An accountant with a family-run engineering firm stole £140,000 to fund her child's private school education, foreign holidays and champagne lunches.
Alison Thomas, 52, of Tadworth Street, Tadworth, Surrey, was jailed for two-and-a-half years for the six-year fraud on the company.
She pleaded guilty at Croydon Crown Court to fraud by abuse of position, when she transferred £144,589 to her personal account between December, 2011 and January, 2018.
Thomas worked for seven years as the company accountant at the small firm in south London.
Her role gave her access to and control of the company’s financial dealings and she was viewed as a vital and trusted member of the team.
Thomas’ fraud was discovered when one of the firm’s owners began to investigate why the company was not performing as well as it should have been.
He became suspicious about how Thomas was able to fund a lifestyle of champagne lunches, foreign holidays and private education for her child on the wages she was being paid.
When the accounts were investigated further, he discovered regular payments were being made to Thomas’ personal account from the company and he confronted her.
She admitted the offence to him at that time.
PC Stewart Bold of the Met’s Economic Crime Hub in Lewisham, said:“Thomas used her position of trust to withdraw large funds from the company to fund her own lifestyle.
“She lived beyond her means and treated the company’s account as her own.
“In doing so she put the company in serious financial difficulty.
“Fortunately this did not lead to the loss of any jobs and therefore further financial struggles for its employees and their families.
“The sentence she has received demonstrates the severity of her actions and I hope will act as a deterrent to others.”