OVER 3 YEARS FOR IMAGINARY SHEEP SCAM
8 Feb 2006 10:45 AM
In the first prosecution of its kind, a man who reclaimed nearly
£1million VAT for a business which traded in non-existent sheep was
jailed on 6 February for three years and nine months. Richard James
Coate, of Owls Hill Farm, Broomfield, Somerset was convicted in
November of Cheating the Public Revenue to the value of £865,799.27.
The Revenue and Customs Prosecutions Office have started confiscation
proceedings under the Criminal Justice Act to recover some £800,000
of assets.
Sentencing Coate at Bristol Crown Court, His Honour Judge Lambert,
the trial judge said: "This was a cunning, sustained fraud in which
you secured in excess of three quarters of a million pounds from the
State. I accept that you propped up an ailing farming business, but
that was at the expense of the taxpayer. A legitimate business
started by you began to fail and you turned to fraud on a grand
scale, albeit not the most sophisticated fraud that has been seen."
Between June 1997 and June 2001, Coate made fraudulent claims under
the Agricultural Flat Rate Scheme, which was designed to compensate
farmers for their VAT inputs without the burden of administration.
During that period, he claimed to have traded some 425,000 sheep with
a mysterious Spanish gentleman called Questos. In fact the paper
process consisted of four stages. Questos 'sold' livestock to Coate,
which he then sold on to a company he owned, Owls Hall Farm Ltd. The
same animals were then 'sold' back to Coate, and finally back to
Questos.
In interview, Coate was unable to provide any information about Sr.
Questos. It was eventually established that a Spanish farmer of that
name had purchased a small number of sheep from Coate some time
before 1992, but had absolutely no involvement in the fraud.
The most significant evidence at the trial covered the period during
the outbreak of Foot and Mouth disease which started in February
2001. Coate's record showed he was trading many thousands of sheep
with Questos, at a time when there were strict movement restrictions
on livestock in his area. When all the stock at his farm had to be
slaughtered, there were 62 animals, and Coate only owned 29 of those.
His records showed he had just taken delivery of 2,500 animals but
there was no evidence of these.
Notes for Editors
1. For further information about VAT flat rate schemes, go to
http://customs.hmrc.gov.uk/channelsPortalWebApp/channelsPortalWebApp.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=pageVAT_ShowContent&propertyType=document&resetCT=true&id=HMCE_CL_001208#P34_3522
2. The Revenue and Customs Prosecutions Office was created by Royal
Assent on 18 April 2005. An independent prosecuting authority, RCPO
reports directly to the Attorney General, and is responsible for
prosecuting some of the largest drug and fraud cases in the UK. The
Director is David Green, QC. For further information see
www.rcpo.gov.uk