Lotto fraudster handed £2.5m after using FAKE ticket faces six more years in prison

The former bricklayer, 56, is set to lose a house and land in Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, where he had planned to build a hotel.

If he does not hand over his assets, valued at £939,782.44, within three months, six years will be added to the nine-year sentence he is already serving.

Putman, now 56, was found guilty in October 2019 of using a forged winning ticket to claim a £2.5 million jackpot in 2009.

The house, close to the M25, currently stands in a scruffy, unkempt state with curtains drawn shut.

The land resembles a vehicle graveyard – with at least twenty cars and vans parked up alongside caravans and mobile homes.

In a hearing at St Albans crown court today, prosecutor Adam Pearson said the benefit Putman had obtained from the fraud was £2,525,495 and the available amount for confiscation was £939,782.44.

His barrister Lawrence Selby said: “Mr Putman does not accept or agree the benefit figure or realisable assets, but will not be contesting these proceedings.”

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Family favourite restaurant chain delays new openings after closing two locations – and more could follow

A FAMILY favourite restaurant chain has delayed its plans to open new…

Major bank to close 11 more branches this year – see the full list

A MAJOR bank is set to close 11 more branches this year…

‘More than half of UK broadband customers’ hit by connection problems

Telecoms providers added ‘insult to injury’ as prices rose, says report by…

We take a look at what homes you can buy around the country with a budget of £355,000 

The average price of a home in Britain has risen to its…