When Rich People Break The Law (Wealth Documentary) | Real Stories

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the traditional image of the British middle-class Pleasant polite pillars of the community and above all honest will make some trap a good wife while there oh there's nothing to it really but fast forward to today and that image couldn't be further from the truth we're going to reveal what the modern middle classes really get up to we'll meet people you thought you could trust like the gentlemanly Building Society manager who had his own plans for his customers deposits a large part of the money was spent on racing tipsters I think 1.7 million he had shares in a number of companies that owned racehorses the rebellious public school girl who became Britain's most wanted woman what was it like being a fugitive it was fantastic and the sweet suburban housewife who became a cat burglar by night I'm so sorry to everyone Miriam for the law-breaking middle classes Judgment Day has arrived the British middle classes are not what they seem behind the veneer of white-collar respectability there's another story one of cheating swindling stealing and ranked dishonesty meet the middle class criminals who are breaking the law to maintain their aspirational lifestyles ripping off their employers and because I trusted her so much I never look to her taking the money stealing from their customers we have suffered so much after hands of this man and even breaking into homes it became easier and easier it was something I became good at and these aren't isolated cases we conducted a poll of over 3,000 people which exposes the true extent of the problem it reveals how the middle class are more dishonest than lower social groups in fact they're the new criminal class more likely to steal from the taxman rip-off the local council buy stolen goods or fiddle the insurance what drove the middle class what define the middle class it may be the 50s is not what defines the middle class now you know in a 21st century in our survey one in four middle class people thought it was acceptable to steal from the taxman one in five would fiddle an insurance claim if they could get away with it more than one in ten admitted breaking the law for personal gain it seems the middle class are determined to hold on to the finer things in life whatever the state of the economy and whether they can afford to pay or not tell me about a champagne isn't dan Griffin is a university-educated wheeler dealer from Somerset who has no intention of paying back the credit he uses to finance his middle-class tastes it's not cheap to live is it you know it goes on lobster and parts of champagne flat lessons and hotels and nice things you know things that what needs to survive I get overdrafts and credit cards and not be able to pay him back I owe must maybe 40 or 50 grand I don't know I really don't know the old middle-class respect for banks and financial institutions cuts no ice with Dan and he's not alone our poll reveals that 12% of middle-class people thought it acceptable to steal from large corporations they found you up every day and give you a lot of grief but you know what can they do and they just you know credit card companies made so much money anyway so I mean the only people are really a heard of banks and you know who cares about them some may view such offenses as victimless but in this middle-class crime wave ordinary people can find themselves in the front line this is Aaron DeLand West Sussex it's a genteel and historic town which attracts antique hunters like Jane a gate to its many shops and markets Jane was raised here and had an ideal middle-class upbringing I suppose I had every little girls dream when when I was younger I'd ballet lessons in which every little girl loves ponies Wyatt definitely had best of everything really local police found themselves on the trail of an elusive criminal the trend developed where we were experiencing a number of burglaries at dwelling houses in and around the villages it was specific to an area of jewelry good quality furniture silverware China very quickly we recognized that we were dealing with a certain level of expertise at the time Jane was a 36 year old housewife she'd quit her job as a tax inspector to be a full-time mom but she was feeling trapped and desperately in need of excitement luckily at that time my children were too young to realize what Mommy was doing and I did I did feel I was living a double life it was it was it was two distinct personalities by day I was their mummy and by night I was taken over by so dramatic to say a dark force doesn't it but that's what it feels like now Jane's downfall began after forging a friendship with a local woman I found her fascinating because she was absolutely streetwise and I wasn't I had no I've been brought up in a cocoon almost compared to her the stuff she was telling me you know how she used to do burglaries and and stuff and I was thinking oh say exciting and so different to my life and I was absolutely fascinated and got completely take note taken in by it and I said what's it like to do a burglary she said I'll show you if you like so she did so we off we went in the in the middle of the night that's true it was early hours of the morning I guess it was about ten miles and we arrived at this house and the dead of night she said okay there's a window open there I was absolutely terrified my nerves would just but she was just blase about him I'm like what do I do she said well have a look round for stuff I looked around and I'd noticed that the woman's got some really gorgeous China and that's something I've been brought up with so just started racking the China right we ignored the television and things I've got back in the car without being caught and we arrived back at her place without being caught I felt guilty for finding exciting I knew that it was wrong I didn't want to find it exciting but the plain truth was that it was exciting I don't know how I was persuaded to do it again and