Nigerian Accountant Steals London School €4m Fund, Uk’s Biggest Education Fraud
A Nigerian-born bookkeeper Samuel Kayode, 57, at the centre of a fraud examination after £4m of a school reserve wound up in his own records.
The unlimited whole of cash is lost from the Haberdashers' Aske's Federation Trust in South London.
The school is named after seventeenth century silk dealer Robert Aske who left a lot of his riches to make an instructive philanthropy reserve keep running by the Worshipful Company of Haberdashers.
The Haberdashers' Aske's state funded schools for young men and young ladies in Hertfordshire was established with his cash.
Kayode went to work at Hatcham in 1997 and rose to end up records chief for the entire chain.
He was paid £57,000 a year, and told partners of his work as a minister in the Christ Apostolic Church, South London, peppering his discussions with 'acclaim the Lord'.
In October 2012 it rose that an extensive total of cash was lost from the foundations' assets.
Kayode's advantages and those of his significant other Grace, who passed on matured 53 a year ago, were then solidified.
It created the impression that enormous totals of school cash had been paid into a ledger in Nigeria and an organization called Samak, which is said to be keep running in Nigeria by Kayode's second spouse Yoni, despite the fact that he denies any wedding has occurred.
The trust propelled a High Court case to recover the missing money however the bookkeeper denied wrongdoing and asserted 'the sum total of what exchanges had been approved by the account chief'.
Be that as it may, the judge found in the trust's support last July and requested Kayode and the home of his late spouse to pay back more than £4million in addition to intrigue.
He stays everywhere and is not confronting any charges, in spite of the fact that he is because of address criminologists again this week.
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