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A MARRIED COUPLE who created sixty false identities, donned disguises and paid homeless people for their PPS numbers in order to defraud banks and credit unions of several hundred thousand euro have been jailed for four and two years.
Former solicitors Keith Flynn (46) who was jailed for four years, and Lyndsey Clarke (37) who was jailed for two years, previously pleaded guilty to fraud charges at Cork Circuit Criminal Court.
The couple, who had an address in Blarney Street in Cork, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud arising out of a garda investigation into the theft of funds from a number of banks and financial institutions over an 18-month period.
Detective Garda Alan McCarthy told the court that the pair created 80 fake accounts using 60 false identities in order to defraud Bank of Ireland, AIB, Ulster Bank, and a number of credit unions by obtaining personal bank loans dishonestly.
He said the criminal activity of the pair began in January 2017 when they started applying for personal bank loans using fake identities.
The couple, who got to know each other when Clarke went to work for Flynn at his legal practice eight years ago, took out a number of loans in financial institutions using fake identities.
The banks and credit unions were at a loss of €394,804 following the criminal activity of the duo. Just over €100,000 has now been recovered.
Prosecuting Barrister Siobhan Lankford, SC, said the pair were in effect running an “identity factory”.
She said that without a guilty plea the hearing of a trial would have involved a “Herculean task” given the huge amount of documentation involved.
Detective Garda McCarthy said the couple applied for loans using fake driving licences obtained online, fake bank statements and fake payslips. They even paid members of the homeless community for the their PPS numbers in order to use them in their criminal activity.
They also used fake Virgin Media, Airtricity, and Electric Ireland bills and had thirty SIM cards with various contact numbers.
Suspicious activities
In September 2017, the Financial Crime Unit in Bank of Ireland became suspicious of activities in six accounts and contacted gardai.
An investigation was subsequently launched and in July of 2018 a search was carried out at an apartment the pair lived in at Sunday’s Well in Cork.
The couple were not present for the search. Gardaí recovered laptops, wigs used for disguises when they went to banks and ATM’s, and a locked safe. Close to €100,000 was recovered from the safe which was opened after Clarke and Flynn voluntarily handed over a key.
When gardaí opened the safe they found 21 fake Irish driving licences, 19 fake bank cards and 16 Credit Union books in different names.
Detective Garda McCarthy said the duo had opened 19 fake accounts with Bank of Ireland in Cork and Dublin, 19 fake credit union accounts, 19 fake accounts with AIB and three fake accounts with Ulster Bank. Loans were approved with all these insitutions.
They also had fake accounts with An Post, Permanent TSB and KBC but no loans were approved on those accounts.
Detective Garda McCarthy said the loan applications were a “quick enough process” for the pair who had an extensive operation in place.
He said the defendants co operated fully with gardaí upon their arrest. They made admissions of guilt in garda interviews in August of 2018. They conceded they were motivated purely by financial gain.
Detective Garda McCarthy said Flynn opened his first law practice in 2006 in Cork before opening a second in Dublin in 2012. Clarke began working for Flynn in 2012.
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The court heard that if the case had proceeded to trial it would have involved an extensive document trail.
Defence
Alice Fawsitt, SC, representing Clarke said her client and Flynn had voluntarily handed over the keys for the safe. She stressed whilst they had robbed from banks they saved the state an enormous amount of money by entering a guilty plea and avoiding a trial.
She told Judge Sean O’Donnabhain that her client had a history of depression.
She said that at no time had Clarke attempted to blame her husband but instead insisted she was an equal participant in the scheme.
Fawsitt said Clarke lost her father in her twenties and her mother has also died. Clarke is an only child without family support other than an aunt.
She said her client had no idea how she had gotten herself in to this situation.
Seamus Roche, SC, representing Flynn said his client had lost his business and was depressed having gone bankrupt. The court heard that pair had shown an aberration of judgement in getting involved in the criminal activity.
He said his client, who entered custody at the last court hearing, was engaging well in prison. He is cooking in the kitchen and studying.
