Pubdate: Fri, 14 Aug 1998 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Sean O'Neill COCAINE 'LED EX-SAATCHI HIGH-FLIER INTO FRAUD PLOT' A WOMAN who claimed to have earned six-figure sums while working as an advertising executive with Saatchi and Saatchi was jailed yesterday after resorting to fraud to finance a drug habit. Stephanie Whitworth, 45, was said to have enjoyed the trappings of a successful career but had "fallen from a great height" and became addicted to crack cocaine. Judge Simon Darwall Smith, at Gloucester Crown Court, told her that her criminal behaviour stemmed from the "hedonistic lifestyle" she had enjoyed during the 1980s. Whitworth, who admitted three counts of deception involving UKP8,250, fought back tears as the judge told her she was "a professional deceiver" and jailed her for a year. The court heard that her criminal career began in 1991 and since then she had been convicted of 19 offences of dishonesty, including theft and deception. Patrick Burrows, prosecuting, said the latest offences happened when Whitworth, from Notting Hill, west London, was staying in Gloucester and persuaded Michaela Zimmerman and Brian Chevis to invest in "an entirely bogus" scheme. Mr Burrows said: "She told Miss Zimmerman she had a friend in London in the loan business and that he could return large of amount of interest on capital. Miss Zimmerman handed her UKP250 for investment but she also had a friend, Mr Chevis, who had a larger amount of capital available. This defendant told him that an investment of UKP4,000 would produce UKP19,000 by the following March." Mr Chevis later gave Whitworth another UKP4,000 to invest. Charles Row, defending, told the court that Whitworth had had a "very successful early career" in advertising. He said: "She was an executive with Saatchi and Saatchi, earning a six-figure salary for a significant period. She had all the trappings of an executive life and when she married and had children she had a nanny and domestic staff. "She was introduced to cocaine by her husband and at first they would take it together. But she could not control it. Throughout the 1980s she could not draw herself out of it. She was also subjected to domestic violence and a great deal of the money she was earning was spent on drink and drugs." Mr Row said that in 1991 Whitworth had moved to Cheshire and worked in telephone directory advertising as a "regional manager". She then set up her own business with financial help from her father but it failed with huge losses. He said: "Shortly afterwards her father died. She had been extremely close to him. Then her husband left her. She was left supporting her children and other relatives who also relied on her. "Financially the pressures were enormous and she found it almost impossible to cope. She turned to crack as a crutch and a release. Her first criminal offence was in the Wirral in 1991 and her husband was given custody of the children. She committed these offences while in the grip of addiction. She is now clear of that addiction and sees it as a reprehensible action. This is a woman who has fallen from a great height. She has done everything she can to demonstrate she is on the way back up." The judge said: "Your antecedent history reveals that you are a professional deceiver skilled in obtaining money from other people for your own gain. I suspect your only real regret is that you got caught." A spokesman for Saatchi and Saatchi said its personnel files dated back 10 years and contained no record of a Stephanie Whitworth being employed by the firm. - --- Checked-by: "Rolf Ernst"