‘Callous’ finance worker jailed for stealing £24,000 from her 91-year-old grandmother then spent the money on holidays and McDonald’s is ordered to pay back just £84

  • Amanda Farr, 48, Croydon was jailed for 18 months for committing fraud
  • She siphoned off Joyce Hutchings, 91, savings into her own account 
  • Amounting to 130 transactions between December 2017 and September 2019 



A ‘callous’ finance worker who stole £24,000 from her grandmother which she spent on fast food and holidays has been ordered to pay back just £84.

Amanda Farr, 48, was jailed last year for 18 months after a jury found her guilty of committing fraud by siphoning Joyce Hutchings’s savings into her own account.

A total of 130 transactions between December 2017 and September 2019 were spent on JustEat, McDonald’s, iTunes and the PlayStation store, as well as bets with William Hill and an Amsterdam holiday.

This left Ms Hutchings, then aged 91 and living in Whitstable, owing money to utility companies and debt collection agencies becoming involved.

Amanda Farr, 48, was jailed last year for 18 months after a jury found her guilty of committing fraud by siphoning Joyce Hutchings’s savings into her own account
A total of 130 transactions between December 2017 and September 2019 were spent on JustEat, McDonald’s, iTunes and the PlayStation store, as well as bets with William Hill and an Amsterdam holiday

When trying to explain at Canterbury Crown Court where the unaccounted money had gone, Farr pointed the finger at Ms Hutchings, claiming she was a ‘big eater’ of oriental cuisine. 

READ MORE: Finance worker, 47, who siphoned £24,000 from her 91-year-old grandmother and wasted money on takeaways from JustEat and McDonald’s is convicted

Confiscation proceedings were held at the same court on Wednesday, where it was agreed that Farr’s actual financial benefit was in fact £13,910.

Judge Simon Taylor KC was also informed that her available assets amounted to £84.

He therefore ordered that that sum should be paid as compensation within 28 days, with an extra seven days in prison if she failed to do so.

Farr was not required to attend the hearing.

At her trial, jurors heard that for almost two years she deceived the pensioner by intercepting her mail and phone calls, as well as redirecting Ms Hutchings’s savings into her own bank account.

She was also found to have a calendar marked with the dates on which the victim’s pension was paid.

Farr claimed her grandmother had consented to handing over money while she cared for her, with much of it spent on her.

Trying to explain where unaccounted money had gone, she pointed the finger at Ms Hutchings, claiming she ‘liked her food’ and was a ‘big eater’ of oriental cuisine.

At Canterbury Crown Court on Friday, Farr was unanimously convicted by jurors, who saw through her lies about how she used the ill-gotten gains
Farr, formerly of Croydon, said the pensioner could spend up to £20 a week on sugary treats, £180 sending her pet to ‘dog school’ and would shell out £35 a time for the animal to be walked

Farr, formerly of Croydon, said the pensioner could spend up to £20 a week on sugary treats, £180 sending her pet to ‘dog school’ and would shell out £35 a time for the animal to be walked.

She also argued the financial agreement was ‘above board’ and designed to benefit the whole family.

Her scam came to light after Mrs Hutchings suffered a series of falls and while in hospital her son Ronald discovered her bank accounts were overdrawn.

At the time of Farr’s sentencing hearing in May, Stewart Ross-Cumming, a financial investigator for the Kent and Essex Serious Crime Directorate, said: ‘Farr’s offending was simply callous and calculated with no consideration for the impact this was having on her victim.

‘Nobody should think they can avoid justice when exploiting members of the public.’

Despite the limited confiscation order made by the court under the Proceeds of Crime Act, offenders can still be pursued if they are found to have further funds at a later date.

Reference

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