again and again but it became easier and easier and in the end we were going out nearly every night J made regular trips to antique shops in the north of England to sell what she had stolen because of her respectable appearance she never raised any suspicions there was something I became good at we actually decided to buy trainers that were about three sizes bigger than our actual feet if they ever find a footprint in a flower bed or something outside a window that I've got it and they're gonna be looking for you know they're gonna be looking for a man rather than a woman I devised ways of getting into places that she didn't think about but her confidence turned into complacency I've parked my car stupidly on the main road in in you know in front all the street lights and everything and I've gone up to the path I've gone into the house I've loaded everything up coming back down the path just about to hit the main road and two policemen come towards me from the bottom and that was it that was me caught for the aspirational middle classes times are tough people have taken on very large mortgages and there is an element of trying to keep up with the Joneses school fees to be paid having big holidays all these amount up to huge amounts of personal debt our survey shows how these pressures affect middle-class attitudes one in six would avoid paying council tax if they could get away with it and nearly one in five would buy something even if they thought it was stolen dan Griffin typifies these white-collar criminals his expensive tastes have resulted in fast credit debts that he feels no obligation to repay and like 25% of middle-class people in our survey he also thinks it's acceptable to steal from the taxman go center tax demands for some renters son you know I think was about ten thousand or something I'm so I just thought whatever I've never filed a tax return in my life I don't know how but the blurring of the line between honesty and dishonesty seems to be at its height in a workplace according to our survey a massive 41% of the middle-class would steal from their employers if they thought they could get away with it this is DC 1796 came out at Calvin this suburban house belonged to Carolyn Langmead a trusted employee of a EC electrical a small family-run business on the south coast when police raided it they found an Aladdin's Cave we went to search her house her back bedroom was basically not a bedroom anymore it it was something like it was like a it was like the stock room for a retail shopping outlet really Langmead had worked for the firm for a decade after five years she'd been trusted with the company checkbook and administered its accounts in 2004 the once-thriving company began to experience problems work was flourishing but we seem to be short of cash flow on our question is of Carolyn and it was always the same questioners oh we're owed a lot of money and I'm chasing it up we're getting it in and everything will be fine but things were far from fine to keep his firm afloat the boss needed to invest all his life savings having already borrowed more than a hundred thousand from the it was only when some bounced checks were fax back to the firm that the manager realized why their finances were so poor come back into the office and went to the fax machine and the checks were there and initially I just before I went into my dad and showed him I felt sick Jim brought it in and it was made out to see Lang made in fact Langmead had written 223 company checks simply making them out herself and cashing them locally she had been getting away with it for four years the white-collar fraud stir is opportunistic fraud stir and if they look at of the risks of being caught they know exactly how their organization works and therefore they are managing that risk very well from day one lang Meads carefully managed fraud had funded a marathon spending spree on around 1500 items of designer clothing Gucci Prada and Louis Vuitton were among her favorites the police found 27 bin bags full of garments bought with stolen checks to the value of more than one hundred and fifty thousand pounds designer boutiques loved high-rolling landmates so much they gave her the celebrity treatment specially opening their doors for her out of hours she was very very clever and because I trusted her so much I never looked to her taking the money I was asking her if we can find where the money is going after her scam was discovered Langmead was charged with theft and dishonestly obtaining money by deception she pleaded guilty and was jailed for four years [Music] but middle-class crime isn't just about white collar workers ripping off their bosses they're also swindling their customers and if you want to de for the British public being middle-class gives you a real head start because instinctively everybody seems to trust you for 20 years Graham price had been an established member of the business community in Gorton South Wales he'd run a variety of local businesses and ultimately managed a local agency of the Halifax Jennifer Ellis was one of his customers everybody thought Graeme was trustworthy his total persona was one of quiet self confidence so that gave you confidence in what he had to tell you one afternoon Graeme called me into his office and he said I've been doing a sort of an investment scheme for the last 18 months and he's very successful I don't want it to be widespread I don't want it to be widely known felt it was quite exclusive then and he said it was linked to the magic word property dozens of other local people were also drawn into prices property schemes I trusted Graham I decided to do it three months later monthly interest no problem did I want to do any more he'd always come up with a different scheme slightly different every time graeme liked if possible to have the money in cash and that would be paid into an account and then he would invest it but price had no intention of putting any of his customers money into property his high-risk investment was at the bookies where he