Four arrested over suspected home insulation scheme fraud

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3 hours ago

Zoe ConwayEmployment correspondent

BBC Black mould growing on the living room wall of a houseBBC

Thousands of homes, like this one in Swansea, were fitted with insulation that caused mould and damp

Four people have been arrested during a dawn raid on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud following an investigation into the government's botched home insulation scheme.

In the early hours of Wednesday morning, 100 investigators entered homes and offices across three counties and removed computers, hard drives and crypto assets.

The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is examining what it said is a "sophisticated conspiracy" to fraudulently claim £44m in public money through the scheme.

The BBC joined a team from the SFO as they put on stab vests and raided a company office at a business park in Cannock.

Lead investigator Ross Corrigan said the SFO suspected this was a ''sophisticated and systemic fraud within the government's Energy Company Obligation 4 (ECO4) scheme which was designed to help people in fuel poverty".

"And yet here we have suspected criminality which might have exploited that good cause," he said.

The ECO4 programe began in 2022 and involved the installation of heat pumps, solar panels and insulation in more than 300,000 homes.

It was targeted at elderly or vulnerable people living on low incomes.

The scheme, which has since closed, was funded through a levy on household energy bills and has cost £4bn.

The SFO said that three companies were involved in the fraud: JJ Crump of Sheffield, South Coast Insulation Services in Fareham and Cannock-based Warmfront.

South Coast Insulation Services went into administration in February.

The SFO alleged the three businesses claimed money for insulation work on 5,000 properties they never installed.

The BBC has contacted the firms for comment.

The SFO said it wants installers and assessors who worked on these contracts to contact them at [email protected].

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP, chair of the Public Accounts Committee, said the SFO investigation showed that the ECO4 scheme was looking increasingly like a ''charlatan's charter".

He said the "sheer amount of money" that may have been fraudulently claimed, estimated at £44m, "serves only to underline further that the known levels of fraud in the scheme, as our committee warned earlier in the year, must be being significantly underestimated".

Almost all of the external wall insulations delivered under the scheme – 98% – required repairs, according to the a report by the National Audit Office.

The BBC has spoken to homeowners across the UK over many years who said their properties have been ruined by poorly installed insulation under ECO4.

In one case in Luton, the dry rot was so extensive that the house has been gutted and is costing more than £250,000 to fix.

The repairs are being paid for by the installer's insurer.

Serious Fraud Office Two men, facing away from the camera, prepare to enter a business premises. One is wearing a dark-coloured stab vest with SFO (Serious Fraud Office) on the back in white letters. The other is wearing a dark-coloured stab vest with NCA (National Crime Agency) on the back in white letters. Serious Fraud Office

The government said it is implementing a find-and-fix programme to help homeowners and said more than 3,000 out of 30,000 affected homes have been repaired.

Energy minister Martin McCluskey, said: "It is appalling that people have allegedly tried to line their own pockets with funding intended to help families lower their energy bills and live in a warm, comfortable home.

"For some unscrupulous people to try to take advantage of that is totally unacceptable and I'm pleased to see action is being taken to bring those responsible to justice."

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