A MAN who created a false document in an attempt to steal more than £2 million from a charity has been handed a jail sentence at Worcester Crown Court.

Stewart David Pearman, 75, of Bredon Road, Tewkesbury, was sentenced to five years and three months imprisonment on February 2 2023, for fraud and making a false statement on oath.

The CPS brought charges against Pearman following an investigation by West Mercia Police.

In 2015, an elderly woman known to Pearman was diagnosed with terminal cancer and sadly passed away at her home on 7 August 2016. 

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The deceased wrote a will in 2014, making an air ambulance charity the main beneficiary of her estate.

She left £25,000 to Pearman who she had appointed as one of the executors of her will.

Shortly after her death, Pearman produced a document which he titled ‘Letter of Wishes’ to solicitors dealing with her estate, declaring that he was now the sole executor of the will and the main beneficiary.

Pearman suddenly stood to inherit £2,186,079, significantly more than the £25,000 which she had intended to leave to him in the 2014 will.

Solicitors appointed to process the will raised doubts about the legitimacy of the letter of wishes and an investigation was launched.

It was found that the defendant wrote the letter of wishes shortly before the deceased passed away, and medical evidence from the deceased’s GP confirmed that she did not have mental capacity when the letter was purported to have been signed by her.

Pearman involved two further defendants Aleksander Yuriev Shikov, 35, and Luke William Derrett, 42, to support his criminal behaviour by requesting them to sign the letter of wishes as witnesses.

Shikov and Derrett provided sworn affidavits confirming that they signed the letter of wishes as witnesses after it was signed by the deceased. However, they later confessed that they in fact signed the letter after the deceased had died.

They both pleaded guilty to wilfully making a false statement on oath and were sentenced on 1 February 2023 to four months imprisonment suspended for 12 months.

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Simon Timbrell, detective constable of West Mercia Police, said: “This was a despicable crime that sought to both take advantage of an incredibly vulnerable woman and deny a life-saving charity vital funds.

“We are very pleased the estate will be bequeathed as intended.

“We hope this sentence sends a strong message that anyone seeking to take advantage of vulnerable people, particularly for financial gain, will be prosecuted.”