UK prosecutor: 4 lawmakers face criminal charges over expense scandal

By David Stringer, AP
Friday, February 5, 2010

4 UK lawmakers charged over expense scandal

LONDON — Four British lawmakers will face criminal charges — and the prospect of jail — over Britain’s expense claim scandal, the country’s chief prosecutor said Friday.

Keir Starmer, director of public prosecution, said three members of the House of Commons, and one member of the House of Lords had been charged with offenses of false accounting.

Investigations into six cases followed the exposure last year of the misuse of claims by hundreds of British lawmakers who used taxpayers’ money to fund expenses on everything from swank second homes to horse manure, porn movies and a mole catcher.

During the scandal, Brown saw nine ministers quit and suffered heavy losses in local and European elections as angry voters deserted mainstream parties. Two House of Commons legislators have been ousted and about 150 others won’t contest the next national election as a result.

Starmer said three governing Labour Party lawmakers in the House of Commons — Elliot Morley, David Chaytor and Jim Devine — and a Conservative Party member in the House of Lords, Paul White, known as Lord Hanningfield, had been charged.

All four men will appear at London’s City of Westminster court on March 11.

“In four cases, we have concluded that there is sufficient evidence to bring criminal charges and that it is in the public interest to charge the individuals concerned,” Starmer said.

Charges of false accounting carry a possible jail term of up to seven years.

Morley, who was once Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s envoy on climate change, faces two charges of false accounting. He is alleged to have billed taxpayers 16,000 pounds ($24,000) for mortgage interest payments on a loan that had already been paid off. Morley insists he later paid the money back.

Chaytor faces three charges of false accounting. He is accused of using false invoices to bill the public for IT services worth almost 2,000 pounds ($3,145). The lawmaker also is alleged to have wrongly claimed 13,000 pounds ($18,000) after by submitting bills on his paid mortgage.

Devine is charged with two offenses and is alleged to have made claims for cleaning and stationery using false invoices.

Starmer said that White faces six charges of false accounting and is alleged to have submitted claims for overnight stays in London on occasions when records show that he had in fact driven home.

Members of the House of Lords have a different expense system to those in the House of Commons, and are paid 140 pounds ($220) per night if they need to stay in London but live outside the capital.

Starmer said prosecutors had dismissed complaints against a second member of the House of Lords — Anthony Clarke, a Labour Party member.

The chief prosecutor said a sixth case is still being considered.

A report issued on Thursday into the expense scandal ordered 392 current and former legislators to repay a total of 1.12 million pounds ($1.7 million).

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