Man from Alford used bank card he found 60 times

An Alford man found a bank card and used it 60 times to buy presents for his children and to fund his drug habit, magistrates at Boston have been told.
News from the courts ANL-170911-154107001News from the courts ANL-170911-154107001
News from the courts ANL-170911-154107001

Wesley James Barnett, 34, of St Wilfrid’s Close, admitted theft of the Halifax Bank card and using it in contactless transactions totalling £1,600 worth of goods.

Dan Pietryka, prosecuting, said Barnett stole the card on December 16 and then used it in 60 transactions to purchase goods between then and December 27.

He said Barnett was interviewed by police in January and he told them he had found it on the ground in Lumley Road and had started using it because he did not have enough money to buy Christmas presents for his children at the time.

Mitigating, Lloyd Edwards said Barnett had been out of trouble between 2004 and 2017 but he had been regularly in trouble since then because a family crisis had ‘completely devastated him’ and he had started taking a ‘large amount of drugs’.

He said a drug referral order, that had been imposed in September, had now expired but he was still working with Addaction, as he was still taking drugs but at a much reduced level.

Mr Edwards said the thefts were in part to sell the stolen goods for money to buy drugs and also to ‘shower his children with gifts’.

He added that Barnett was subject to a suspended prison sentence imposed after these offences, and had not offended since then.

Barnett, who it was said suffered from fibromyalgia and was now permanently confined to a wheelchair, was given a new six month drug referral order and ordered to pay £1,600 in compensation to the Halifax Bank.