Suffolk fraud investigators protect nearly £4 million of public funds

The team uncovered 66 cases of irregularity from 318 investigations

Author: Sian RochePublished 24th Jul 2023

Nearly £4 million of public funding's been protected by fraud investigators in Suffolk.

East Suffolk Council’s (ESC) Corporate Fraud Service uncovered 66 cases of irregularity from 318 investigations between April last year and March this year.

An annual Corporate Fraud Service performance report, presented to ESC’s Audit and Governance Committee this month, showed that investigating officers helped to detect £3,855,337 in irregularity during the last financial year.

Things the service intervened in included the cancellation of 13 Right to Buy applications, which the council says saved £1,062,580 in discounts.

Tenancy fraud investigations resulted in the recovery of eight social housing properties, which the council estimates saved £744,000.

A further £241,715 was reclaimed in financial contributions to pay for improved infrastructure from planning applicants who wrongly claimed exemption from liability to pay Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) but were found not to have fulfilled conditions relating to their declaration.

Another £401,839 was retained through the preventing and detection of incorrect or fraudulent Covid-19 business recovery grant claims, designed to provide financial support for small businesses following the coronavirus pandemic.

Business rate avoidance detection resulted in new bills worth £114,416, while investigations into businesses with additional undeclared premises removed £3,675 in wrongly claimed Small Business Rates Relief (SBRR).

Cllr Vince Langdon-Morris, East Suffolk’s cabinet member for Resources and Value for Money, said: “I commend the work of our Corporate Fraud Service team in upholding the council’s zero-tolerance approach to fraud, corruption, bribery and other irregularity.

“The prevention, detection and recovery of fraud helps to ensure the protection of public funds and reduce financial pressure on the council.

“But this isn’t just about saving money. The work of the Corporate Fraud Service indirectly enables families to come off the housing register and find homes; it helps us retain housing stock which may otherwise have been wrongly bought at a discount; it means communities get what they deserve in contributions from developers, and it means that we can protect and preserve the financial assistance available to those who genuinely qualify for and deserve it.”

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