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man gets two years' jail for role in corruption case
An unusual corporate fraud case ended
yesterday with the jailing of a former
Auckland
advertising high-flier for his role in a financial scandal that
enmeshed two of
New Zealand
's leading companies.
Former employees of forest giant Carter Holt
Harvey and advertising leader Colenso BBDO have been convicted of
offences involving secret payments of $243,000.
In the bribery case, brought by the Serious
Fraud Office, Justice Geoffrey Venning yesterday sent former Colenso
senior accounts director Adrian Hood to jail for two years.
The starting date of his sentence was deferred
for two months to allow him to apply for home detention.
Hood, an advertising executive for 18 years,
had worked himself up to a position of responsibility at Colenso,
managing Carter Holt's customer loyalty programme, the judge said.
Carter Holt was a substantial client of
Colenso, and former Carter Holt marketing manager Glen John Keeley
and Hood had developed a relationship so that when Colenso decided
to contract out its customer loyalty programme, companies owned by
Hood and his family secured the business.
Between December 1999 and April 2003, Hood
made 45 payments to Keeley as an incentive to keep the business.
Hood's returns from the scheme were far
greater than the payments to Keeley, Justice Venning said in the
High Court at
Auckland
yesterday.
In June last year, Justice Simon France jailed
Keeley for 10 months.
Keeley pleaded guilty to one charge of
accepting a secret commission and breaking the Secret Commissions
Act, for which the maximum penalty is two years jail.
Justice Venning said yesterday he took
Keeley's sentence into account when jailing Hood.
A jury had found Hood guilty of 45 counts of
making secret payments to Keeley and Justice Venning said Hood's
offending went against the public's perception that
New Zealand
business was largely free from corruption.
"This sort of dishonesty, which is
effectively bribery to continue a supply of business, is not at all
commonplace and should not become so. Cases like this are
rare," he told Hood.
"Before this fall from grace, you were a
useful member of society."
Hood had sons aged 3 and 6, but his marriage
had broken up and he was managing a hotel/motel business in
Hamilton
, the judge said.
Hood had demonstrated his willingness to get
his life "back on track" by managing that business, whose
owners hoped at some stage to go into business with him.
An emotional Hood held his face throughout the
sentencing, nodded when the judge asked about his remorse and wept
openly when mention was made of his former executive career and
sons.
Defence lawyer Jeremy Bioletti said Hood's
marriage and career were over and he had suffered condemnation from
people.
That had taken a toll, leaving him with a
siege mentality.
He had suffered "burnout" in his
high-pressure role at Colenso, now suffered animosity from many
people and his life had disintegrated.
Mr Bioletti asked for a shorter sentence of 12
to 15 months prison.
Prosecutor Mike Ruffin said Hood was
classified at low risk of reoffending but the sentence should be
longer than suggested by Mr Bioletti.
I had to include that story…it was just so unusual. Just goes
to show that with fraud, probably more than any other type of
offence, often the offenders are the most unlikely people….The
rule of thumb is, if the books seem to show your staff or fellow
Directors are ripping you off, then there’s a strong likelihood
that they are. Get on to Active ASAP- we love Fraud and uncovering
fraudsters- really gives us something to stretch our minds.
Whether it needs overt or covert surveillance, human or
technology based, computer forensics, or just good old fashioned leg
( and paper ) work- Active can definitely help with your fraud or
employee theft problem.
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