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rtp slot gacor hari ini - https://pagbilaoacademy.edu.ph/rtp-live-slot. A rampant fraudster who ripped off Medicare to pay for her lavish lifestyle felt she was entitled to the money because she was special.  Sarah Ward, 31, of Noble Park North - in 's southeast - was on Friday jailed for two years, but will only have to serve one year before being released on a recognizance order - a Commonwealth version of a good behaviour bond.  Ward had been working as a receptionist at the Melbourne Digestive Clinic when she put through 1609 fraudulent Medicare claims totalling $181,121 for herself and her husband.  It was not the first time she had illegally sponged taxpayers, with a prior conviction in 2015 for a $29,000 fraud against a Melbourne hospital.

    (Image: [[|]])   Walk of shame: Sarah Ward leaves the County Court of Victoria on Wednesday in what would be her last hours of freedom 

In sentencing her, County Court of Victoria Judge Geoff Chettle revealed Ward had began stealing from taxpayers less than a year after completing a community corrections order she received for those thefts.  The court heard Ward's thieving was motivated by her desperate need to 'present an affluent appearance to others'.

 RELATED ARTICLES                 Share this article Share   A seemingly unrepentant Ward later told forensic doctors she felt entitled to the money because she felt underpaid by her bosses. 

Forensic psychologist Patrick Newton told the court Ward showed all the signs of being a 'narcissist'.  'Ms Ward's narcissistic traits have a predictable and clear impact on her self evaluation and her perspective of other people.

She was apt to overestimating her own abilities and to lack empathy for others,' he said.  'Ms Ward underestimates the gravity of dishonesty … tending to see such conduct as justifiable because she is special and because it assists her to overcome the unfairness which would otherwise prevent her from achieving the success that is her due.' Mr Newton said Ward was less likely to feel guilt or shame over her treachery and felt a need to take advantage of others out of risk of being exploited by them.  The court heard Ward had made up to 80 fraudulent claims a day between March 2019 and when she was caught in April 2020. Court documents state over the year she submitted 781 false Medicare patient claims in her own name and 828 in the name of her husband, Morton Ward, before the clinic's accountants tipped off Medicare and authorities.

    (Image: [[|]])   Sarah Ward hoped her breast feeding child might keep her out of jail.

She was wrong 

    (Image: [[|]])   Ward made more than 1600 fraudulent transactions 

Judge Chettle was scathing in his assessment of Ward's behaviour.  'Your offending is obviously serious.

It involved planning, sophistication and was repetitive and long lasting,' he said.  'You flagrantly breached the trust placed in you to honestly carry out your employment duties. Your offending was motivated by greed  and not by need.' Your offending was motivated by greed and not by need  The court heard Ward had told doctors she believed she had been 'inadequately paid' by her employers and was desperate to keep up with her more wealthy friends.  'You wanted better clothing for your children and a better car,' Judge Chettle said. Ward had banked on being handed a 'get out of jail free card' because she became pregnant after getting caught, and that baby is now a year old child who she continues to breastfeed.  Her barrister, Michael Allen, attempted to convince Judge Chettle that jailing his client would 'lead to a deterioration in her child's health and well-being'. But on Wednesday the court heard Ward's plans had come undone because her child would be able to live with her in jail through the state's Living With Mum Program. 

    (Image: [[|]])   Ward's baby will now be forced to go to jail with his vile mother, who ripped off sick Australians 

The court heard Ward had shown little concern for the health and wellbeing of sick children when she repeatedly defrauded Australia's health system.  As part of her job, Ward had access to the Medicare patient claims system and used that to make false claims for consultations with the two doctors who supervised her at the clinic.  Ward pleaded guilty to a single charge of obtaining a financial advantage by deception from a Commonwealth entity. Mr Newton told the court Ward was motivated to steal because she had come from a poor family and was bullied at school.  'Ms Ward concluded that unless she could demonstrate overtly her worthiness by accumulating the external trappings of success, she would be destined to experience recurrent rejection and so remain on the periphery of social groups as she had during her youth,' he told the court.  'Ms Ward seems to have reasoned that she must either take advantage of the situation to enhance her ability to present an affluent appearance to others or else be doomed to face continued rejection and ostracism.' Crown prosecutor Adam Murphy accused Ward of 'robbery of the Australian community'. He further dismissed Ward's attempts to convince Judge Chettle that she was suffering from a 'personality disorder' that compelled her to be steal.  'Patrick Newton …

said word for word „that none of the offender's traits either individually or in combination are sufficiently severe to reach the level of a personality disorder“,' Mr Murphy said.  The court heard Ward had secured another job with a psychology practice, whose owners were oblivious to her previous and current offending.  She has since repaid the money in full, taking $100,000 from a mortgage offset account and selling a $70,000 car.

She also borrowed money from her mother. <div class=„art-ins mol-factbox news“ data-version=„2“ id=„mol-b760f570-c2d9-11ed-a57e-8f60b9b3fba3“ website reason why Medicare fraudster Sarah Ward brazenly stole $180K

a_ampant_f_audste_who_ipped_off.txt · Zuletzt geändert: 2023/03/17 07:26 von renegisborne8