SCOTTISH CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION REFERRAL IN APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE BY MARK CONWAY AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2020] ScotHC HCJAC_48 (28 November 2020)


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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> SCOTTISH CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION REFERRAL IN APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE BY MARK CONWAY AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2020] ScotHC HCJAC_48 (28 November 2020)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2020/2020_HCJAC_48.html
Cite as: [2020] ScotHC HCJAC_48, [2020] HCJAC 48, 2020 GWD 36-472, 2020 SCCR 451

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
[2020] HCJAC 48
HCA/2020/223/XC
Lord Justice General
Lord Menzies
Lord Turnbull
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD TURNBULL
in a
SCOTTISH CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION REFERRAL
in
APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE
by
MARK CONWAY
Appellant
against
HER MAJESTY’S ADVOCATE
Respondent
Appellant: Party
Respondent: Farquharson QC AD; the CrownAgent
28 October 2020
[1]       On 2 August 2017, in the High Court at Edinburgh, the appellant pled guilty by
section 76 procedure to an indictment in the following terms:
“Between 6 August 2009 and 25 May 2016, both dates inclusive, at Dundee House,
50 North Lindsay Street, Dundee, 44 Latch Road, Brechin and elsewhere you Mark
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Andrew Conway, whilst employed as an IT Officer for Dundee City Council did
form a fraudulent scheme to obtain money from Dundee City Council and in
pursuance of said scheme you did on various occasions enter onto Dundee City
Council computerised payment ledger entries purporting to represent sums due to
genuine suppliers to Dundee City Council with associated bank account payment
instructions made out to bank accounts under your own control, and you did thus
induce Dundee City Council to transfer money to you to which you knew you were
not entitled and you did thus obtain £1,065,085.32 by fraud.”
The sentencing judge adjourned the diet until 24 August 2017 to permit the preparation of a
criminal justice social work report. On that date he imposed a sentence of 5 years and
4 months imprisonment, restricted from the period of 8 years which he would otherwise
have imposed but for the appellant’s early plea of guilty. Sentence was backdated to
2 August 2017, on which date the appellant was remanded in custody.
[2]       In August 2019 the appellant applied to the Scottish Criminal Cases Review
Commission (“the SCCRC”) inviting it to refer his case to this court. In its statement of
reasons dated 27 March 2020, the SCCRC referred the appellant’s sentence on the basis that
there was fresh evidence showing that, after the appellan t had been sentenced, Dundee City
Council had recovered sums equal to the value of the fraud and that had this information
been available at the time of sentencing it may have had a material bearing upon the
sentence selected. Having regard to disposals in similar cases where offenders had been
convicted of crimes of dishonesty involving significant values, the SCCRC also considered
that the sentence imposed may have been outside the range of sentences which the judge at
first instance, applying his mind to all the relevant factors, could reasonably have considered
appropriate. In due course the appellant lodged a note of appeal reflecting the basis upon
which his case was referred by the SCCRC. The relevant parts of the note of appeal were
grounds 1a, 1b and 2a.
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The appellant’s offending, mitigation and sentence
[3]       In August 2017 the appellant was 51 years old. He had been employed by Dundee
City Council between 1986 and 2016 as an IT officer specialising in financial IT systems and
was regarded as the council’s primary specialist in this field. The council used a custom
financial computer system for the payment of monies to those who supplied services to, or
on behalf of, the council. The appellant had unrestricted access to all components of the
system for the purpose of ensuring its proper running. During 2009 the appellant fell into
debt due to his use of online gambling websites. On 6 August he made an entry in the
council’s financial system purporting to relate to payment due to a fuel supplier but which
contained the payment details of his own building society account. That initial entry was for
payment of a sum of almost £18,000. Thereafter, and up until May 2016, he continued to
engage in the fraudulent process which he had created. When the scheme was identified an
investigation was launched which concluded that the appellant had set up a total of 57
payments of sums of money to which he was not entitled, with the individual sums
obtained ranging between £5,898 and £27,557. The total sum dishonestly obtained by the
appellant from the council was £1,065,085.32, of which he returned £7,337.58 at the time of
the investigation.
