Car damamged in a crash

CSAS integral to crash-for-cash fraud prosecution

Hardeep Dehal, a serving Metropolitan Police officer, has been found guilty of planning to fraudulently claim £18,415 in a staged crash-for-cash with a Tesco delivery van. He was sentenced to 30 months’ immediate custody at Southwark Crown Court on 24 July 2019.

Tesco delivery driver Raiyaan Anwar also admitted the offence, which took place on 11 March 2016. On that day a Citroen car was driving in East London with five people in it, including Dehal.

According to a pre-planned arrangement, Anwar crashed into the Citroen. He reported the crash to his employers, Tesco, as a genuine accident caused by him. Dehal alleged that he had suffered injuries and submitted medical reports claiming compensation for conditions such as severe pain, stiffness and discomfort, and anxiety.

Tesco’s insurance company admitted liability, on the understanding that one of its delivery drivers had been at fault in a genuine collision with members of the public. The amount of compensation due to each of the men was still left to be determined.

The prosecution used a CSAS analysis of telephone data, including text messages and cell site evidence to prove the planning behind the fraudulent collision. This evidence showed that the defendants, between them, had exchanged 375 telephone contacts over a two-month period shortly before the crash.

Busola Johnson, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said “Hardeep Dehal claimed personal injury as a result of the staged crash and stood to gain thousands of pounds from insurance companies. Not only had he meticulously planned the fraudulent crash, but he put himself at risk of real physical harm in the pursuit of insurance money. Insurance fraud is not a victimless crime. Payouts based on fraudulent claims lead to increased premiums for ordinary, hard-working people.”

For more information, visit the Crown Prosecution Service’s website.