Get involved: send your photos, videos, news & views by texting 'OXFORD NEWS' to 80360 or email »
12:00pm Monday 14th July 2008
A benefit cheat who claimed more than £4,000 in council handouts has become the first person in Oxfordshire to be electronically tagged for the offence.
Melanie Richardson, 35, of White Leys Close, formally Venners Water, Didcot, pleaded guilty to five counts of benefit fraud at Didcot Magistrates' Court.
She was ordered to undertake 40 hours of unpaid community work and wear a tag for four months.
This means she cannot leave her house between 7pm and 7am, Thursday to Sunday.
She must also pay back the full £4,262.97, which she claimed, but was not entitled to.
Magistrates heard that Ms Richardson failed to declare she had started work and continued to receive housing benefit, council tax benefit and income support.
South Oxfordshire district councillor Rodney Mann, cabinet member for finance, said: "This woman was perfectly able to support herself and has now got a criminal record for her deceit.
"It is also the first incidence of tagging for benefit fraud in Oxfordshire and will mean Richardson is restricted on the times she can leave her home.
"With the continuing good work of our investigators we are confident of weeding out more and more fraudsters to do our bit for the public purse."
Here’s one very good reason why Evelyn Waugh’s magnum opus Brideshead Revisited has never been adapted for the big screen before.
We were walking through lush grass towards a magnificent sucking herd of Aberdeen Angus cattle. Not a single creature moved as we approached; only a red kite flying overhead disturbed the scene. These beautiful creatures remained calm and comfortable and continued grazing despite our presence.
Oxford United's new chairman has issued an open invitation to fans, who have suggestions and thoughts about ways to improve the club, to come and see him.
I am far from being a fan of the burger, perhaps as a result of the horrors I inflicted on myself in youth.
VAL BOURNE on an American producer's rich variety of colourful heucheras
Staging a an epic work such as Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd is an enormous challenge — but director Kate Saxon is convinced she can bring this story of love and loss to life without presenting pastoral cuteness or melodramatic hysteria. She promises there will be neither fluffy sheep nor windswept clinches in the English Touring Theatre’s production, at the Oxford Playhouse from Tuesday to next Saturday.
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Find your next job now in Oxfordshire
Search Now »
Make a date in Oxfordshire now!
Search Now »
Oxfordshire homes for sale and to let
Search Now »
Cars for sale in Oxfordshire
Search Now »