[4]       At the sentencing diet the judge was told that the underlying reason for the
appellant’s offending was the personal debt which he had accrued from a long-standing
gambling addiction. He had re-mortgaged his house twice in an attempt to manage his
debts. His initial aim had been to pay back all of the money obtained from his employer.
His anticipated means of doin g so was by future gambling winnings, which never
materialised. After a few years his level of gambling was such that he appreciated he had no
realistic hope of ever winning enough to repay the sums obtained. All of the money
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received through the fraudulent scheme had been gambled away. The level of the
appellant’s gambling led to him being referred to as a “VIP” client by gambling companies.
He was routinely incentivised to continue betting by the provision of presents, invitations to
attend hospitality events and free bets being credited to his account as a “reward”. Despite
inviting the court to take account of the level of encouragement which had been engaged in
by the gambling companies, counsel who appeared for the appellant informed the judge that
he was not suggesting that there had been any breach of the Gambling Act 2005.
[5]       The judge was invited to take account of the efforts which the appellant had gone to
by way of assisting, to the extent that he could, in reducing the extent of the overall loss to
Dundee City Council. Although he was told that there was no realistic prospect of the full
sum specified in the charge being recovered, the judge was informed that the appellant had
consented to the recovery of his entitlement to a lump sum and annual pension, allowing the
council to recoup a sum of £258,966.15. He did not intend to contest confiscation procedures
under the Proceeds of Crime Act and had instructed his legal representatives to seek early
resolution of that matter with the Crown. It was expected that this would result in the loss
to him of the net equity in his home, valued at approximately £49,000.
[6]       The appellant lodged a note of appeal challenging the sentence imposed submitting,
amongst other points, that the sentencing judge had failed to give adequate weight to the
mitigating factors relied upon. Leave to appeal was refused by the first sift judge who stated
that all maters had been properly taken into account and that the appeal was “plainly
without merit and unarguable”. There was no application to the second sift.
New information
[7]       In his application to the SCCRC the appellant included an extract of a copy of the
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publicly available Dundee City Council Scrutiny Committee Report into his conduct, dated
December 2017. That report noted that, in common with other Local Authorities, Dundee
City Council was required to have a fidelity guarantee insurance policy providing cover
against loss through the dishonesty of employees. The report revealed that by the end of
2017 the council had recovered a sum in excess of £1 million. In response to the SCCRC, the
council advised that £335,923 had been recovered from their insurers, £258,966 had been
recovered from the appellant’s pension and an ex-gratia payment had been received from
William Hill Bookmakers in the sum of £500,000, providing a total sum of £1,094,889.
[8]       In addition to the Scrutiny Committee Report, the appellant also provided a letter to
the SCCRC dated 6 March 2018 from the Gambling Commission. This concerned the
outcome of an investigation into the conduct of William Hill which had been concerned
with, amongst other matters, the appellant’s gambling activities. Providers of gambling
services such as William Hill are required to hold a gambling licence under th e 2005 Act and
are subject to the regulation of the Gambling Commission. The Act requires the Gambling
Commission to produce codes of practice with respect to social responsibilities and licence
holders are bound to comply with those. The investigation discovered systemic failings
with William Hill’s methods aimed at preventing money laundering and limiting harm to
those considered problem gamblers. The Gambling Commission found that William Hill
had failed to comply with conditions of their operating licence requiring them to adhere to
the Money Laundering Regulations 2007 and the Gambling Commission’s own code of
practice relating to licence holders’ social responsibility. The Gambling Commission
ordered William Hill to reimburse the identifiable victims who had suffered due to its
customers frauds. On 11 October 2017 they paid Dundee City Council £500,000 in
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recognition of the Gross Gambling Yield they had obtained from the appellant gambling
with them the fruits of his illegal activity.