The pair were struck off as solicitors in 2018 for matters completely separate to this garda investigation.
They had been suspended in 2016 but were not struck off until two years later. They were struck off for not performing their duties properly in a practice which was deemed to be “chaotic”. The pair had ceased practice in November 2016.
When the married couple first appeared before Cork District Court in connection with the charges they were granted free aid. The court heard Flynn was working as a chef while Clarke was on a back to work scheme.
Sentence
Today at Cork Circuit Criminal Court, Judge O’Donnabhain said that the guilty pleas and level of cooperation had avoided the need for a lengthy trial.
In the region of €100,000 recovered by gardaí will be distributed to the various financial institutions impacted by the fraud.
Judge O’Donnabhain said that given the enormous work carried out by an official at Bank of Ireland to unearth the fraud their compensation should be higher than a pro rata calculation.
He commended Bank of Ireland Financial Crimes Unit for uncovering the fraud and stressed that all of the other institutions were oblivious to the deception that was going on. He said the unnamed individual at the bank had helped gardaí substantially in their investigation.
Judge O’Donnabhain stressed that that the married couple engaged in a “significant crime” which involved a substantial amount of organisation.
He emphasised the pair had got themselves involved in “elaborate, criminally purposeful scheme” to extract money from financial institutions.
“It was thought out. It was complex. They are completely culpable. They are both highly educated well established persons.”
Judge O’Donnabhain added that they were both guilty of “criminal deviousness.”
Giving the level of co operation and the guilty plea Judge O’Donnabhain jailed Flynn for four years. Taking the personal circumstances of Clarke in to account he jailed her for two years.
The pair practiced at Keith Flynn & Company. Clarke is a former Fine Gael candidate who put her name forward for the party in the Cork North West Ward in the 2014 Cork City Council local elections. She received just over 300 votes.
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Had a woman tell me one night, in coppers no less ” get away outta that there’s a smell of bengy off ye” that was about 15 years ago and I still have no idea what bengy is… It was Lynx Africa I told her!!
I’ve lived in a few countries and Dublin women are definitely the most obnoxious and stuck up. I’ve seen a lot of my mates (no they weren’t hammered) get laughed at/told to p off by groups of very average looking women when they could have had a bit of banter or politely decline.
Thankfully I’ve never suffered it myself as I’m deadly looking but Dublin girls really need to up their game. Poland and Czech Republic have the hottest and least up themselves women. Great combo.
I love Irish men, once I get chatting to them that is, but in a nightclub Irish men can be aggressive messes (drunk, leering and just grab you) and at this point you just want to get away!
Honestly some nights the only thing you want to do is chat to your mates, have a few drinks and dance without anyone bothering you.
Also no one has brought this up but groping? How many women have been groped simply as a come on as they move through a night club or the dance floor? Not so much in Dublin but down the country! New Years Eve in Carlow was traumatic.
No woman likes a man who is hammered off his face. …. and they tend to be just that on a night out. Most chat up lines are either immensely cheesy, which is a pukefest, or immenseley vulgar… same outcome! If a guy stayed half sober I imagine he’d get a lot further :)
Any women who spend the first 17-18 years of their lives in a convent are bound to hold certain prejudices. But because it’s so common in Ireland it’s often overlooked.
I’d always be up for a bit of banter because some guys can be very funny with their chat up lines. There was an awkward moment where a guy sidled up and attempted flirtation while the husband was standing beside me. We all had a laugh about it and chatted throughout the night. If a guy chances his arm and keeps it respectful, don’t tell him to F off, take it as a compliment and if you’re not interested don’t be a cow about it. I don’t like when a guy gets aggressive or messy and then threatening and abusive when you decline his sweaty, groping advances.
This site seems to really hate any form humour??? But they seem to back the clowns in government without knowing “taylor rules” within the E.U. structure for here?
In ireland its always the pub,if you see a woman you like on wednesday at the petrol pumps ask her out,women arent always in the pub to meet men,they go out sometimes to just dance and dont want a man
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