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Social Welfare Fraud.

Dáil Éireann Debate, Wednesday - 16 December 2009

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

Questions (246, 247)

Olwyn Enright

Question:

258 Deputy Olwyn Enright asked the Minister for Social and Family Affairs the number of persons prosecuted for social welfare fraud in each payment area in 2009; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [47347/09]

View answer

Written answers

The number of criminal cases finalised in court for the first 11 months of 2009 was 334. The breakdown of the cases by type is set down in the tabular statement.

Criminal cases finalised in Court to end November 2009

Unemployment

Illness

Others

Employer

Total

Outcome

JA

JB

IB/DA

OPFP

**

Withdrawn

1

1

0

0

0

1

3

Fined

120

95

6

3

0

3

*227

Probation Act

23

20

1

1

0

1

46

Adjourned — Liberty to re-enter

2

2

0

0

0

0

4

Prison Sentence

3

6

0

0

**1

0

**10

Suspended Sentence

12

7

3

1

0

0

23

Struck Out/Dismissed

6

3

0

0

2

1

12

Community Service

4

1

0

2

0

1

†8

Convicted no penalty imposed

1

0

0

0

0

0

1

Total

172

135

10

7

3

7

334

JA — Jobseekers Allowance; JB — Jobseekers Benefit; IB — Illness Benefit; DA — Disability Allowance; OPFP — One Parent Family payment.

*4 cases received a fine and a suspended sentence.

†4 cases received community service and a fine.

**1 case received a prison sentence and a fine.

Others = 3 Employee Obstruction of a social welfare inspector.

Olwyn Enright

Question:

259 Deputy Olwyn Enright asked the Minister for Social and Family Affairs the number of people prosecuted for social welfare fraud from 2000 to date and in 2009; the average time taken to process these cases; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [47348/09]

View answer

The number of people prosecuted between 2000 and the end of November 2009 is set down in the tabular statement below. Under social welfare legislation, a prosecution for a summary offence may be brought within 2 years from the date that the offence was committed; or 18 months from when sufficient evidence to justify instituting legal proceedings came into the possession of the Department. All such cases are submitted by social welfare inspectors to the Department's Central Prosecution Service (CPS) for possible criminal proceedings. A brief in relation to each case is forwarded by CPS to the Chief State Solicitor's Office (CSSO) to initiate legal proceedings within the required timeframe through the District Courts. The cases with addresses outside Dublin and county are dealt with by the relevant local state solicitors based around the country.

The Courts are totally independent of the State and judges have the discretion to decide on the appropriate penalty to be applied in any case having regard to the evidence presented to them in relation to the case. It is the offence which is the subject of the prosecution, however, some judges choose to adjourn cases to monitor the recovery of the debt arising from the fraud. The average time to bring a case to conclusion through the courts varies. An analysis of the 334 cases finalised in court up to the end of November 2009 found that 14 (4.2%) cases were submitted to CPS for prosecution in 2009; 137 (41%) were submitted in 2008; 78 (23.4%) were submitted in 2007; 98 (29.3%) were submitted between 2003 and 2006. The balance of 7(2.1%) were submitted between 1997 and 2002.

DSFA Criminal Prosecutions

Year

Criminal cases finalised in court

2000

199

2001

199

2002

168

2003

209

2004

273

2005

269

2006

266

2007

239

2008

324

2009 end-(Nov)

334

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