In Scotland, tried a former priest who "hunt" for wealthy women married to them, and then conveyed to the bankruptcy and disappear without trace. The trial of the fraudster-masher combines all three of his wives.
Three women, one former and two current wife of the accused appeared in Uorikskom Royal Court (county Warwickshire), to act as witnesses to an unusual trial. At the dock was their 58-year-old husband, who is accused of bigamy and large monetary fraud, says The Daily Mail. In one case swindler forged signature of his wife to obtain a loan from a bank at 15 thousand dollars.
A former preacher Scottish church Rod Sangster deliberately pick trusting women, then tricked of their money, said the judge.
Polygamist has been exposed once escaped from his third wife - Janet Pollard. For a long memory about yourself woman left a huge monetary debt of 85 thousand dollars. Knowing Sangster with his latest victim, a woman was carried after replacement therapy of cancer.
Later, Janet Pollard contact with the second wife Sangstera - Jill, that the pastor threw a similar way, not even divorced. Pollard admitted the woman, a wife Rhoda Sangstera and suspects that he and her husband, too.
"I Dostala our wedding pictures to show her" - recalls the trial Jill Sangster. Podruga Jill in misery only managed to confirm that their fraudster was the same person.
Notably, the romantic trip with his wife in the honeymoon pastor conducted on the same island.
Court Prosecutor David Jones believes that Sangster had acted in good scheme, which he had "completed" for his first wife, Frances Tate. From nurse cleric divorced after 25 years of marriage, in 1996. Resident of the city Eberdin left with four children and large debts on their hands.
Couple divorced after a pastor fled to England, in the town of Doncaster (South Yorkshire district), where he met his second wife. Francis Tate acknowledged that before her husband showed the desire for "Freestyle life." Sangster could suddenly "disappear" for several weeks, leaving it in its entirety it.
"He in credibility of the women with financial independence, and then used their money" - the prosecutor said Jones. Money squandered another wife, Sangster taken to find new victims. According to the Public Prosecutor, gambler manipulated by people for their own purposes.
In the same 1996 Sangster, having to live in the tony Hotel Crowne Plaza Hotel in Chester, married a second time. However, his new beloved waited for the same fate as the previous one. After 6 years old pastor tore it and threw relations, leaving the spouse alone with debts amounting to 50 thousand dollars.
Remembering her husband's corrupt, Jill Sangster burst into tears in court. Hard woman admitted that "not aware of the value of debt" until the gambler is not left in 2002.
Leaving behind has a second wife to their fate, Sangster to find a job in Evesham hotel in County Durham County (west England) and, via the Internet, met Janet Pollard.
When they married in 2004, Pollard does not imply that her husband was not even the newly designed divorce from second wife. Couples moved to Scotland and bought a house, he took a mortgage from a bank Northern Rock.
By this time, Sangster stopped working. To his wife he had found an excuse, explaining his laziness that supposedly busy writing a book, which will receive 165 thousand dollars in royalties.
According to release the investigation in August 2006, Sangster forged signature of his third wife, to get in a bank loan of $ 15.5 thousand dollars. "When he threw Janet, she found letters from creditors totaling 85 thousand dollars" - told the court the prosecutor.
In June 2007, police arrested a corrupt in Chester. Asked about the reasons for the gap with his second wife Jill Sangster man has not been able to answer anything.
Eventually, the detainee pleaded guilty to bigamy, as well as forging the signature of its most recent wife. The truth is that the fraudster claims that he was still acting on the agreement with Pollard. The defendant also insists that women are aware of the amount collected bank loans.
The trial continues.

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