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Catriona Carey could lose family home amid fraud scandal

Former Irish hockey star Catriona Carey could face losing her family home, after failing to make any repayments on her mortgage in nearly 10 years.

An order for possession of her house in Weir View Hill, Co. Kilkenny, has been granted to Start Mortgages Designated Activity Company, which is seeking to recover arrears of more than €359,000.

According to court documents, the former camogie player, who was convicted of tax offences in 2008 and of theft and fraud in 2020, has not made her own monthly mortgage repayments since November 2012.

An order for possession of the house was granted on May 11, together with a stay of execution of three months. Once that period has ended, Start Mortgages is entitled to take possession of the property.

Despite the possession order, it is understood that Catriona, who is the sister of legendary hurler DJ Carey, will still have the option of temporarily remaining in her home if she agrees to a private sale of the house.

Otherwise the county sheriff will be instructed to take possession of the home if she does not vacate it later this month.

According to The Irish Independent, the balance outstanding on the property is €876,000 including the €359,000 in arrears.

Catriona has also incurred significant arrears on another property she owns in Co. Laois, while a house close to her family home which she previously owned was recently sold by private auction for €365,000 after receivers were appointed to it.

The Kilkenny native is also being sued by Bank of Ireland (BoI) over debts relating to a property which has since been sold.

Back in February, RTÉ Investigates shed light on the accountant, former national sports star and convicted fraudster.

The documentary, led by investigative journalist Paul Murphy, claimed that Catriona took €500,000 in deposits from people struggling to make mortgage repayments — and spent it on herself.

She allegedly offered to buy their mortgage debt back from their lender at a discounted price, and would sell the debt back to the mortgage holder at the same discounted price.

Catriona’s UK-registered company Careysfort Asset Estates offered them a new loan to fund the buy-back. In return, she charged upfront deposits of between 10% and 30% of the loan – which translated to sums ranging from €5,000 to over €30,000.

Most people begged and borrowed the money and wired it to overseas bank accounts, or put it down in cash. Two years on, several of clients she relieved of deposits claim they are still waiting for a deal.

RTÉ Investigates got hold of a large number of bank statements from Careysfort Asset Estates, detailing hundreds of transactions including her local supermarket shop and a €55,000 BMW car, registered in Catriona’s name.

In one year alone, around €200,000 from company bank accounts was allegedly spent on personal goods and services. The money appeared to come from deposits paid by clients like Colin.

According to RTÉ Investigates, just €488.10 was left in the company coffers as of January this year.

Catriona, who was raised in Gowran in Kilkenny, was once close to her brother DJ – who has been ranked as one of the greatest hurlers Kilkenny has ever produced.

After she qualified as an accountant, Catriona worked for him in his business. But in her 20s, she furnished an incorrect invoice with her VAT returns and was caught.

In 2008, she was prosecuted for giving an incorrect invoice to the tax authorities, for furnishing incorrect information, and claiming back VAT that she was not entitled to.

Catriona was found guilty of all three offences, and was fined €1,500 at Kilkenny District Court. She resigned as a director of DJ’s cleaning business in March 2009.

Catriona was convicted in February 2020 for the theft of €6,948 and for forging a cheque from a Kilkenny hairdresser who had hired her as his accountant.She was given an eight-month suspended prison sentence.

Before sentencing, she repaid the exact sum via her solicitor, and the statement showed where the money came from.

It was sent from the Careysfort Assets Estates account, meaning that the account used by Catriona to lodge money defrauded from her clients was also used to repay money she had stolen elsewhere.

A Garda spokesperson told RTÉ Investigates back in February that there is an ongoing Garda investigation into a number of alleged fraud incidents relating to the activities of an asset management company.

They said, however, that An Garda Síochána does not comment on named entities nor individuals.

Catriona told RTÉ that her company had funds to cover all clients’ deposits but was advised “not to refund clients at this point”.

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