Former Police Officer Admits Role in 'Crash for Cash' Scheme

Former Police Officer Admits Role in 'Crash for Cash' Scheme.webp

London, April 8 An Indian-origin former police officer has pleaded guilty to his role in a "crash for cash" scheme, involving fraudulent personal injury claims following deliberate vehicle crashes in the UK.

Kuldip Singh, 42, was a Metropolitan Police officer when he became involved with a group that organized pre-arranged collisions with vehicles and then made fraudulent claims for compensation from insurance companies.

The UK's Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said the scheme involved the group receiving thousands of pounds in personal injury and vehicle damage compensation.

"Kuldip Singh was a serving police officer when he chose to become involved in a corrupt scheme that saw fraudulent insurance claims made after pre-arranged crashes," said Busola Johnson, Specialist Prosecutor with the CPS Special Crime Division.

"Furthermore, he made fraudulent and false claims about vehicles from his own car hire company. This was not a momentary lapse of judgment but a sustained pattern of calculated dishonesty, carried out for financial gain and designed to deceive insurers, employers, and the justice system itself.

"The public are entitled to expect the highest standards from those entrusted with enforcing the law, and Kuldip Singh's actions represented a serious betrayal of that trust and caused significant financial harm," she said.

Singh pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud, fraud by false representation, two counts of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, two counts of perverting the course of justice, and unauthorized access to a computer to facilitate further offences at Southwark Crown Court in London on Tuesday.

He will be sentenced for the crimes at the same court on June 2.

The CPS released details of the scheme, with one incident dating back to March 2016 when a member of the group, 32-year-old Raiyaan Anwar, who was working as a Tesco supermarket delivery driver at the time, drove his delivery van into the back of a white Citroen being driven by Singh.

Singh's passengers were four other men who were all involved in the scheme. Anwar admitted liability for the crash to his then employer, Tesco, but did not inform them of his acquaintance with the driver and passengers of the car.

This led to five personal injury compensation claims, and those fraudulent claims amounted to £33,362, although only £912 was paid.

Singh also ran a car hire company called ADK Supreme with another man, 55-year-old Alper Emin, where high-value vehicles were obtained on finance and rented out for a fee to individuals who would probably have been unable to pay for the vehicles themselves.

A client of ADK Supreme crashed one of the rented Mercedes cars, and to avoid liability, Singh and Emin falsely alleged that a burglary had taken place at the company address and that the key to the crashed Mercedes had been stolen. There had been no such burglary, the court was told.

Singh subsequently made a false insurance claim to cover the damage to the crashed car and received £16,145 from the insurance company.

According to the CPS, three further cars leased by ADK Supreme were involved in collisions or issued with tickets for road traffic violations, and Singh falsely claimed that the cars had been cloned to avoid being held liable.

He also created a false police report that one of his leased cars had been cloned and persuaded a member of police staff to make the entry on the police database in an attempt to avoid suspicion.

Singh was dismissed without notice from the Metropolitan Police Service on November 23, 2017, for gross misconduct. He and the other men then fled the country, but Singh was extradited from Georgia last month.

Meanwhile, his co-suspects – Anwar, Emin, Krishna Gnanaseelan, 31, and Singh Dehal, 31 – have been prosecuted in their absence and remain at large.
 
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car hire fraud conspiracy to commit fraud crash for cash criminal investigation financial crime fraud fraud by false representation georgia extradition insurance claims insurance fraud metropolitan police personal injury claims perverting the course of justice police misconduct southwark crown court uk law enforcement
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