A chief executive at Age Concern is facing ‘significant’ jail time for pocketing more than £700,000 of the charity’s cash during an eight-year fraud.
John Briers, who at one time earned almost £6,000 per month, paid 60 of the charity’s cheques into his own bank account.
He also awarded himself 11 unauthorised bonuses and 19 additional pension contributions when he was running the South Tyneside branch in Beach Road, South Shields.
The 57-year-old denied three offences of fraud between January 2007 and August 2015 during a trial at Newcastle Crown Court.
But on Thursday, the 57-year-old was unanimously found guilty of three counts of fraud.
John Briers, a chief executive at Age Concern, has been warned that he faces ‘significant’ jail time for pocketing more than £700,000 of the the charity’s cash during an eight-year fraud
He will be sentenced on May 24 after Judge Tim Gittins has been supplied with information from the charity and others affected by the fraud.
Judge Tim Gittins remanded Briers in custody and told him to prepare for a significant prison sentence.
The judge adjourned sentencing in order to get information from the charity about the impact of the offending.
‘You have been convicted by the jury, on clear and compelling evidence, of a significant fraud on a charity you were employed to protect the financial interests of,’ Judge Gittins warned Briers.
‘The sentence in due course will be a significant custodial sentence.
‘I will determine the length of that sentence in the light of everything put before me.
‘In the circumstances, I’m afraid you will be remanded in custody.’
Christopher Rose, defending, had made an application for Briers to be allowed bail until the sentence hearing arguing that he suffers health problems, including sleep apnoea, but it was refused.
John Briers will be sentenced on May 24 after Judge Tim Gittins has been supplied with information from Age Concern and others affected by the fraud
The court heard Briers, a married father who worked at the charity for 21 years, was suspended from his post when financial manager Graham Cassidy noticed a supporting document submitted by him looked fake.
‘The reason it caused me concern, the reason it came so quickly to mind, was the fact the VAT was wrong,’ Mr Cassidy told jurors.
Mr Cassidy said the appearance of the document itself also raised suspicion.
He said: ‘It didn’t feel like a good quality invoice, it didn’t feel like a real invoice.
‘It looked like something that had been photocopied.’
Mr Cassidy said he spoke out about his worries when he was dealing with the invoice in August 2015, which resulted in an investigation.
The court heard a full staff meeting was called at the organisation and all employees were warned to have no contact with Briers, who was on holiday at the time.
Mr Cassidy added: ‘Mr Briers was being suspended pending investigation.’
The court heard investigators found templates of blank invoices for firms the organisation had dealt with when Briers’ office was searched.
Prosecutor Anthony Dunne told the court: ‘The defendant is charged with three offences of fraud by abuse of position.
‘The position he held was that he was chief executive of a charity, Age Concern South Tyne.
‘The case against him is he dishonestly used that position to fraudulently pay to himself large amounts of Age Concern’s money.
‘He made most of those payments simply by writing out cheques to himself.
‘He then covered his tracks by pretending that those fraudulent payments were either payments to companies who had supplied good and services to Age Concern or bonus payments that were approved by the charity’s board of trustees or special payments, also agreed by the board, or a sub-committee of the board.
‘The defendant created false documents to explain those fraudulent payments.
‘In the end, he was caught out because one of the documents he created contained obvious mistakes and the finance manager with the charity noticed.
‘In total, he stole over £700,000 from the charity through these means.’
The court heard the money was taken from both branches of the organisation – one being the charity, which he was chief executive of, and the other was the trading company, which he was secretary of.
Briers told jurors at Newcastle Crown Court that he was entitled to the payments and bonuses that went into his bank and that he also used the account to pay cash for services used by the charity
Briers pocketed £433,236 through fraudulent cheques which he claimed were for suppliers.
He paid himself £104,560 in bonuses, including a special, duplicate monthly salary of £5,756, on one occasion, and he used £169,703 of the charity’s cash to top-up his pension.
Mr Dunne said Briers used fake invoices and even fraudulent minutes of board meetings in a bid to cover his tracks.
Briers, of Woodstock Road, Gateshead, made no comment during a police interview.
He told jurors, from the witness box during the trial, that he was entitled to the payments and bonuses that went into his bank and that he also used the account to pay cash for services used by the charity.
Briers claimed the bogus documents were simply ‘placeholders’ to assist with accounting when the originals were lost and were never intended to look real.
He had claimed large sums of money would go through his account and be kept in the safe at his office to pay for services used by the charity and were never hidden from colleagues.
Detective Sergeant Dave Henderson, of Northumbria Police, said: ‘Today, John Briers has been found guilty after trial for offences relating to the fraud he committed while abusing the trust of his employers at Age Concern South Tyneside.
‘He chose to commit these offences by trying to cover his tracks, using false documents and therefore gaining more than £700,000.
‘This amount of money is a substantial amount for a charity trying to help those most vulnerable in our society.
‘This type of criminal behaviour will always be investigated and pursued. Today, he has rightly been brought to justice for those actions.
‘Police would like to thank all those at the charity for their support during what has been a long ongoing investigation and subsequent trial. He is now remanded in custody until May 25, 2018.’