Difference between revisions of "Richard Alderman"

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Revision as of 16:33, 12 August 2020

Person.png Richard AldermanRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(lawyer, deep state functionary)
Richard Alderman.jpg
Criticised for irregularities during his time as director of The UK Serious Fraud Office. Alleged irregularities include £1m of unauthorised payoffs to colleagues

Employment.png Senior Consultant

In office
2012 - Present
EmployerSlaughter and May

Employment.png SFO/Director

In office
April 2008 - April 2012
The Telegraph charged that the SFO "was run in a 'slovenly, sloppy' manner"

Richard Alderman is a former SFO director, a tenure which was widely criticised. The Telegraph reported that the SFO "was run in a 'slovenly, sloppy' manner" and that he took 52 days foreign travel in a year and sanctioned £1m of unauthorised payoffs to colleagues.[1]

Andrew Feinstein described him as a man whose "long career in the deeper reaches of the British bureaucracy made him a safe pair of hands".[2]

Career

Before the SFO, he was a senior investigator at HM Revenue and Customs in charge of specialised tax inquiries.[3]

SFO Director

In 2010 Alderman met the head of the World Bank's anti-corruption unit, Leonard McCarthy, "to discuss strengthening co-operation between the two agencies."[4]

In a letter to Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, Emily Thornberry wrote:

"I fear that Richard Alderman's conduct with regard to severance packages and ex-gratia payments to senior staff may amount to an offence of Misconduct in Public Office. I would be very grateful for any assistance that you can offer in investigating this deeply troubling matter.’"[5]

Payoffs to colleagues

In March 2013, The Telegraph began a report by stating that "Before a brutal grilling by MPs on the Public Accounts Committee, Richard Alderman was forced to admit he had not obtained written approval for nearly £1m of severance payments to three departing colleagues." They quoted Emily Thornberry as saying that "A financial irregularity on this scale is an affront to the standing of the SFO, which is supposed to be the nation’s flagship fraud and corruption watchdog."[6]

Later Activities

Slaughter and May hired Alderman as a senior consultant, a group with which he had dealings when he lead the SFO.[7]

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References