had a weakness for gambling on the horses a large part of the money was spent on racing tipsters I think 1.7 million went on race in tipsters he had accounts with various bookmakers one of those accounts held a credit balance of fifty thousand pounds a substantial amount of money went on expensive motor vehicles he bought two Mercedes vehicles for himself price managed to persuade more than 80 people to join his own bogus schemes because he was using the later investors to pay the interest payments on the new investors as long as the new investors were coming through there was plenty of money to pay back the initial investors and they had no cause to be suspicious of the scheme which is why they then recommended other people and the whole thing's newborn to sustain the fraud and fund his gambling he needed to continue siphoning funds from Gorton however resources in the modest town couldn't support his habit so price sought a little extra help and began stealing thousands of pounds from the Halifax he invested half a million pounds in shares he spent two hundred ten thousand pounds on premium bonds he paid off his fifty thousand pounds mortgage on his house he's invested money in four companies which owned racehorses he sustained the fraud for three years over which time thousands turned into millions but his massive theft was finally exposed by an internal audit in the safe one of the auditors found a cheeky IOU note on the back of which was written I agree and price borrowed seven million pounds from the Halifax on top of all that price had stolen a further three million from his private investors he was jailed for 12 years we have suffered so much at the hands of this man I watched grain price on the second day of the hearing because it meant over to two days he was expressionless his tone of voice was monotonous he said yes to everything that the judge actually accused him off in a toneless voice but I saw his face when he went out of that door now it was despair it was absolute terror and I thought yes we've had a year of this your time in prison well-spoken white-collar professionals like Graham Price stand out from regular inmates survival isn't easy for someone coming in from the middle class for the first time finding themselves in a prison population most of whom have been there before they will find it very tough indeed the inmates will have a go at them they will Cheever them along you know they will attack them and it's a very hard time for them Jane a gate received a six year jail sentence for a series of nighttime burglaries the former tax inspector had embarked on the crime spree to escape her humdrum suburban life I just remember that looking at the jewelry and I felt my world had ended and the judge said six years anything and that was it and the next thing I knew I was in Holloway I found it very frightening I must admit I was absolutely petrified apart from my father dying that was the worst moment in my entire life I just went completely cold and I just thought I two young children not at all that's it I'm not going to see them again and then I think I just went into shock for all the excitement and the money it gave me that's the biggest the biggest regret of my life that was I'm so sorry to everyone I really am the middle classes spend a fortune educating their children privately they hope they'll emerge well-mannered well-spoken and well on their way to a career in the respectable professions but when it comes to falling on the wrong side of the law even the most privileged upbringing is no barrier now she was the young woman with everything money brains good looks and a first-class education but today a dramatic fall from grace she's gone on the run with a pilot known as the Baron after trying to fake her own death can you help track her down the woman police were hunting was ex public school girl Fiona Mont fiona was born into an upper middle-class family listed in posh people's Bible Debrett's her mother was a senior figure in the local Conservative Party she was accused of being part of a huge fraud involving stolen computer equipment where suppliers and customers had been ripped off to the tune of hundreds of thousands of pounds fiona was interviewed by police and released on bail pending formal charges but then her story took a dramatic turn rather than face being charged she went on the run with her pilot friend Graham LeBaron Hesketh she escaped to the continent the police launched a massive appeal for information in the media during the search of the flight we in fact found these two weeks as you can see is a blonde one and a redhead and as we did not believe these were boyfriend's yes we believe they're her use obviously shows that she can change her appearance Fiona may have been from a well-heeled family but she had a taste for bad boys Graham the Baron Hesketh was a convicted drug smuggler together they would find love on the run this footage is the personal record of their escapades [Music] much of their time in Europe was spent worrying about being spotted and recognized if there was somebody you didn't like it was after you would you feel safe in his house what I have to do smash the site to get back in Britain the police were making little progress with their search their two fugitives always seem to be one step ahead we went to search to commercial containers we expected them to be full of property computers laptops and furniture when we got there they were in fact empty and these two items were the only thing that we could find in there which was two smiley faces obviously somebody's got a sense of humor white-collar crime may be on the rise but it seems dishonesty is down to geography as well as social status our survey of more than 3,000 people reveals the English middle class is most likely to break the law are in London while those most likely to stick to it live in Yorkshire in Scotland they're a relatively honest Bunch but the area of Britain where most middle-class citizens admit to breaking the law for personal gain is