Friday 13 August 2010

Crooked Caretaker Dodges More Jail For Targeting Residents


A guilt-ridden residential caretaker at a landmark development, who raided unsuspecting residents flats while they were out, helping himself to thousands of pounds worth of jewellery and electrical equipment returned from South Africa to “face the music.”

Scottish-born Paul Cunningham, 45, took a £4,000 car from one resident of Downings House, (pictured) a Grade II listed former school building at 21 Southey Road, Wimbledon, loaded it up with loot and pawned the lot.

He pleaded guilty at Kingston upon Thames Crown Court to burgling one female resident on or before April 9, stealing a diamond ring, sapphire and diamond ring, gold watch, gold ring, broche and chain, worth £7,200.

He also admitted taking a £1,100 Sony television and surround-sound equipment from another flat and stealing a set of car keys for a Toyota Yaris from a couple who were on holiday.

“He had gone to South Africa, but came back to face the music,” Cunningham’s lawyer Mr. Michael Marlow told the court today.

Cunningham, whose family emigrated to South Africa when he was young, initially returned to the UK in 2007 and got the caretaker’s job on June 1, 2008.

The position came with spare sets of keys for all the flats and the first victim suddenly realised jewellery was missing from inside her ground-floor flat despite no evidence of a break-in.

Later that month a letting-agent noticed household electrical equipment was missing from an unoccupied flat and when a couple returned from holiday on April 11 their car was gone.

On each occasion the victims tried to call trusted Cunningham to report the crimes, but there was no response.

On April 12 the defendant sent a text to the couple, informing them their vehicle was parked at Gatwick Airport and it was recovered by Sussex Police.

He sent a follow-up text revealing he was returning to “face the music.”

He also revealed the jewellery had been pawned at a broker’s in Tooting and some of it was returned to the victim.

Cunningham was circulated as wanted on the Police National Computer, but he returned to the UK and handed himself into Wimbledon Police Station on May 8.

The defendant, who claims he has a heroin and sleeping pills addiction, told officers he only received £155 for the jewellery and sold the television for £500.

“You should be under no delusions these were serious offences,” Judge Martin Binning told Cunningham. “There was a serious breach of trust.”

The defendant, who has been in custody for three months, was sentenced to a two-year supervision order with an eighteen-month drug rehabilitation requirement and ordered to pay £2,000 compensation to the victims.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

You need to give the Bob squad boys some credit.... maybe "Bob squad makes fugitive double killer face the music."