Labour peer was investigated over claims that she was paid expenses on a flat in Kent that had been unoccupied for years

Lady Uddin, the Labour peer accused of claiming more than £100,000 in expenses for a flat she did not live in, will not face any criminal charges, the Crown Prosecution Service confirmed today.

The Labour peer was investigated over claims that she was paid expenses on a flat in Kent that had been unoccupied for years. Uddin has a second home in the East End of London, just four miles away from parliament.

The inquiry has been suspended with no charges made because there was “insufficient evidence” to bring a prosecution alleging that Uddin did not occupy the home in Kent.

Keir Starmer, the director of public prosecutions, said: “The allegation against Baroness Uddin was that she had claimed ‘night subsistence’ for overnight stays in London, after attendances in the House of Lords, to which she was not entitled. Although she had nominated a flat she owned in Maidstone, Kent, as her ‘only or main residence’, it was alleged that her ‘only or main residence’ was in fact a house in east London.

“Evidence in this case was obtained from neighbours of Baroness Uddin and from companies supplying utility services, such as water, gas and electricity to the flat in Maidstone. But after careful scrutiny of all of the available evidence we have decided that, in applying the definition of ‘only or main residence’ adopted by the House Committee, there is insufficient evidence to bring criminal charges against Baroness Uddin and we have today advised the Metropolitan police to take no further action.”

The decision not to prosecute relied heavily on a ruling by the Lords clerk to allow peers to nominate their first and second homes, and that the definition of a primary home was one which the member visited at least once a month. On the evidence prosecutors had, they could not prove she had spent less time there.


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