Accrington care worker who stole £200k from clients is jailed

Chelsea Whittaker, 31, admitted stealing cheques from around 30 clients in Lancashire between 2015 and 2018. She was jailed for two years and three months at Preston Crown Court.

Whittaker was a service manager for care company Lifeways, which runs homes for people across Lancashire. She was tasked with cashing in cheques from her clients but would then withdraw cash after being trusted with their bank details, police said.

Whittaker admitted stealing more than £200,000.

The victims lived in Accrington, Burnley, Colne, Blackburn, Nelson, Haslingden, Morecambe, Skelmersdale and Leyland. One victim died in hospital after being unable to afford rehabilitative care, while another victim struggled to save up for shaving foam, police said.

The sister of one the victims told police her brother, who was in recovery from a heart attack, should have had around £14,000 in his bank account. She said he was unable to pay for care and died in hospital after becoming anxious and refusing further treatment.

Whittaker was arrested after Lifeways reported her to police. Lifeways said the stolen money had been repaid to the victims and said it “deeply regretted the distress caused”. A spokesman for the company added it had reviewed and tightened procedures at the firm.

That is a particularly despicable crime which deserves a penalty worse than a short prison term … :angry:

The company should also be investigated. Could good practice have prevented this?

When I ran a mental health unit back in the 90’s we made sure no single person had control & we made sure figures were regularly double checked. My wife managed a number of units for a care company about 20 years ago & raised concerns about the way money was handled & the company ignored her. A few months after she left, a member of the office staff was arrested for fraud involving client money. That could easily have been avoided, but was not.

No amount of good practice will ever protect someone from a determined thief. But too many care companies fail to take good practice measures to protect those they should be protecting.