Wales wherever they live the reasons for dishonesty are often the same I spoke to a couple of people who had stolen because they wanted to protect their status they would define those respectable people either in their family or amongst their peer group and they committed fraud ironically to protect that position the classic middle-class crimes are fraud they are their crimes where you never come face to face with the victim it was an alleged fraud involving stolen computers that brought ex private school girl Fiona Mont to the attention of police after detectives pulled her in for questioning she went on the run and fled abroad Fiona has never told her story before but we tracked her down and tonight she breaks her silence for the first time lots of people in the way of said what was it like being a fugitive it was fantastic it was it was brilliant absolutely brilliant - to be free of them and I thought that's an end to it Fiona had attended a 7,000 pounds a year private school but that's where her troubles started I have it's called horrible they were definitely definitely trying to mold us into a particular image the same image I was also very shy and very quiet and it built and built and built and built and it exploded when I was 14 fiona's rebellion against her privileged upbringing eventually led her into the arms of convicted drug smuggler graham the baron Hesketh on the run she kept ahead of the police by staying on the move and sleeping in a caravan with Hesketh she traveled through Holland France and then Spain when I asked him if he would come with me he said yes straightaway without hesitation from our point of view it's love story back in the UK police accused the couple of taunting them sending letters poking fun at detectives working on the case along with a fake check for 1 million pounds the latest back in England is that time apparently we've been sending taunting emails to the police the fact they were saying I was taunting them it was quite the reverse I wasn't police were trying to use the press to get a reaction because they might get a trace or a track on where we were and I was adamant that I wasn't going to give them that I wasn't going to give anything away fiona was so elusive the media nicknamed her the cat but after three years on the run she finally ran out of lives when Detective Constable Steve Skerritt caught up with her steve Skerritt came in to Spain and had me arrested in Spain fiona was thrown into a Spanish jail to await extradition the blankets were alive with lice I can feel him crawling all over my face and the place was just like a lunatic asylum just exactly what was it that I did that has justified or in any way excused this I mean are there other crowds of people back in England cheering that I'm being arrested after 40 days in jail Fiona had a surprise visitor and my name was called out on the Tanner this boy in jeans and a t-shirt said who was there with Courts papers he said you're free to go and I you know I hadn't make him repeat it several times I couldn't believe it and he said you're free to go go it's still unclear why fiona was released by the spanish authorities but British police say that somewhere along the line there was an administrative mix-up fiona has always denied her guilt and to this day she's never been charged since being on the run she and Hesketh have married and had two children but memories of being a fugitive are still vivid after a few weeks back I thought I'm a bit worried maybe they'll still come so I'll ring them so I rang the chief constables office and I spoke to a lady there and she said Fiona who after all that stories like Fiona's may grab the headlines but millions of cases of middle-class dishonesty go unreported and they cost the country billions of pounds each year high on the list of offenses and non-payment of fines especially those issued by local authorities for illegal parking in fact more than 10 percent of those questioned in our survey thought it acceptable to steal from the council I mean I have a few parking tickets I think 20 at last count maybe 25 I don't know I just lost camp okay there is a considerable sum that they're wanting for me but I find it unacceptable to pay it absolutely totally totally unacceptable so an m-pam in common with twenty percent of middle class people Dan also thinks it's acceptable to exaggerate insurance claims I had a car stolen once when I was in Oxford and I claimed on the insurance for it to get the window fixed and the dashboard put back together and then I lied about and said that I had a camera that there as well you know it wasn't very much but you know I mean I'm sure the insurance company wouldn't be too pleased if they knew about it we've seen how a desire for money can lead to middle class crime but there's another motivation and it's equally powerful whatever your social group no matter whether you're the richest monolith or the poorest monolith everybody has the same vices and the vices one of the vices is six Alec Bromley was targeted by a man driven by that vice it would cost him and his Bolton furniture business a fortune this was addressed to sweet this is three and a half thousand pounds bought it for 500 quid Alec decided to hire an accountant to help with his expanding business the man he took on Michael Lee couldn't have had more impeccable credentials one thing that impressed me at the interview with Lee it was his CV a qualified accountant also he was a magistrate down in London the ex city Anton started workers Alex bookkeeper I got on very well with my Utley I trusted the guy I accepted his advice and and I felt quite comfortable that he was looking after us his Drive will deliver the suite and it will be cash on delivery the driver would come back with the money and give it to Lee I'll give it to Alek he would think of it to me so I could have to having two or three thousand pounds a day coming in and out of the office and of course that needs to be bite Lee was responsible for the banking of that I used to just come in and