A
fish and chip shop manager, who stole £141,000 from the successful
business to clear his troubled son's drug debt, has been jailed for
fourteen months.
Gary
Chapman, 52, of Fairway Avenue, West Drayton helped found the
business with his friend of thirty years and was trusted to record
the income and bank the takings.
He
pleaded guilty at Isleworth Crown Court to stealing the sum from
'Jack's' in Hillingdon Road, Uxbridge (pictured) between June, 2010 and July,
last year.
As
a 20% shareholder in the company Chapman's actual benefit was
calculated as £116,000 and his matrimonial home has been made
subject to a court-ordered restraint as confiscation is pursued.
The
first-time offender, who opened the shop in 1999 with business pal
David King, was so successful the £250,000 start-up loan was repaid
in five years.
“The
guilty plea is a genuine indication of his remourse and shame,”
said Mr. Alastair Smith, defending. “The burden has weighed heavily
on him.
“When
the police showed up at his premises he did not seem agitated, as if
he accepted the day was coming, and he kept meticulous details of the
money he had taken.
“He
was aware that what he was doing was wrong and was concerned about
that fact.
“He
did suffer from a constant moral nagging and had a vain hope that one
day he would be able to put things right.”
The
father-of-two, who also has two step-sons, is now divorcing his wife
and his half of the matrimonial home has been valued at £51,000 for
compensation purposes.
He
immediately signed-over his 20% stake in the business when Mr. King
discovered the thefts, which has been valued at £24,000, but Chapman
claims his share is worth nearer £100,000.
“He
has always worked in fish and chip shops and up until now has never
stolen a single penny,” added Mr. Smith.
“Mr.
Chapman dismissed his son just before these offences and his son
disappeared from the local area.
“A
group of drug users then approached him and said his son's
thirty-eight thousand pound debt, plus interest, has transferred to
him as far as they were concerned.
“They
made it clear paying-off the debt was linked to the long-term welfare
of the defendant and his son and he agreed to pay five thousand
pounds a week.
“His
first mistake was not to go to the police and his second was to take
a twenty thousand pound loan from a loan shark and in this context
the defendant started taking money.
“He
noted it all down and hoped one day he would be able to pay it all
back.
“He
stole from the company in which he had dedicated over a decade of his
life and now he has lost his good name and the assets he has built
up.
“He
has lost his marriage, his mental equilibrium and risks losing his
liberty and has gained nothing for himself.”
Judge
Paul Dugdale told Chapman: “You did it to benefit your son who had
got himself into a lot of difficulties.
“The
trouble I have is that this was an awful lot of money and a high
breach of trust.
“This
is a very serious offence of dishonesty that has to be met by a
custodial sentence.
“You
took cash out of that business and you kept in the safe at work a
full record of all the money you had taken.
'In
my view that shows a degree of understanding that the money was not
yours and had to go back.
“I
can reduce the sentence because of the unusual circumstances of you
taking the money not for your benefit, but the benefit of your son
and you kept a record of every penny.”
Chapman
must also pay a £100 victim surcharge.
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