The SCCRC reference
[9]       In its statement of reasons, the SCCRC observed that there is a consistent body of
case law which indicates that repayment of or towards the financial loss occurred in crimes
involving financial dishonesty will be a relevant factor at sentence (paragraph 23). It
concluded that sentence was passed on the appellant prior to two key pieces of information
becoming available. Those were that Dundee City Council had recovered the full value of
the fraud, and that the most significant payment came from William Hill in recognition of
the regulatory breach concerning the amount and regularity of the appellant’s gambling
with it that went almost unchecked. The SCCRC concluded that this information may have
had an effect upon the length of the headline sentence selected, that there was a reasonable
explanation for it not being led and that in its absence a miscarriage of justice may have
occurred.
[10]       The SCCRC also took account of information which the appellant had provided to it
about a number of cases decided in Scotland including:
The case of Christopher Proudfoot who, in July 2009, at the Sheriff Court at
Inverness, was sentenced to a period of 40 months imprisonment reduced from a
headline sentence of 5 years having stolen £930,000 from his employer over a period
of three years through his position as a bookkeeper in order to pay off debts accrued
through gambling.
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The case of Anthony DeMarco who, in July 2010, at the High Court at Edinburgh,
was sentenced to a period of 5 years and 4 months imprisonment reduced from a
headline sentence of 8 years having pled guilty to an offence involving arranging
loans from financial institutions by means of fraud to a total value of £1 million over
a period of one year.
The case of David Dinham who, in July 2011, at the Sheriff Court at Edinburgh, was
sentenced to a period of 2 years imprisonment (headline sentence not known) having
embezzled £550,000 from his employer over a four year period.
The case of Daniel Dreghorn who, on 2 September 2015 at the High Co urt at
Glasgow, was sentenced to a period of 4 years imprisonment reduced from 6 years
having pled guilty to stealing medical equipment worth £1.3 million over a four year
period.
The case of Jacqueline McPhee who, on 12 July 2016, at the High Court at Edinburgh,
was sentenced to a period of 3 years and 4 months imprisonment reduced from a
headline figure of 5 years having pled guilty to a charge of defrauding her employer
of a sum in excess of £1.3 million over a period of thirteen months.
The case of Stephen Farley who, on 21 September 2016, at the High Court at
Edinburgh, was sentenced to a period of 7 years imprisonment reduced from a
headline sentence of 9 years having created a “Ponzi scheme” through which he
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obtained over £18 million from investors with a benefit to him over the term of the
libel of £800,000.
[11]       Whilst acknowledging that it was unaware of the exact details and circumstances of
the cases mentioned, the SCCRC considered that, assessing generally the value of the crimes
at issue and the disposals arrived at, the sentence imposed on the appellant may have fallen
outside a range of sentences which the sentencer applying his mind to all of the relevant
factors could reasonably have considered appropriate. It explained that this view was
strengthened in consideration of the new evidence and for this reason also considered that
there may have been a miscarriage of justice.
Sentencing judge’s report
[12]       In the report which the sentencing judge prepared in response to the original note of
appeal he explained that, despite the mitigating factors relied upon by the appellant’s
counsel, he selected a headline sentence of 8 years imprisonment having regard to five
factors:
1. the appellant fraudulently obtained a sum of money in excess of £1 million;
2. he persisted in his conduct for almost 7 years;
3. his conduct amounted to a very grave breach of trust;
4. even after he became aware in May 2016 that colleagues had discovered something
suspicious in relation to an earlier payment he created a further false invoice in the
sum of nearly £18,000 and arranged for that to be paid into his account;
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5. the amount of public money involved and the persistent and brazen nature of the
appellant’s fraudulent behaviour required a deterrent sentence to be imposed to
prevent others from acting in a similar way.
Supplementary report
[13]       The sentencing judge prepared a supplementary report for the benefit of this court
having considered the terms of the reference and the fresh note of appeal prepared on the
appellant’s behalf. In that report he explains that he was aware of the sentences passed in
the cases of McPhee and De Marco at the time of sentencing and was to an extent guided by
the sentence imposed in De Marco. He adhered to his original view that the appellant had
committed a grave breach of trust carried out over a very substantial period of time. He
explained that, in his view, it was an aggravating feature of the crime that the fraudulent
behaviour resulted in substantial losses to the public purse.