give him the money and then in good faith that he would then deposit in the post office but Lee had a secret behind closed doors he had a weakness for watching a woman clean his house wearing nothing but a pair of rubber gloves and he was willing to pay for it in her account she said that what she would charge was anything but it was about 200 pounds an hour for her company although Lee never laid hands on her he was addicted to the thrill he blew a hundred and sixty thousand pounds of his own savings on her and ran up a further 60 thousand in credit she said he would take her to London he would buy meals she claimed that he paid for a breast implant operation for her she claims to have cleaned off for him when he told her to there's so no evidence of the house being clean he was given this girl more and more money and he couldn't get any more money from anywhere else so what was he left with he was left with Alec and his cash rich environment top-quality Sammy Lee began fiddling the accounts and paying himself out of Alec's takings most fraudsters will start by passing through a small invoice a relatively small cheque and they will see whether the systems are controls pick it up and then they'll get braver they'll understand that that hasn't been checked or found out and as a result the food will just tend to escalate from there Lee continued stealing for four years before he was found out when detectives broke the news to Alec he was stunned over a period of 18 months he's in Basel from your business between 160 to 280,000 pounds did you know anything about it I said well you know I said that sit in it all the color drained from his face he was a broken mill dr. Dale yeah and it was just he ruined my day ex magistrate Michael leaves middle-class credentials didn't keep him out of prison he was sentenced to two years I'll tell you one thing I do all the bank in these days in studies of white-collar crime there are recurring themes a desire to better oneself and a craving for social status this is Tom and Tao the highest village in the scottish highlands it's known as the Gateway to the Cairngorms noted for its fishing and wildlife Tommy tells her a planned village that was set up all over 250 years ago and I don't suppose it's changed all that much since but life here took a dramatic turn with the arrival of a man who seemed to be at the very pinnacle of the social ladder he was an impeccably mannered English gent who'd fallen in love with a village and wanted to invest in it he had a title Laird Anthony Williams and he had cash he bought the Gordon hotel which was the Gordon Arms Hotel he then bought the old souvenir shop which is now the clock house restaurant he then bought the cottage at the end of the village which he then renovated overnight the place was sort of scaffolded teams of builders arriving and the whole place was a hive it was money was no object the renovations that Tony did work to the highest standard that any of one locally had ever heard of there were rumors about the gold-plated bath taps in the cottage and things like that how true I have no idea and and it became the talk of the village a wonderful thing that happened you just didn't get investment like that in a little village on that scale and we all wondered what was going on Laird Williams poured three million pounds into the tiny community earning popularity and respect he basked in his high social status he was he was the lord of the manor he was the Laird of Tom in town we want people to evaluate us positively social affirmation and getting the kind of social rewards of acceptance and of praise and people think in your you're a good person these are extremely powerful reinforcements to individuals very very private man but I always knew that there was something behind him he was worrying he could see he was a worried man we all felt that there was something not quite right but nobody could put their finger on it as Williams continued to lavish money on the village delight turned slowly to suspicion the lads regular trips to the local bank seemed more than a little unusual he came up once and his XJS a couple of carrier bags in the back you know quite clearly quite obvious to the people in the know England what was in those bags he really did have a large amount of money in those bags alerted to Williams's unusual banking practices the police began to investigate and when the case ended up at Scotland Yard the name Anthony Williams seemed strangely familiar because he worked there as Deputy Director of Finance Williams an accountant had been trusted to oversee a pot of money which was supposed to fund a secret aircraft for spying on terrorists instead he'd used it to climb the social ladder the lesson it kind of gives the yard and any organization isn't it no matter how secret no matter how important something is you never let one person control there has to be checks and balances two or three people need to know what's going on the most damning evidence about crime that's committed in organizations is that people say they do it because it was a and having got used to the money they continued until the point of course when they got called William certainly got used to the money during the course of his fraud he diverted more than five million pounds of public funds into his private accounts people have to be trusted it's part of doing this is doing an organization's work and of course people in higher positions in the organizations have greater trust placed upon them are often a lot less visible they're much more autonomous access to greater amounts of information and resources and money and clearly when they abuse that trust the consequences can be much more severe and for Williams the consequences were severe he was sentenced to seven and a half years in prison and after his release the once wealthy Laird from the highlands began a new career as a South London bus driver we've seen how middle-class professionals are using their detailed knowledge of corporate systems and accountancy