HOME NEWS MAGAZINE MANIFESTO CONTACT ARCHIVE SHOP
 

The Talented Mr. Rodley

rodley

A gang of international criminals, spearheaded by an ersatz lord named Hugh Rodley, came within a whisker of stealing £229 million from a City bank. After months of preparation, a team of Belgian hackers working for Mr. Rodley stole into the offices of Sumitomo in October 2004. They made 21 transfers of up to £40 million each from the accounts of high-profile customers including Casio, Toshiba and Nomura Asset Management.

Rodley then attempted to transfer the stolen money into accounts of his own in Cyprus and the Seychelles. But the hackers had made a tiny error involving the touch of a single key, bamboozling the whole money transfer system and revealing it to the bank.

Rodley was convicted at Snaresbrook Crown Court of conspiracy to defraud and conspiracy to transfer criminal property. Rodley had enjoyed all the trappings of the rural aristocracy, with a £2 million Gloucestershire home surrounded by five acres of gardens, riding stables, a Rolls-Royce and an office in Mayfair.

But behind the respectability was a lifetime of fraud. Rodley was born Brian McGough in Ireland in 1947. He purchased his title and insisted on being addressed as “Lord Rodley” throughout the proceedings. He has a long criminal record for offences including forgery and obtaining property by deception. But he behaved like a gentleman to the last, despite clearly not being one, thanking his investigating officers at the end of the trial: “Thank you for the way you have treated me, I am very tired, I have lost the will to fight. Good luck.”


4 Comments »

Comment by Judy Lugg — April 14, 2009 @ 8:43 am

Ther are huge amounts of his fraud still uncovered. I for one, along with many others was swindled by him in connection with a telephone card franchise, Konnecta.


Comment by Dr. Leavingsoon — September 29, 2009 @ 12:24 pm

If one is going to do something terribly wrong, one can either be caddish, or at least respectably decent in defeat.
This fellow has managed, incredibly, to do both.
I’m of two minds about this – He’s a dashed criminal, but at least he can doff his bowler while he robs you blind.


Comment by Tom Crane — September 30, 2009 @ 7:43 pm

It is amazing that such people can seem like such good chaps. I guess that they have not only created their persona, but they really believe that is real. The great American swindlers of recent time come to my mind.


Comment by joseph shaw — November 9, 2009 @ 9:15 pm

A paltry £229m? Surely a spot of community service would have been sufficient.


RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment