Caught in the Act
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Stolen deposit total passes £1,000,000 for third year in a row

The amount of renter’s cash crooked landlords and letting agents have been convicted or accused of raiding from tenancy deposits has passed £1,000,000 for the third successive year.

Renting reform campaigner Ajay Jagota of zero deposit firm Dlighted keeps a stolen deposit totaliser, highlighting how much money is stolen from renters every year.

Recent convictions took 2018’s running total of stolen deposits to £1,334,718 as the year comes to a close - a rise of 14.8% from the £1,162,037 recorded in 2017.

The most recent case saw three men who ran agencies in and around Islington under the name Crestons, leave at least 19 victims £105,000 out of pocket.

Other recent cases include:

• Heather Crabb, who admitted pocketing £260,000 from renters in Plymouth.

• Victoria Steele, arrested in Swaffham after an estimated £60,000 of landlord and tenant cash was reported as missing.

• Karen Blakely, convicted of pocketing £34,000 in Scunthorpe. 12 landlords and letting agents have now been convicted or charged with theft of deposits in 2018, at an average theft of £111,227.

Ajay Jagota is head of the #ditchthedeposithcampaign, with seeks government encouragement for landlords and letting agents replacing traditional tenancy deposits with deposit replacement insurance, allowing the £4.5bn of renter’s cash held in deposits to be transformed into Help to Buy ISAs for first-time buyers and eliminating deposit theft.

He said:

“For the third successive year more £1,000,000 of the deposits which supposedly keep landlords and tenantrs safe have themselves been stolen and as our figures show the problem is just getting worse.

“It’s impossible to see things improving in 2019 either – especially as the introduction of the Tenants Fees ban is going to but considerable financial pressure on lettings agents, making the temptation to misappropriate renter’s cash irresistible to agents who find themselves trouble.

“As I always say, this is just the tip of the iceberg. It’s the private rented sector’s dirty little secret that supposedly ring-fenced deposits are routinely used as a convenient source of cash. As long as businesses don’t get into trouble, they can always cover this up. But when they go under, which could well happen to an increasingly number of businesses next year, it becomes frighteningly obvious quite how much cash is missing.

“It doesn’t have to be this way. 2018 was the year that deposit free renting went mainstream, and for good reason. Deposit replacement insurance like Dlighted’s gives landlords and letting agents significantly superior protection against rent arrears, property damage and legal costs while allowing them to let properties longer and faster.

“A last minute amendment to the Tenant Fee ban has now capped deposits at 5 weeks, yet again begging the question ‘are cash deposits really the correct vehicle for protecting landlord’s properties?’

“Deposit free renting makes renting cheaper for tenants, easier and more profitable for property professionals and cuts crime. So let’s make 2019 the year we eradicate deposit theft once and for all by simply not using deposits.”

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by John Hart .

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