procedures to commit huge Falls it's a crime wave that's costing Britain billions of pounds a year but the educated middle classes aren't just using their financial skills to break the law they have all kinds of other talents Eck's public school boy John myatt's crimes were down to knowledge of the art market and a deft hand with a paintbrush I was broke I've got a troubled domestic circumstances and too little wants to take care of I needed money John a talented artist took on a seemingly innocent 200-pound Commission where he painted a picture in the style of Matisse but the buyer later returned and announced that he'd had the painting valued as an original for around 25,000 pounds he he offered me a half of the money that he could get for it and I think if that had just been a one-off but that would have been that but in fact it led to a relationship that went on for far too long the pair began an art forgery scam that is estimated to have netted more than a million pounds John churned out more than 200 paintings and had another way of making them look old well this is a Picasso from run about 1911 1912 started off being seated nude but it's ended up being a Harlequin anyway it will look a little bit too new when it's when it's varnished so something you can easily do at home is take a nice hot cup of coffee quite strong black and we go now ideally it wants to be stronger than that but this will give you the effect you just look at the kind of lovely dense Brown effect we're getting through here lovely in a minute I'm going to I'm gonna stand it upright because what will happen is that as I stand it up the coffee as it goes down we'll catch the tooth of the canvas as that comes down what it should do is start to just give the impression of seats here it comes let's give the impression of just general clean dirt over the ages it's not a crime to paint this it's not a crime to sign this to sign this son Brock or Picasso it's a crime to sell it to you as a Braque and Picasso quick-drying household paint mixed with KY jelly enabled John to produce a finished forgery once every six weeks and unbelievably still fool the buyers it was unreal I think it was a bit like watching her spaceship landed on the lawn you know and take off again and instead of going down the pub and saying you never guess what I mean it just it was that City it was silly it was unreal I think I'd be getting paid for because the quality of what I was doing frankly was just grim it wasn't good I walked out of an auction one day our moved up King Street in London and I watched three of my four and my paintings go through and I'd listen to the auctioneer describing them and I thought to myself why do I feel why do I feel so crap about this and it was that it was just then that I thought I'm not doing this anymore so I stopped and when I stopped of course in my naivety I thought well that's it that that's good okay we'll go and do something else oh I can't go back to teaching I think and yeah you know I feel quite surprised with the policeman search warrant you know just don't seem to be very unfair to me that they got me when I'd stopped doing it John was sentenced to one years imprisonment for the fraud what are the same Brixton welcome to the second worst prison in the United Kingdom so ah thanks a lot I remember say to this guy where's the library so it was a cardboard box on the floor about the size of that said that's Oh God the truthful thing about prison is it is exactly the same as the world up here the world you're in right now except the nice people are much nicer and the nasty people unbelievably much last year John was released after four months do I think I got punished severely no I think I got off extremely lightly I was I was very lucky that was police officers walking outside the corridor in the southern crime course thing you're gonna get six years after his release the same skills that got John into trouble in the first place helped him to rehabilitate he's now a commercially successful artist selling legitimate paintings that he openly declares as fakes some of them fetch tens of thousands of pounds gilt I say I did a bad thing I went to prison I paid a lot of money back to them and that's it it's over in this program we've met fraudsters forges swindlers and their victims everybody thought grain was trustworthy I felt sick I'll tell you one thing I do all the bank in these days it's a situation that's showing no sign of coming to an end and these crimes will affect everyone in Britain it isn't victimless crime not no crime is victimless truly victimless I think we all end up dying in the front line we'll be Britain's businesses from large corporations to small family outfits for every pound of detective Ford some surveys show that eight pounds is undetected they should be auditors please check financial expenditure and I spoke to one of the offenders about how he got round this and he called the auditors a bunch of Muppets the cost of borrowing etc all these pressures coming in is going to kind of squeeze their lifestyle and I think you will see more people who are in positions of trust letting that moral wall down you'll see the kinds of crimes that they perceive to be victimless [Music]
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Channel: Real Stories
Views: 1,825,321
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Keywords: criminal, Full Documentary, Full length Documentaries, Documentary, Documentaries, BBC documentary, BBC Three documentary, TV Shows - Topic, Amazing Stories, fraud documentary, Real Stories, BBC 3, posh, Channel 4 documentary, BBC Three, Amazing Documentaries, class, britain, Extraordinary people, true crime, 2017 documentary, crime documentary, white collar crime, itv documentary, documentary crime, real stories documentaries, real stories full episodes, scam documentary
Id: CbnCVDK504s
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Length: 44min 38sec (2678 seconds)
Published: Mon Aug 14 2017
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