Bookies' employee stole €18,000 in seven months

A SEPARATED mother who stole €18,000 from her employer when she ran into financial difficulties after her marriage ended is to be considered for community service after repaying the money.

Jennifer Good (39), of The Way, Hunters Run, Clonee, stamped blank betting dockets when she was alone in Pat McManus Bookmakers' office in the Little Pace Shopping Centre in Clonee, later filling in winning details and collecting cash.

Good pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court last week to five counts of theft on dates between November 2004 and June 2005. Judge Katherine Delahunt referred the case to the Probation Service to assesses Good's suitability for community service.

Garda Peter Cooney told Mr Séan Guerin, BL, prosecuting, that the thefts came to light when Good's employer, Brian Murray, happened to observe her put a betting docket through the system when she was alone in the shop.

Garda Cooney said her employer decided to do an audit and found 180 suspicious dockets. These bets had all been placed while Good was on duty and had all been settled by her. He also noted that the dockets were all in pristine condition, which was unusual.

The dates on the dockets ranged from November 2004, when Good started work in the shop, to June 2005 and approximately €18,000 was taken in total. Garda Cooney said the accused readily admitted the thefts when arrested and fully co-operated with Gardai.

Good told gardai she was paid €80 a day and had begun stamping blank dockets after a security camera was removed. She said she would stamp the docket, fill the winning details in later and collect cash. She said she would put through two or three dockets every day she worked and had taken up to €300 a time.

Garda Cooney said the defendant had no previous convictions and was separated from her husband, with whom she had two young children.

Mr Luán Ó Braonáin SC, defending, said she had had difficulties after their separation with maintenance payments from her husband, which had now been resolved, and had run into arrears in her mortgage and other bills.

Mr Ó Braonáin said she had collected €18,000 from various sources to repay her employer and felt a great deal of shame for her actions. He said she was unlikely to come to Garda attention again and asked the court to treat her as leniently as possible.