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HBOS Reading scandal: convictions, sentencing and practitioner guidance on historic corruption, fraudulent trading and money laundering in England and Wales

Published on: 10 February 2017

Published by a LexisNexis Corporate Crime expert
Legal News
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Article summary

Original news Senior HBOS banker and associates found guilty of corruption, LNB News 31/01/2017 141

A former HBOS manager, a financial adviser and their network were found guilty of corruption, fraudulent trading and laundering funds after operating a racket that eventually left the bank facing losses of about £250m in total. Ex-banker David Mills and cohorts plotted to line their own pockets, forcing companies into collapse along the way. Their conduct deliberately prioritised personal gain, with severe consequences for the companies involved and for the businesses affected.

What is the background to the investigation in this case?

On 30 January 2017, Judge Beddoe at Southwark Crown Court passed sentence on five banking staff and private business advisers for offences tied to a £245m fraud on HBOS customers between 2003 and 2007. This stemmed from a complex, six-year Thames Valley Police inquiry, codenamed Operation Hornet. It became the force’s longest and most intricate case, with an estimated cost of £7m. A Thames Valley Police press release stated the Financial Services Authority (as it then was) referred the matter to the Thames Valley Economic Crime Unit because the offences arose within HBOS’s impaired assets team in Reading. The prosecuting authority was the...

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