Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jul 2007 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.edmontonsun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Tony Blais, Court Bureau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) JUNKIE HAD TO STEAL FOR DOPE A heroin junkie has admitted defrauding the Workers' Compensation Board of $1.25 million to feed his drug habit while working as a WCB case manager. And now a judge must decide whether Murray Todd Cremer, 47, should be put behind bars or be allowed to serve his sentence in the community under house arrest. Court heard the scam involved Cremer fraudulently reviving two closed files where he had been the case manager and having cheques issued to the two former claimants. One of the claimants was Cremer's brother Robert, who died of a heroin overdose in 2005, and the other was his first drug dealer, Darryl Tiffin, who died in 1998 when he was decapitated in a single-vehicle collision. According to agreed facts, Cremer defrauded the money between 1996 and 2000, when he suffered a serious stroke. The fraud was discovered during a 2003 audit which revealed Cremer was able to pull off the scam due to his knowledge of the WCB system for payments to claimants. On one of the bogus files, Cremer was issuing cheques paying out between $5,000 to $10,000 per week. In one of those weeks, a $3,730 cheque was issued for room and board, a $2,683 cheque was issued for mileage and a $3,145 cheque was issued for bus fare. To justify such payments, a claimant would have had to drive nearly 10,000 kilometres, take a Greyhound bus to Winnipeg more than 20 times and be staying somewhere overnight for more than 35 days, all in a one-week period. Cremer took the witness stand Thursday at his sentencing hearing and testified he began stealing money from his employer to feed his heroin addiction, a habit he said cost him between $300 to $500 per day. Of the $1.25 million, Cremer said half the money went for drugs and the balance went to Tiffin and his brother. "I'm very sorry for what I've done. I think it's terrible," said Cremer, who began working at the WCB in 1977. "The compensation board has been very good to me. "I went insane and lost my moral compass," he continued. "I just screwed up." Crown prosecutor Orest Yereniuk argued Cremer should be sentenced to three years in prison while defence lawyer Alex Pringle asked that a conditional sentence to be served in the community be imposed. A decision is slated for Aug. 30. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek