Bradford Kings Science academy staff convicted of fraud Published duration 1 August 2016

image copyright PA image caption Kings Science Academy in Bradford opened in September 2011

The founder of a flagship academy and two members of staff have been found guilty of defrauding the government out of £150,000.

Sajid Raza, 43, Shabana Hussain, 40, and Daud Khan, 44, made payments from Department for Education (DfE) grants into their own bank accounts.

The grants were given to set up Kings Science Academy in Bradford in 2011. It opened in 2012.

The three were found guilty at Leeds Crown Court following a six-week trial.

Granting bail, Judge Christopher Batty told them "I am very much considering custody" for September's sentencing.

'Family business'

Peter Mann from the Crown Prosecution Service told the court the trio had "treated public money as their own".

He said: "Raza treated the Academy like a family business employing his relatives there and, for at least the first 12 months, operating with no proper governance.

"Hussain, Raza's sister, received unlawful payments, and Khan helped to falsify documentation," he said.

The court heard how fraudulent activity took place from 2010, despite senior civil servants expressing concern about Raza's leadership and financial management.

The jury heard a number of meetings took place between Raza and the DfE, at which he was said to be "incredibly rude and dismissive" and appeared to "pluck financial figures out of the air".

Analysis by BBC Education Editor Branwen Jeffreys

By the time Sajid Raza applied in 2010 to open a free school under a new flagship government policy he was a man with growing financial problems. There was already one court judgement against him for a small debt, the first of ten for missed payments of various kinds.

Raza had already made false claims on mortgage applications for rental properties. But within two months in 2010 his initial proposal to open a free school had been approved by the Department for Education and the first grants were paid into the company account.

Some civil servants raised concerns but the process continued. The court was told that when he was challenged, Raza threatened to call the then Education Secretary, Michael Gove.

By later that year Raza was transferring public money into a personal account and using some of that money to pay the mortgage on his rental properties. The school opened in September 2011 in Bradford and the jury heard it was run as a family business.

Among those employed by the school was his sister in law Shabana Hussein also convicted today of receiving a fraudulent payment. The finance director, Daud Khaun, helped cover up the misuse of public money. In total £150,000 were misappropriated.

The Department for Education says the allegations were investigated as soon as they were raised and the free schools system is designed to deal with such problems faster than local authorities.

But while the process of approving free schools has tightened up, this case raises a serious question about the early implementation of the policy. In the rush to approve applications, were short cuts taken and warning signs ignored?

image copyright PA image caption Sajid Raza, (left of David Cameron) opened the school in September 2011

The court heard he opened a bank account in 2010, which had a balance of £28,000 by July 2011 after it received three large credits from Kings Science Academy.

In the same month, almost half the balance was used to make large mortgage repayments.

Mr Mann said Raza had been motivated by "considerable financial difficulties" and he obtained the money by creating false invoices and submitting fraudulent expenses.

He also inflated his salary and on two applications "claimed to be a consultant surgeon", he said.

Raza, the founder and principal, was found guilty of four counts of fraud, three counts of false accounting and two counts of obtaining money by deception.

Hussain, a teacher at the school and Raza's sister, was convicted of one count of fraud and one count of obtaining property by deception.

Khan, the financial director at the school, was found guilty of two counts of fraud and three counts of false accounting.