> He is currently working five nights a week in a factory and has saved up €30,000 to repay to the school.
> If he was not imprisoned, he would continue to save and repay the school in full, counsel said.
Fair enough.
Starting to look like white collar crime is a good career path. Fraud, done well, almost never leads to a custodial sentence. And if it’s done well, across borders, the perpetrators are almost never caught.
A senior police officer in the UK said that the best crime to undertake these days is fraud, due to the lack of investigations launched against it.
And he didn’t even have to return the money. /s
Should it not be spelt Principle?
>He is currently working five nights a week in a factory and has saved up €30,000 to repay to the school.
>If he was not imprisoned, he would continue to save and repay the school in full, counsel said.
What was to stop him being jailed, let out on day (night) release to earn the money back to repay what he stole, and let out once it had been repaid in full?
> Judge Martin Nolan
Oh, I see now.
If you look at the dates he was rinsing them from the month he took charge right until he was busted. Using the school as an atm. He’s very lucky to avoid jail time. I imagine a working class person taking a quarter of that amount wouldn’t get such leniency.
These suspended sentences are starting to look attractive. I get the use of free stuff for a while and then have to give it back. It’s win, win!
8 comments
Yes, it’s Nolan.
> He is currently working five nights a week in a factory and has saved up €30,000 to repay to the school.
> If he was not imprisoned, he would continue to save and repay the school in full, counsel said.
Fair enough.
Starting to look like white collar crime is a good career path. Fraud, done well, almost never leads to a custodial sentence. And if it’s done well, across borders, the perpetrators are almost never caught.
A senior police officer in the UK said that the best crime to undertake these days is fraud, due to the lack of investigations launched against it.
And he didn’t even have to return the money. /s
Should it not be spelt Principle?
>He is currently working five nights a week in a factory and has saved up €30,000 to repay to the school.
>If he was not imprisoned, he would continue to save and repay the school in full, counsel said.
What was to stop him being jailed, let out on day (night) release to earn the money back to repay what he stole, and let out once it had been repaid in full?
> Judge Martin Nolan
Oh, I see now.
If you look at the dates he was rinsing them from the month he took charge right until he was busted. Using the school as an atm. He’s very lucky to avoid jail time. I imagine a working class person taking a quarter of that amount wouldn’t get such leniency.
These suspended sentences are starting to look attractive. I get the use of free stuff for a while and then have to give it back. It’s win, win!