St Leonards district judge and two others jailed over fraud at legal firm

A solicitor, a legal executive and an associate of a law firm have been convicted following a nine-week trial at Southwark Crown Court and sentenced to more than 14 years in jail today (Friday, January 27).

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Left to right: Simon Kenny, Emma Coates and Stephen Hiseman. Picture courtesy of Sussex PoliceLeft to right: Simon Kenny, Emma Coates and Stephen Hiseman. Picture courtesy of Sussex Police
Left to right: Simon Kenny, Emma Coates and Stephen Hiseman. Picture courtesy of Sussex Police

The trio were found guilty of the embezzlement of almost £700,000 of client funds over a seven-year period.

Simon Kenny, 60, of Tudor Avenue, St Leonards, was sentenced to six years after being found guilty of two counts of fraud by abuse of his position.

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The offences occurred between January 2007 and May 2011 while he was the principal solicitor at CK Solicitors as well as a district judge.

Kenny was convicted in respect of transferring client money to cover the money they had drawn from the Selsey-based firm.

Police said the extent of Kenny’s deceit was exposed by the tragic death of the firm’s accountant, Robert Foskett, who realised he had become unwittingly involved in the fraud – a realisation which troubled him so much that he ended up taking his own life, and naming Kenny in his suicide note.

Emma Coates, 47, of no fixed abode, but formally of Selsey, was sentenced to six years after being found guilty of two counts of fraud by abuse of position.

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Between December 2008 and November 2011 when employed as a legal executive at CK Solicitors, Coates was responsible for making a series of transfers from the firm’s client accounts to her own.

Following an intervention by the Solicitor Regulatory Authority (SRA), CK Solicitors was closed in 2011.

Coates went on to establish Coates & Co and was able to defraud clients and steal funds coming into her possession when acting as an executor for Selsey residents.

This came to light during 2014 when the investigation was passed to officers of the Sussex Police Economic Crime Unit.

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During the six-year period it emerged Coates used client money to fund a lavish lifestyle – spending £10,000 on a hot tub, bbuying a Range Rover and financing a holiday to Barbados for herself and a group of friends.

She regularly attended horse races at both Cheltenham and Goodwood, and at least some of the client money was used to finance monthly mortgage payments on a series of properties bought by her.

Stephen Hiseman, 60, of an address in the resort of Morzine in the French Alps, was sentenced to two-and-a-half years after being found guilty of two counts of fraud while acting as a freelance legal consultant associated to CK Solicitors.

Hiseman, a long-standing friend of Kenny, became involved in the transfer of £60,000 of client money which was diverted to his own foreign bank account.

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Police said he had earlier obtained £5,000 from another client by abusing his position and misrepresenting the outcome of a debt settlement.

Detective Constable Nikki Thiim, of Sussex Police Economic Crime Unit, said: “This was a complex investigation which was delayed in coming to court due to procedural issues brought about by one of the defendants.

“These convictions have exposed the deceit and greed of a group of individuals who have consistently denied exploiting the trust placed in them by members of the public, and the theft of almost £1million.

“The court heard how their deception not only led to victims losing thousands of pounds but that Kenny’s action had directly contributed to Mr Foskett tragically taking his own life.

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“The fraud caused property transactions to fail, the theft of family inheritances and the dissipation of child trust funds.”

Following sentencing Sussex Police will undertake a financial investigation to pursue the possibility of recovering assets held by the defendants under the Proceeds of Crime Act, so that wherever possible, compensation might be returned to the victims of these offences.

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