A senior Army officer has been jailed for fraudulently claiming £48,000 in allowances to pay for his children’s boarding school fees.
Major General Nick Welch, understood to be the most senior officer to face court martial since 1815, was sentenced today (March 26), to 21 months imprisonment by a panel of senior officers following a four-week court martial trial at Bulford Military Court.
The Major General previously claimed that his roles in Andover and London made it more difficult to comply with the “mess” of military rules.
The court was told the 57-year-old two-star general, who left the military in 2018, had applied for the allowance on the basis that he and his wife Charlotte would not be living close to the children’s schools in Dorset.
The Continuity of Education Allowance (CEA) was claimed to allow their children to stay at £37,000-a-year Clayesmore School and £22,500-a-year Hanford School between December 2015 and February 2017.
The payment, which covers 90% of fees, is aimed at allowing children of service personnel to remain at the same schools to enable their serving parent to be accompanied by their spouse as they are posted to different locations.
But the prosecution said Mrs Welch, 54, spent most of her time at the cottage in Blandford Forum, Dorset, close to the two schools, rather than at their allocated military accommodation in Putney, south-west London.
CEA rules say a spouse must not be away from the residence at work address for more than 90 days per year.
The investigation was launched in February 2017 after a neighbour alerted authorities about the Welch family’s absence from the London home.
Welch had denied being dishonest and said he believed he had complied with the requirements of accompanied service because his wife was living with him for the majority of the time.
His barrister, Sarah Jones QC, argued the CEA system and the 90-day rule were a “mess” and not strictly enforced by Ministry of Defence (MoD) administrators.
Ms Jones said that Welch’s mobile role in the Army with responsibilities at the MoD in London and Army headquarters in Andover made it more difficult to establish his compliance with the CEA regulations.
But prosecutor Sarah Clarke QC accused Welch of lying and “attempting to manipulate” the figures regarding his family’s locations to cover up his dishonesty.
The court martial panel consisted of a retired major general, a rear admiral, a retired air vice marshal, two commodores, a brigadier and a civil servant.
An MoD spokeswoman said: “If a service person has been reported to the Royal Military Police because it is believed they have committed a crime it is only right that it is investigated fully and the results of the investigation are presented to the Service Prosecuting Authority.
“It has been proven in this case that the retired Major General Nicholas Welch OBE did commit fraud and therefore he will be sentenced accordingly.”
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