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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Ellen Kirwin & Aditi Rane

Lorry driver pretended to be dead neighbour to steal £60k of his savings

A man posed as his dead neighbour for more than two years so he could steal more than £60,000 of his cash and life savings.

Dean Thompson claims he 'unofficially cared' for neighbour David Traylen for 20 years. But when Mr Traylen died aged 78, Thompson pretended to be the pensioner to carry out a spending spree with his money. A court heard Thompson, from Hull, spoke to Mr Traylen's bank pretending to be him soon after he passed away and transferred £25,000 to himself. He then transferred a further £30,000 worth of uncashed bonds to himself two years later.

Over those two years, the 54-year-old also withdrew thousands using Mr Traylen's debit card. A total of £61,356.25 was taken from Mr Traylen's accounts, Hull Daily Mail reports. Thompson, of De La Pole Avenue, admitted five counts of fraud by false representation and one count of theft at Hull Crown Court. Ben Hammersley, prosecuting, Mr Traylen did not have any known relatives or beneficiaries to his estate when he died on October 2, 2017 and that Thompson was 'unofficially caring' for him for the last two decades of his life.

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Thompson registered David' s death with Hull City Council but then called up First Direct bank, impersonating Mr Traylen and asking for the £28,000 in his savings account to be transferred into his current account. Posing as Mr Traylen, Thompson told the bank he was 'very ill and wanted to sort out his funds'. He then wrote himself a cheque for £25,000.

Over the next two years, the court heard, Thompson used the money for his family's day-to-day expenditure. He continued to withdraw a further £6,367 using Mr Traylen's debit card. In October 2019, again posing as his dead neighbour, Thompson accessed a further £30,000 of uncashed bonds and transferred them into his own account.

On November 11, 2019, Mr Traylen's sister, who lived in New Zealand, came forward to claim his estate. She appointed a solicitor in the UK to liquidate the property, unearthing Thompson's fraud. In a police interview, Thompson claimed the money had been a gift from Mr Traylen, but later fully admitted to the offences. Charlotte Baines, mitigating, said Thompson has had no previous convictions in his 54 years.

She added: "He knows what he did was despicable and utterly regrets his actions. His intentions were good, he supported David Traylen when he was alive, David had no one to care for him when he was alive. The defendant had meaningful intentions. Thompson is someone with a strong work ethic, working for most of his adult life, he had a secure job at Stagecoach Transport. He has been trying to put together the funds to pay back what he took, he wants to put it right."

Judge Peter Kelson QC told Dean Thompson: "I accept that you did previously support the victim before his demise. You described yourself as his unofficial carer, that is an underestimation of the support you provided him. However, after his death, you immediately transferred money to yourself by deceiving his bank.

"The aggravating features of this case are the abuse of trust and sophisticated nature of the offence in that it took significant planning. This surpasses the threshold for immediate custody." Judge Kelson sentenced Dean Thompson to two years in prison.

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