A conman who intimidated and confused betting shop cashiers into believing he had won bets has been jailed today (February 9).
Snaresbrook Crown Court heard how John O'Connor, 33 years old of St Mary's Road, Ealing, conned staff at Chelmsford branch of Ladbrokes, along with 13 other branches in the UK over around 18 months, from July 2012, out of about £10,000.
O'Connor used a number of what the betting industry refers to as "slow count fraud" tactics, fooling them into believing he had won bets when, in some cases, he had not even paid his stake.
His tactics included placing a bet but then distracting the cashier - sometimes with the help of friends - by asking questions, becoming rowdy or placing a series of small, obscure bets at the same time. This would allow him time to see if his runner was likely to win.
If it won, he would hand over his stake and claim the profit, or else pretend he had already paid and ask only for his winnings. He would then place the non-existent stake on another bet.
If he lost, he would leave without paying the stake.
As well as Chelmsford, O'Connor carried out his crimes at branches in Hillingdon, Redbridge, Tower Hamlets, Newham, Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Westminster, Clevedon in Somerset, Sutton-in-Ashfield in Nottingham, Chester in Cheshire, Standish in Greater Manchester, Sandy in Bedfordshire and Weston-super-Mare in Somerset.
Ladbrokes reported the offences to the Metropolitan Police Service in April 2013, after he carried out the con at a branch on Oxford Street, Westminster. Detectives circulated CCTV images of him to police services around the country, and Hertfordshire police officers arrested him in July 2014.
O'Connor was charged with 15 counts of a fraud by misrepresentation, to which he pleaded guilty at Snaresbrook Crown Court on 24 November.
While on bail, awaiting sentence, he carried out the same offence at William Hill on Tyburn Road, Edington, Birmingham on 28 December 2014.
It is believed that he may have carried out the scam on many more occasions.
Today, he was sentenced to 18 months' jail, suspended for two years for 16 counts of fraud by misrepresentation.
He was also given a 12-month supervision order and a four-month alcohol treatment order.