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Bank worker denies lying about blackmail to cover prostitute payments

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Published Date: 28 May 2009
AN IT worker denied yesterday that he invented a story about being blackmailed to cover giving £1,100 to a prostitute.
The 55-year-old told a jury he had been forced to hand over cash to two men who threatened to tell his wife about his affair with a sauna worker.

However, under questioning by defence lawyers, the man admitted he had made no attempt to raise the a
larm, and that one of his alleged attackers fell asleep waiting for him to get money at a bank.

The lawyers suggested the accused had simply been collecting the cash on behalf of the prostitute, but the man rejected the claim that he had willingly handed over wads of notes and that it was "more palatable" for his wife if he made himself out to be the victim of a crime.

Stephen Dobson, 39, and John Dobson, 36, deny extorting £10,000 from the man on 17 October last year.

The High Court in Edinburgh has heard that the man met Catherine Purcell at Carol's Sauna, Easter Road, Edinburgh, in 2005 and would pay up to £140 a week for her services.

The man alleged that Stephen Dobson and John Dobson demanded £10,000. He told the court he went to the Royal Bank of Scotland in Edinburgh's George Street to obtain a loan, and took an immediate £10,000 cash withdrawal, giving the money to Stephen Dobson.

The trial continues.





The full article contains 250 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 27 May 2009 9:41 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Prostitution
 
 
  

 
 


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