Lawyer jailed for fraud against loyal clients
Media Release
26 November
2014
Lawyer jailed for fraud against loyal clients
John David Milne (79) has been sentenced to eight years and one month of imprisonment today in the Christchurch District Court following a Serious Fraud Office (SFO) prosecution.
Mr Milne pleaded guilty in October to 34 Crimes Act charges.
For a period in excess of 20 years, the former Dunedin lawyer had been soliciting money from clients or associates on the premise that he would invest their money. Mr Milne had not actually invested any of his clients’ money. He had in fact been paying investors from funds received for investment from other clients and paying other business debts.
Mr Milne’s dishonesty generated approximately $2.8 million from a loyal client base, of whom many were elderly and vulnerable.
SFO Director, Julie Read has emphasised that despite the successful prosecution, the agency remains concerned for Mr Milne’s victims for whom it is too late for many to recover from the impact of his dishonesty.
ENDS
Notes for
Editors
Background to
investigation
John David Milne is a former
lawyer with Harewood Law Office in Christchurch; this office
was owned by Craig Paddon. Prior to that, he ran a sole
practice in Dunedin from 1960 to 2008.
The New Zealand Law Society found Mr Milne guilty of professional misconduct over his handling of client funds, and he has been struck off the Register of Lawyers.
Mr Milne was declared bankrupt in October 2012.
Crimes Act Offences
Section 220 Theft by person in
special relationship
(1) This section applies to
any person who has received or is in possession of, or has
control over, any property on terms or in circumstances that
the person knows require the person—
(a) to account to
any other person for the property, or for any proceeds
arising from the property; or
(b) to deal with the
property, or any proceeds arising from the property, in
accordance with the requirements of any other person.
(2)
Every one to whom subsection (1) applies commits theft who
intentionally fails to account to the other person as so
required or intentionally deals with the property, or any
proceeds of the property, otherwise than in accordance with
those requirements.
(3) This section applies whether or
not the person was required to deliver over the identical
property received or in the person's possession or
control.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (1), it is a
question of law whether the circumstances required any
person to account or to act in accordance with any
requirements.
Section 224 Theft by
misappropriating proceeds held under direction (pre October
2003)
Every one commits theft who, having
received, either solely or jointly with any other person,
any money or valuable security, or any power of attorney for
the sale of any real or personal property, with a direction
that the money or any part thereof, or the proceeds or any
part of the proceeds of the security or property, shall be
applied to any purpose or paid to any person specified in
the direction, in violation of good faith and contrary to
the direction, fraudulently applies to any other purpose or
pays to any other person the money or proceeds, or any part
thereof:
Provided that where the person receiving the
money, security, or power of attorney, and the person from
whom he receives it, deal with each other on such terms that
all money paid to the former would, in the absence of any
such direction, be properly treated as an item in a debtor
and creditor account between them, this section shall not
apply unless the direction is in writing.
About
the SFO
The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) was
established in 1990 under the Serious Fraud Office Act in
response to the collapse of financial markets in New Zealand
at that time.
The SFO’s role is the detection,
investigation and prosecution of serious or complex
financial crime. The SFO’s focus is on investigating and
prosecuting criminal cases that will have a real effect
on:
• business and investor confidence in our financial
markets and economy
• public confidence in our justice
system and public service
• New Zealand’s
international business reputation.
The SFO operates three operational teams; the Evaluation and Intelligence team along with two investigative teams.
The SFO operates under two sets of investigative powers.
Part 1 of the SFO Act provides that it may act where the Director “has reason to suspect that an investigation into the affairs of any person may disclose serious or complex fraud.”
Part 2 of the SFO Act provides the SFO with more extensive powers where: “…the Director has reasonable grounds to believe that an offence involving serious or complex fraud may have been committed…”
In considering whether a matter involves
serious or complex fraud, the Director may, among other
things, have regard to:
• the suspected nature and
consequences of the fraud and/or;
• the suspected scale
of the fraud and/or;
• the legal, factual and
evidential complexity of the matter and/or;
• any
relevant public interest considerations.
The SFO’s
Annual Report 2014 sets out its achievements for the past
year, while the Statement of Intent 2014-2018 sets out the
SFO’s strategic goals and performance standards. Both are
available online at www.sfo.govt.nz