarks in the name of the Roughley parents and the Almond family. When everything came to the surface, Mr. Roughley revealed that he and his wife hugged each other, cried and thought, ‘What did he do to deserve this?”

He also said that he can’t think about what his daughter has done to him. He would not have thought his daughter could do it.”

When she found out about her daughter’s crime on March 11 last year, Ms. Recalling stated that she felt helpless.

She also added that Clare was always behaving the right way, therefore, she never expected her to cheat the way she did.

 ”We had believed Clare to be a valued member of Jean’s care team and had a special relationship with Jean. The realisation Clare was stealing from someone as vulnerable as Jean was a body blow” – said Mr. Almond.

Jeremy Lasker’s defense argued that his former client was a good person and regretted her activities.

He told the Court that Clare was stealing to offset her growing losses in betting.

He also said he does not accept this as an apology. According to him, there is no justification for what Clare did, however, the court needs to know how she was struggling with gambling addiction for more than six years.

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