September 4, 2015 2.25 pm This story is over 110 months old

Fifteen accused of £12m fraud appear in court in Lincoln

Conditional bail: Fifteen people accused of fraud involving a Lincolnshire NHS trust appeared at Lincoln Magistrates Court.

Fifteen people accused of involvement in a £12 million fraud committed against a number of NHS Trusts and other public and private bodies appeared before Lincoln Magistrates Court on Friday, September 4.

The charges follow Operation Tarlac, a four year investigation by police in both Lincolnshire and Guernsey with assistance from NHS Protect, which was set up to counter fraud in the health service.

The alleged scam involved people contacting organisations masquerading as legitimate construction companies contracted by them.

The fraudsters allegedly claimed that their bank details had changed, and provided account numbers which instead belonged to companies owned or controlled by the defendants.

The scam, known as ‘divert fraud’, involved payments for construction works were being diverted to other accounts.

Police investigations began following a complaint from the Lincolnshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust which provides mental health and learning disability services together with drug and alcohol treatment programmes.

A total of 12 frauds involving more than £12 million and seven attempted frauds involving a further £3 million are alleged to have been identified; mainly involving NHS Trusts but also involving two PLCs and a number of other public bodies, including the States of Guernsey.

Oluwatoyin Allison, 48, from London; Stephen Tyndale, 45, from Southwark, London; James Eman, 33, from Redditch, Worcs; Ali Akbar, 31, from Redditch; Arif Habib, 54, of Bearsden, Glasgow; Asif Habib, 51, of Dubai; Monica Thomson, 38, from Airdrie; Imtiaz Khoda, 42, from Dubai; and Kalpesh P, 43, from Dubai; are all accused of conspiracy to defraud and conspiracy to launder money between January 1, 2011 and July 31 2012.

They are alleged to have conspired, together with Bayo Awonorin and with others, to defraud public bodies and other organisations by dishonestly inducing or seeking to induce such bodies and/or organisations to divert monies due to be paid to companies holding construction contracts with the said public bodies and/or organisations, into bank accounts which were not in fact in the name of, or under the control of, the companies entitled to received such payments.

All nine together with Abdul Ghaffar, 66, from Redditch; Tariq Khan, 33, from Dubai; Zahid Muhammed, 46, from Glasgow; Yagnesh P, 44, from Staines, Middlesex, and Shazia Nisa, 33, face a further charge of conspiracy to launder money between January 1, 2011 and July 31, 2012.

They are alleged to have conspired with Bayo Awonorin, Walter Wagbatsoma, Zia Malak and others, to convert and/or transfer criminal property knowing or intending that the same property constituted or represented, in whole or in part-directly or indirectly, his own or another person’s benefit from criminal conduct.

A 15th defendant Oghogho Ehanire, 41, of Preston, is accused of money laundering between June 14, 2011 and December 31, 2011.

The defendants were all committed to Lincoln Crown Court where they will appear on September 18. They were all granted conditional bail.