[14]       He explained that when assessing sentence he had proceeded upon the view that the
loss suffered by Dundee City Council was in the region of £800,000, whereas he now
understood from the material he had been provided with that almost all of the sums lost had
been recovered. He explained that the level of harm actually caused to the victim of a crime
is a relevant factor in selecting the appropriate sentence and, had he known at the time what
the eventual level of harm caused to the council was, he would have selected a different
sentence. He explained that he would have selected a headline sentence of 7 years
imprisonment and, applying the same discount of one third in light of the plea, he would
have imposed a sentence of 4 years and 8 months.
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The appellant’s submissions
Grounds 1a and b
[15]       The appellant relied upon the material set out in the reference and the SCCRC’s
reasons for considering that a miscarriage of justice may have occurred. He argued in
particular that when the sentencing judge was informed that there was no realistic prospect
of the victim recouping the full sum mentioned in the charge he was given a misleading
piece of information. Subsequent enquiry demonstrated that Dundee City Council had all
along been in possession of fidelity guarantee insurance, in light of their obligations as a
local authority.
[16]       The appellant submitted that whilst the payment from William Hill had been
described in the Dundee City Council’s Scrutiny Committee report as being ex -gratia, it was
quite clear from the correspondence considered by the SCCRC that the payment had been
made in order to satisfy William Hill’s requirement to divest themselves of funds acquired
from illegal sources and to make redress to the victims of crime in cases where the unlawful
funds received could be demonstrated as rightfully belonging to those victims.
[17]       Attention was drawn to the Principles and Purposes of Sentencing Guideline
prepared by The Sentencing Council for Scotland. As set out at paragraphs 1 and 2, the core
principle that sentences must be fair and proportionate required that all relevant factors of a
case must be considered. One aspect of the crime to which the appellant pled guilty was the
financial loss to the victim. What was important was the lasting impact of that loss. In the
present case that lasting impact was very little given the sums recovered by the council.
Ground 2a
[18]       The appellant submitted that there were a number of relevant mitigating factors in
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his case. He was a first offender with a full and commendable work record who presented
with minimal risk of further offending. He had co-operated fully with the police enquiry,
had self-referred to addiction agencies and had stopped gambling prior to the sentencing
diet. In addition to losing his pension built up over thirty years of employment he had lost
his reputation and prospects of future employment. In all of these circumstances the
disposals in the cases mentioned in the SCCRC statement of reasons supported the
submission that the sentence selected in his case was excessive.
Discussion
The new information
[19]       At paragraph 23 of the statement of reasons the SCCRC state that:
“There is a consistent body of case law which indicates that repayment of or towards
the financial loss incurred in crimes involving financial dishonesty will be a relevant
factor at sentence.
The cases which are cited in support of this proposition are Restorick v HM Advocate 2003
SCCR 609, White v HM Advocate 1987 SCCR 73, Dolan v HM Advocate 1986 SCCR 564, Islam
and Meah v HM Advocate 1989 SCCR 109 and Hughes v HM Advocate 2014 SCCR 506.
[20]       The case of Restorick involved an entirely different type of dishonest conduct through
which a very large sum of money was obtained from an elderly and vulnerable victim and
there was no restoration. A sentence of 10 years imprisonment was upheld on appeal. The
case of Hughes also involved large sums of money but the nature of the fraud was a false
statement as to income, leading lending institutions to provide loans for the pu rchase of two
properties. The loan payments were met, one loan was repaid and the loans were at all
times secured. The court stated that there was never any risk of loss to the lending
institutions.
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[21]       The court is not persuaded that what was said in any of these cases is of application
to sentencing decisions involving the nature and extent of the offending in the appellant’s
case. That said, repayment of, or towards, financial loss incurred through an accused
person’s dishonesty may be a factor which a sentencer can take into account in determining
the appropriate disposal. What effect, if any, to give to evidence of repayment will depend
upon the particular facts and circumstances of the individual case.
[22]       It is appropriate to begin by proceedin g on the basis that the harm caused to Dundee
City Council in the present case was the loss occasioned to it directly by the appellant’s
conduct. That is reflected by the sum specified in the charge to which the appellant pled
guilty. Mitigating factors may then be taken account of and given appropriate weight. In
assessing sentence the judge took account of the sum of almost £259,000 which the council
was able to recoup from the appellant’s pension fund. He was entitled to do so.
