Lloyds to compensate fraud victims with $125m scheme

File picture: Reuters

File picture: Reuters

Published Apr 7, 2017

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London  - Lloyds Banking Group

revealed a 100 million pound ($125 million) compensation scheme

on Friday for victims of a fraud for which six people were

jailed this year, as Britain's financial watchdog reopened a

probe into the case.

Britain's biggest mortgage lender has been under pressure to

compensate the victims at its HBOS business, who say it reacted

too slowly to their complaints, and will hope that this will

draw a line under the controversy.

"We would like to express our deep regret and apologies to

any customers directly affected by the criminal behaviour of

these individuals," Chief Executive António Horta-Osório said.

Lloyds said in a statement it will provide interim payments

on a case-by-case basis and appoint an independent lawyer to

consider whether it properly investigated at the time.

Nikki and Paul Turner, who brought the scam to the attention

of police in 2003, called on Lloyds to be clear on when it would

make payments.

"It is a relief to see that Lloyds is finally recognising

its obligations to the victims of this scandal," Nikki Turner

said in a statement.

"However we need to see a firm timetable from Lloyds on when

restitution will be made. The bank has to recognise that victims

suffered twice – once from the fraud and then from the cover

up," she said.

Lloyds, whose shares had fallen 0.8 percent by 0900 GMT

against a 0.3 percent fall in the S&P European banks index

, said the compensation was to cover economic losses,

distress and inconvenience caused by the fraud.

Many of the businesses involved went into liquidation,

resulting in job losses and financial hardship as a result of

the scam. Two former bankers at HBOS, which was rescued in a

state-engineered takeover by Lloyds in 2008, helped siphon off

money from struggling businesses which were HBOS clients.

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Britain's Financial Conduct Authority separately said it was

resuming its investigation of the case, which had been placed on

hold in 2013 pending the outcome of the police's own probe.

Former HBOS bankers Lynden Scourfield and Mark Dobson,

businessmen Michael Bancroft, David Mills and his wife Alison

Mills and accountant Tony Cartwright were convicted of various

crimes after a five-month jury trial in February.

They were found guilty of a scam involving fraudulent loans

and sent to prison for a total of 47-and-a-half years, among the

toughest sentences handed out for a high-profile, white collar

fraud in Britain in recent years.

The corrupt bankers asked struggling business owners to

employ a turnaround consultancy as a condition for getting a

loan and they were obliged to pay the consultancy high fees for

services and, in some cases, hand over ownership.

Scourfield was bribed with designer watches, sex with

prostitutes and exotic foreign holidays by his business

associates for his role in the scam.

Judge Martin Beddoe said when sentencing him that Scourfield

had "sold his soul ... for sex, for luxury trips with and

without your wife, for bling and for swank."

REUTERS

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