Freitag, 15. Juni 2012

Smith accused on second home claims-LIVEJOURNAL

http://xabatmontgomery.livejournal.com/7509.html

A civil servant sacked for leaking embarrassing disclosures is planning to 

launch a private prosecution against Jacqui Smith, accusing her of expenses 

fraud.
Ms Smith claimed £116,000 in second home allowance on her family home 

in Redditch while listing a London house she shared with her sister as her 

main home.
But Christopher Galley, a former Home Office official, said the former 

Home Secretary was more often at the Worcestershire address.
He said: "We are accusing her of fraud by misrepresentation of her second 

home allowance. We are suggesting that her main residence is in Redditch 

and not her sister's home in Peckham."
Mr Galley and Tory immigration spokesman Damian Green were arrested 

over leaks of Home Office documents but neither was charged. Mr Galley 

was then sacked from his job in April following a disciplinary hearing. He 

has instructed Bark and Co solicitors and is to file a complaint with 

Westminster Magistrates Court accusing Ms Smith of fraud by 

misrepresentation, he said.
Mr Galley, who is now research director of the Sunlight Centre for Open 

Politics, a pressure group, is also using the Freedom of Information Act to 

request details of Ms Smith's appointment diary.
Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards John Lyon is already investigating 

a complaint against her over her expenses.
Ms Smith could not immediately be contacted for comment.
When details of her claims became public, she denied any wrongdoing.
At the time she said: "I have tried to do what I think is the right thing for 

the taxpayer, for my ability to do my job as Home Secretary, for my family 

in terms of where they live. I think I have tried to do the right thing."

Sunlight Cops Will Prosecute Jacqui Smith

http://xabatmontgomery.livejournal.com/7794.html

As revealed exclusively in this morning’s Daily Mail, The Sunlight Centre for Open Politics have instructed Bark and Co solicitors to prepare to prosecute the former Home Secretary for fraud.
The Sunlight COPs are now raising thousands of pounds for the case. Please donate to our cause by cheque, card or paypal here.
Here is what the Daily Mail had to say:
Whitehall mole will prosecute Jacqui Smith over expenses
By TIM SHIPMAN
A Whitehall whistleblower is to launch a private prosecution against Jacqui Smith, accusing her of expenses fraud. Miss Smith, who resigned as Home Secretary last month, racked up a £116,000 allowance on her family house in Redditch, while claiming her main residence as her sister’s spare bedroom in London.
Christopher Galley, a former Home Office civil servant, claims however that she spent more time at the West Midlands address. Jacqui Smith: Claimed £116,000 Under the banner ‘Bringing Jacqui to Justice’, he is preparing to file a complaint with Westminster Magistrates Court accusing her of fraud by misrepresentation.
Mr Galley, 27, was fired last November after he was exposed for leaking documents on the Government’s immigration policy to Tory spokesman Damian Green. He is now the research director of the Sunlight Centre for Open Politics, a pressure group set up to campaign for transparency. The group yesterday instructed lawyers with the London firm Bark & Co, which specialises in fraud and hunting down benefit cheats.
Mr Galley worked for two years as a diary manager to ministerial special advisers and was in the private office of ministers Vernon Coaker and Tony McNulty. He had access to Miss Smith’s diary between January and November last year, when he was fired. He said: ‘From what I know having seen Jacqui Smith’s diary and having watched her daily routine, I saw that she came in on Monday afternoon and left on Thursday evening. ’From what I can see Redditch was her main home and London was her second home.’ Neighbours of Miss Smith’s sister have claimed the former minister was rarely there for more than a few days a week. Mr Galley will sign an affidavit detailing his own information on Miss Smith’s movements.
The group has already made a freedom of information demand, calling on the Home Office to produce Miss Smith’s appointments diary. Last night it sent another request for details of her movements from the Whitehall car service. It is working to raise the six-figure sum needed to fight the case in court. Harry Cole, of the centre, said: ‘There is so much public anger about expenses and the police have shown no willingness to take up cases, so we’re taking the law into our own hands. ‘This will be an expensive test case but it could lead to dozens of others.’ In an interview last week, Miss Smith said she quit the Cabinet because of the ‘hurt’ she felt when it emerged that her husband had charged two pay-per-view pornographic films to the taxpayer. While arguing vociferously that she spent most of her time in London, she has not provided documented proof to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards John Lyon. A possible precedent is former Tory MP Michael Trend, who was forced to stand down over his expenses claims. He claimed in the same way as Miss Smith while he was staying with a friend in London. He had to repay £90,277.