Paddy Power Betfair in the dog house after £2.2m fine

Paddy Power Betfair has been fined £2.2m (€2.5m) by Britain's gambling watchdog for a raft of failings including allowing a punter to gamble money stolen from a dogs home.

Paddy Power Betfair in the dog house after £2.2m fine

Paddy Power Betfair has been fined £2.2m (€2.5m) by Britain's gambling watchdog for a raft of failings including allowing a punter to gamble money stolen from a dogs home.

The UK Gambling Commission found "significant" amounts of stolen money had been gambled with Paddy Power's online exchange Betfair after it failed to carry out proper anti-money laundering checks.

Its investigation also found Paddy Power did not protect three customers showing signs of gambling addiction.

The commission's inquiry centred on five customers in 2016, including two who were allowed to gamble stolen money - one of whom had defrauded his employer, Birmingham Dogs Home.

Simon Price, who was chief executive of the dogs home, and his wife Alayna admitted cheating the charity in an £894,754 (€1m) fraud over four years from 2012 to feed his gambling addiction.

Mr Price was jailed for five years at the end of 2017, while Mrs Price was given a two-year suspended term.

As part of Paddy Power's settlement with the Gambling Commission, the money will be returned to the dogs home.

The regulator also found three Paddy Power customers were allowed to bet "extensively" online and through its betting shops despite signs of problem gambling, which were not picked up after failures to interact with the punters.

Paddy Power Betfair will pay out £1.7m (€1.9m) to charity Gamble Aware and just under £500,000 (€567,000) to victims and impacted parties, as well as £50,000 (€57,000) to cover the commission's investigation costs.

Richard Watson, executive director of the Gambling Commission, said: "As a result of Paddy Power Betfair's failings significant amounts of stolen money flowed through their exchange and this is simply not acceptable.

"Operators have a duty to all of their customers to seek to prevent the proceeds of crime from being used in gambling.

"These failings all stem from one simple principle - operators must know their customer."

PA

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