Cases

Employee who embezzled £1million from local authority ordered to pay back funds under Proceeds of Crime laws

A former local authority employee who embezzled more than £1million from Aberdeen City Council over a 17-year period has been ordered to repay more than £165,000 under Proceeds of Crime laws.

Michael Paterson, 60, was imprisoned for four years at the High Court in Edinburgh last July after pleading guilty to a charge of embezzlement. 

At the High Court in Edinburgh on 12 May 2025, the court made a confiscation order in the sum of £167,698.71 and recorded that his benefit from criminal conduct was £1,184,000.   

The court also made a compensation order in favour of Aberdeen City Council, ordering that the sum of £104,630.33 recovered as part of the confiscation proceedings is paid to the local authority.   

The sum of £417,523 has already been recovered by Aberdeen City Council from Paterson’s pension fund. 

The confiscation order can be revisited if further assets are identified in the future to be paid towards the full amount that was determined as the benefit of the crime.  

Between 2006 and 2023, Paterson, who was employed as a Council Tax and Recovery team leader, issued 622 false refunds totalling £1,087,444.  

He set up an internal pathway which allowed him to fraudulently issue council tax refunds into his own bank account.  

Sineidin Corrins, Depute Procurator Fiscal for Specialist Casework at the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, said: “Michael Paterson committed an egregious betrayal of trust by taking advantage of his position to embezzle public money from his employers.  

“We take such criminality very seriously. This confiscation order underscores the fact that prosecution of those involved in financial crime does not stop at criminal conviction and sentencing.  

“Even after that conviction was secured, the Crown pursued Proceeds of Crime action to ensure funds he obtained illegally were confiscated.  

“Confiscation orders have ongoing financial consequences, meaning we can seek to recover further assets from this individual in the future to ensure he pays back the full amount.”  

Paterson had unrestricted and unmonitored access to a system which allowed him to issue refunds to council taxpayers up to £3000.  

But in September 2023, a colleague spotted an unusual refund conducted by ‘mikep’ to the value of £2899.81 to a customer who was not entitled to one.  

As a result, the council’s Counter Fraud Department was alerted, and a widespread investigation eventually revealed the scale of Paterson’s crimes.  

It showed that, between 2019 and 2023, the total sum of £376,042.85 was paid into a specific account by user ‘mikep’.   

Further investigations revealed that between 2006 and 2019, a total of 490 refunds worth £711,401.62 were paid into the same account in which Paterson received his monthly council salary.  

He was suspended from his job in September 2023 when the matter was reported to the police and dismissed from his employment three months later.