Nigerian born Olusola Owoeye, 49, has been jailed for two years for pretending to be homeless after renting out her apartment to falsely claim over £114,000.
The single mother-of-three was described in court as a ‘dishonest, greedy woman’ who wanted money for nothing.
A court heard that Olusola Owoeye bought her own home before claiming she had been made homeless and was then given a flat by her local council.
She then rented out her original property – which she had purchased with a fraudulent mortgage – charging tenants up to £820 a month.
Owoeye, is thought to be the first person in London to be convicted of fraud after receiving payments while under ‘no recourse to public funds’ (NRPF) immigration status. She pocketed more than £114,000 over five years.
An immigrant with this status cannot access the mainstream benefits system, homelessness assistance from a local authority or social housing.
But they can get other publicly-funded services and would not be breaching their immigration conditions if they receive these.
Owoeye may have to sell her home to pay back money to Bexley Council in south-east London.
She was found guilty of three charges of fraud following a four-day trial at Woolwich Crown Court last month.
She was subsequently jailed for two years by Judge Jonathan Mann QC, who told her: ‘There is only one reason you did what you did and this is because you are greedy. For you this was money for nothing.’
The apartment building in Dartford where Owoeye lived for a number of years while defrauding Bexley Council of more than £114,000 by claiming to be homeless.
The court heard that Owoeye first came to the UK from Nigeria in 2002. She then made a fraudulent mortgage application, claiming she was working in the software industry and earning £41,000 a year.
This allowed her to buy a home in Erith, south-east London, for £156,000 in June 2008.
She moved out four years later and lived with a friend. In 2013 she approached Bexley Council for support, claiming to be homeless.
She told staff that she had been evicted by a landlord, and was re-housed in Dartford and then Crayford. But her lies were uncovered in January last year when the tenant at her Erith home approached the council to make a complaint.