[23]       However, quite different considerations apply to recompense achieved by a victim as
a consequence of events over which the perpetrator of the crime has no control, which do
not require his participation and which cause him no loss or hardship. Although the council
received substantial further sums, the court does not consider that it would be correct to
proceed on the basis that, in the end, Dundee City Council suffered only a very small or no
loss. This would be to ignore the fact that this result was only brought about as a
consequence of payments made from other sources. There is no reason at all to view the
payment of almost £336,000 from the council’s insurance company as a factor in mitigation
of the appellant’s sentence. To do so would be to ignore that this loss to a commercial
enterprise was a direct consequence of the appellant’s offending.
[24]       The effect of the payment by William Hill is more difficult to determine. On the one
hand, had they done what was required of them they might have ceased to engage in betting
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transactions with the appellant. Whether that would have brought his offending to an end
or not seems entirely speculative and perhaps unlikely. Equally, the fact that the company
was in breach of a social responsibility requirement to the appellant in failing to check the
extent of his gambling is something which only has a tenuous connection with the fact that
he was embezzling money from his employers. On the other hand, it might be said, as the
sentencing judge did in his supplementary report, that William Hill’s decision to pay
£500,000 to the council can reasonably be interpreted as an acceptance by them that their
dealings with the applicant were dishonourable and contributed to a situation where he
became ever more immersed in and addicted to gambling.
[25]       Assuming at best for the appellant that the fact of the payment by William Hill can
be viewed as a mitigating factor, the weight that properly can be attached to it is limited. In
particular, it would be wrong for a sentencer to engage in a form of arithmetical exercise
through which the custodial sentence to be imposed became shorter by way of correlation
with the increasing amount of money recouped by the victim.
[26]       The general approach which the sentencing judge took in determining the
appropriate disposal was correct. The five factors which he relied upon were all relevant
and led him, correctly, to conclude that only a significant prison sentence was appropriate.
The court does not consider that the new information relied upon ought to have any
substantial impact on the selection of the appropriate length of sentence.
The sentence selected
[27]       The appellant’s submission was, that regardless of the mitigatory value of payments
received, the sentence selected could be seen to be excessive by reference to the
circumstances of, and sentences imposed in, the various cases to which attention was drawn.
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Little by way of detailed information is available to the court in respect of these cases. None
is the subject of a reported decision and each is an example of a sentence imposed by a first
instance judge. Something of the circumstances of the cases of De Marco and Farley can be
understood from the sentencing statements published on the Judiciary of Scotland website
and the court had available to it a copy of the sentencing judge’s report to the Parole Board
for Scotland in the case of Dreghorn. The case of Farley concerned quite distinct behaviour in
which the accused set out by determined effort to lead a lavish lifestyle funded by his
sophisticated criminal conduct. The remaining cases though can perhaps be seen as a group
in which the general nature of the offending was similar and was carried out by individuals
in similar positions to the appellant. As the appellant submitted, there were significant
aspects of aggravation in the case of De Marco which were absent in his case. We also
understand that the accused McPhee had a previous conviction, albeit 16 years earlier, for
embezzling the sum of £250,000 from a former employer. The sentence in her case seems
surprisingly lenient.
[28]       Despite the limitations of the information available, the picture which emerges
reasonably clearly from this collection of cases involving similar conduct to that engaged in
by the appellant, is that the sentence selected in his case stands out as being high. Taking a
broad view of the facts of the comparable cases relied upon, a sentence of 6 years
imprisonment would seem to the court to be the appropriate sentence in the appellant’s
case. Such a sentence would reflect the extent to which deterrence need feature as a
sentencing purpose in cases of this sort. That sentence would fall to be discounted by a
period of one third in recognition of the utilitarian value present in the early plea tendered.
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Decision
[29]       The sentence imposed shall be quashed and in its place there shall be substituted a
sentence of 4 years imprisonment to date from 2 August 2017.



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