Betting-Shop Blarney: O'Connor |
A
fast-talking betting-shop swindler, who boozed away the profits of
his audacious scam, which involved tricking staff into believing he
placed winning bets, has received a suspended prison sentence.
He
intimidated and confused betting shop cashiers into believing he had
won bets, losing the bookmakers around £10,000
John
O’Connor, 33, of St Mary's Road, Ealing, conned staff at 14
branches of Ladbrokes across London and the UK over around 18 months,
from July 2012.
He
used a number of what the betting industry refers to as “slow count
fraud” tactics, to fool staff into believing he had won bets when,
in some cases, he had not even paid his stake.
Tactics
included placing a bet but then distracting the cashier - sometimes
with the help of friends - by asking questions, becoming rowdy or
placing a series of small, obscure bets at the same time.
This
would allow him time to see if his runner was likely to win.
If
it won, he would hand over his stake and claim the profit, or else
pretend he had already paid and ask only for his winnings.
He
would then place the non-existent stake on another bet and if he
lost, he would leave without paying the stake.
On The Con: O'Connor In Action |
He
also travelled around the country to Clevedon, Somerset;
Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottingham; Chester; Standish, Greater
Manchester; Sandy, Bedfordshire; Chelmsford, Essex and
Weston-super-Mare, Somerset.
Ladbrokes
reported the offences to the Metropolitan Police Service in April
2013, after he carried out the con at a branch on Oxford Street,
Westminster.
Detectives
circulated CCTV images of him to police services around the country
and Hertfordshire police officers arrested him in July 2014.
O’Connor
was charged with 15 counts of a fraud by misrepresentation, to which
he pleaded guilty.
While
on bail, awaiting sentence, he carried out the same offence at
William Hill, Tyburn Road, Edington, Birmingham on December 28, last
year.
It
is believed that he may have carried out the scam on many more
occasions.
O'Connor
received eighteen months imprisonment, suspended for two years and
was placed on probation for twelve months, which includes a
four-month alcohol treatment order.
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