Adam Smith College: Four could face trial

PROSECUTORS are considering charging four suspects in connection with alleged fraud at one of Scotland’s largest 
colleges.
The Adam Smith College in Kirkcaldy: Subject of a probe. Picture: Jane BarlowThe Adam Smith College in Kirkcaldy: Subject of a probe. Picture: Jane Barlow
The Adam Smith College in Kirkcaldy: Subject of a probe. Picture: Jane Barlow

Police have passed the names of three women and a man to the Crown Office after carrying out inquiries into the running of Adam Smith College in 
Kirkcaldy, now part of Fife College.

Separate probes by auditors KPMG and the Scottish Government resulted in the institution being ordered to pay back £5.5 million in EU grants in 2013.

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Now the Crown Office is considering a report from the police in which a 50-year-old man and three women aged 44, 49, and 58 are named in connection with incidents at the college between 2008 and 2012.

The government and KPMG investigations had uncovered voluntary severance payments made to two individuals that were not in line with college policy, as well as a lack of documentation around a number of decisions, including the personal use of college facilities and suppliers.

According to a report which was made public last year, KPMG found the college’s financial regulations had not been adhered to when it came to hiring two companies for a marketing strategy review.

KPMG also found evidence the college had submitted claims to grant funding bodies that were “inaccurate, unsupported by evidence and overstated” since at least 2007.

A later investigation by Scottish Government auditors found “significant irregularities”, including the apparent systemic over-claiming of staff time.

A Crown Office spokesman said: “The procurator fiscal has received a report concerning a male and three females in connection with alleged incidents. The report remains under the consideration.”

The inquiry into the college’s finances began after an earlier probe by the Scottish Funding Council (SFC) into bullying at the institution, in 2012.

Former principal Dr Craig Thomson resigned in 2012, a week after he had been suspended indefinitely when the SFC launched its investigation into allegations of bullying, intimidation and the misuse of funds.

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His replacement, Ian Harrington, was suspended as interim principal on the orders of the college board while investigations into the misuse of funds were carried out. He later left the college.

From 2005, the college’s chancellor was former prime minister Gordon Brown. There is no suggestion that the MP for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath was involved in any wrongdoing.