Submitting.
4. Which American wrote the 1966 crime story
In Cold Blood?
6. Which Stourbridge band had UK top 10 hits in the early 1990s with
Welcome To The Cheap Seats and
The Size of a Cow?
7. In which country was the England footballer Raheem Sterling born?
Raheem Sterling. See question 7. PA image.
8. Which astronaut died aged 90 on April 28, 2021?
9. What do the initials AOL stand for?
10. For which film did Anthony Hopkins win his best actor Oscar in 2021?
11. Which band had a worldwide hit with a song called
Rockstar in 2000?
12. Who had a UK number one single in 1958 with
Magic Moments?
14. Which former Sunderland footballer wrote the critically acclaimed memoir
Colin Nesbitt set up Little Heroes Cancer Trust after grandson fell ill with disease
The 60-year-old siphoned off thousands in cash to pay for holidays and caravan
He had sole control of the accounts and did not want other people banking cash
He stole a total of £87,000 and defrauded the charity out of a further £235,000
Nesbitt was convicted of four counts of fraud and one of count of theft between 2009 and 2015 after a five-week trial and was sentenced to 20 months in prison
BBC News
Published
image copyrightBen Lack
image captionColin Nesbitt was convicted of theft and fraud after a five-week trial at Bradford Crown Court
The founder of a children s cancer charity has been jailed for stealing £87,000 from the organisation.
Colin Nesbitt, 60, set up the Bradford-based Little Heroes Cancer Trust in 2008 after his grandson became ill.
Nesbitt, who was featured in Channel 4 programme The Secret Millionaire in 2012, transferred the charity s money into other bank accounts and used some of it to provide unsecured loans.
Passing sentence at Bradford Crown Court, Judge Jonathan Gibson said Nesbitt, of Kent Road, Bingley, had used his position to cream off some of the money for himself.
1/1 The founder of the Little Heroes Cancer Trust has been jailed for 20 months for stealing from the charity and putting its money into bank accounts in his name. Colin Nesbitt, 60, of Kent Road, Bingley, was found guilty by a jury last month of four of-fences of fraud and one of theft between 2009 and 2015. Today, Judge Jonathan Gibson told him he had betrayed public confidence in the whole charities sector. “You were dishonestly mingling personal and charity expenditure,” he said. But it would be unjust to sentence Nesbitt on the basis of “the headline figures on the indictment.” Much of that money was spent on Christmas toy drops, staff wages and cost of the premises.
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