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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Mansfield Traquair Centre, 15 Mansfield Place, Edinburgh, EH3 6BB. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Best friend jailed for stealing cash from charity she helped set up

 

Funds raised for people with cancer were stolen

A woman has been jailed for stealing £86,000 from her best friend’s cancer charity.

Lindsay MacCallum, 61, defrauded the charity Rainbow Valley over the course of a decade, after launching it with former friend Angela MacVicar.

She also embezzled £9,505 from the Anthony Nolan Trust.

MacCallum, of Aberfoyle, Perthshire, forged signatures of charity staff and rerouted cash from fundraising accounts for her own use between 2011 and 2021, the court was told.

She worked as a fundraising manager for the Anthony Nolan Trust from 1995 to 2012 before she left to set up Rainbow Valley with MacVicar.

In 2005, MacVicar lost her 27-year-old daughter Johanna to leukaemia and the foundation was established in her honour.

The pair worked together for 10 years before a fall-out in 2022.

MacVicar subsequently discovered discrepancies in an account set up for a fundraising ball.

In total MacCallum took £85,978 from Rainbow Valley.

Katie Cunningham, prosecuting, told the court: "The accused sent a message to Mrs MacVicar stating, 'I'm really sorry Angela. I hate myself, I'm trying to make it right."

"She said she was ashamed and it was "abhorrent" that she had transferred money from the account into her own.

"The accused said her daughter was in terrible trouble and needed access to money.

"She said that she was finding it difficult to live with herself."

MacCallum was made project development manager of Rainbow Valley and in 2014 was given a charity credit card to replace using a Friends of Rainbow Valley bank account.

But the account remained in use and it was not until August 2022, after a fall out between the friends, that questions were raised over transactions from this account.

MacCallum - a former Royal Navy servicewoman - pleaded guilty to two fraud charges totalling £95,483.

Defence advocate Deirdre Flanagan said MacCallum had already paid back £25,000 of the money taken, was able to repay the rest, and intended to do so.

Sheriff Maryam Labaki told MacCallum: "The purpose of the Rainbow Valley charity was to support the families of those suffering from cancer.

"You betrayed those who are suffering, and the terminally ill and their families.

"You deprived them of funds raised in good faith."

 

Comments

0 0
Dominic
about 19 hours ago

And some do it the simpler wayvby manipulating the charity credit card.