David Chaytor, Jim Devine, Elliot Morley and Lord Haningfield to face court today

New details of the charges faced by three Labour MPs and a Tory peer were revealed in documents published ahead of their court appearance today.

David Chaytor, the MP for Bury North, is accused of providing false information on an allowances form under the Theft Act 1968.

The charge states he falsely claimed rents between September 2005 and August 2006 for 152 Hide Tower, Regency Street, London, from Sarah Elizabeth.

It added that he claimed £12,925 by lodging a claim for £1,175 a month in rent when he was in fact the owner of the premises.

A second charge stated that on or about 19 May 2006, he dishonestly filed two invoices for computer IT services worth £975.

The court document added that they purported to show the services had been provided in February and March 2006 by Paul France.

A third charge stated that between November 2005 and September 2006 he dishonestly made use of a short-hold tenancy agreement in a claim form.

This showed that between August 2007 and January 2008 he rented Delph Cottage, Castle Street, Summerseat, Bury, from Olive Trickett for £775 a month plus a month deposit.

The charge added that Trickett was his mother and it was not permissible to lease accommodation from a family member. The total sum claimed was £5,425.

Jim Devine, the MP for Livingston, is accused of falsely claiming costs for parliamentary duties in March 2009.

The charge sheet alleged he submitted two misleading invoices worth a total of £5,505 for services provided by Armstrong Printing Ltd.

A second charge alleged that between July 2008 and May 2009 he dishonestly claimed allowances for repair, insurance or security.

The document alleges he intended to gain by submitting false invoices for services, cleaning and maintenance worth £3,240.

The services were allegedly provided between April 2009 and March 2010 by Tom O’Donnell Hygiene and Cleaning Services.

Elliot Morley, the MP for Scunthorpe, is accused of falsely claiming a furnishing allowance between March 2006 and November 2007.

The charge sheet alleged he submitted a deceptive mortgage application.

This showed £800 mortgage monthly interest was charged by the Cheltenham and Gloucester when in fact the mortgage was paid off. A total overpayment of £16,000 was made.

A second charge alleged that between April 2004 and February 2006 Morley made a further false mortgage interest claim.

Again he is accused of claiming £800 a month, a total overpayment of £14,428.67.

Lord Hanningfield, also known as Paul White, faced six charges.

The offences are alleged to have taken place in March 2006, May 2007, April 2008, July 2008, May 2009 and April 2009.

One charge stated that on or about 1 April 2009, at Westminster, he made a dishonest claim for travelling allowances.

It stated that Hanningfield “purported to show that you were entitled to be paid expenses when the conditions entitled you to payment of such expenses had not been fulfilled”.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



Related articles

  • Lords sleaze watchdog to earn £350 a day
    Pay is still significantly less than £108,000 salary of Commons standards commissionerThe House of Lords' new sleaze watchdog is to be paid the equivalent of £90,000 a year, it was revealed today.The post of commissioner for standards in the Lords has been advertised on the parliamentary website, and a recruitment firm is also understood to be identifying candidates.It is expected that whoever lan...
  • Labour peer Lady Uddin will not face prosecution over expenses
    Labour peer was investigated over claims that she was paid expenses on a flat in Kent that had been unoccupied for yearsLady 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 Ke...
  • MPs on expenses charges cite parliamentary privilege
    Labour MPs and Tory peer plead not guilty and say workings of parliament should be dealt with by parliamentThree Labour MPs and a Conservative peer charged with theft over their expenses claims are to fight to keep their cases out of the criminal courts by attempting to invoke a 320-year-old law protecting them under parliamentary privilege.Elliot Morley, David Chaytor, Jim Devine and Lord Hanning...
  • MPs and peer due in court over expenses
    Labour MPs David Chaytor, Jim Devine and Elliot Morley, along with Tory peer Lord Hanningfield deny theft by false accountingThree Labour MPs and a Conservative peer are due to appear in court today accused of theft by false accounting.MPs Elliot Morley of Scunthorpe, David Chaytor of Bury North and Livingston's Jim Devine will appear at City of Westminster magistrates court.They will be joined by...
  • Ashcroft using trips with Hague to chase business, says Labour
    Tory peer and donor is accused of using shadow foreign secretary as his introduction to Cuba and other countriesLord Ashcroft was suspected by Britain's ambassador to Cuba of attempting to develop business interests in the country while accompanying William Hague on an official shadow Foreign Office visit.A memo sent to the Foreign Office by Dianna Melrose, the British envoy in Havana, states: "As...
  • Ashcroft using trips with Hague to chase business, says Labour
    Tory peer and donor is accused of using shadow foreign secretary as his introduction to Cuba and other countriesLord Ashcroft was suspected by Britain's ambassador to Cuba of attempting to develop business interests in the country while accompanying William Hague on an official shadow Foreign Office visit.A memo sent to the Foreign Office by Dianna Melrose, the British envoy in Havana, states: "As...
  • Ministers and shadow ministers renounce MPs’ pay rise
    Labour and Tory frontbenchers will not accept the 1.5% rise due to kick in next monthSenior MPs today queued up to renounce a pay rise worth almost £1,000 today amid fears of a public backlash.John Bercow, the Commons Speaker, said it would be "extremely inappropriate" to accept a 1.5% rise, due to kick in next month, in the aftermath of the expenses debacle.Downing Street also made it clear that ...