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Fraud charge MPs' exit cash frozen

8 Feb, 11:01 PM

Elliot Morley has been suspended from the Labour Party
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The "golden goodbye" payments for three MPs facing criminal charges over their expenses will be suspended until legal proceedings are over, Commons Speaker John Bercow has said.

Elliot Morley, Jim Devine and David Chaytor would have been entitled to resettlement grants on stepping down from the Commons at the general election, it emerged at the weekend.

All three Labour MPs, who had the party whip suspended earlier on Monday, deny allegations of false accounting, and have pledged to defend themselves "robustly".

But Mr Bercow wrote to the Clerk of the House Malcolm Jack telling him to "suspend any payments which would otherwise be due and attributable to the Resettlement Grant in any case where criminal proceedings are brought in relation to any claim for expenses until the criminal proceedings have been finally disposed of".

Jim Devine has been suspended from the Labour Party
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Earlier, Gordon Brown was accused of being out of touch on the expenses scandal after Labour withdrew the party whip from the three MPs being prosecuted. Tory leader David Cameron described the move, three days after the charges were announced, as a "humiliating" U-turn by the Prime Minister.

Labour insisted the suspension of David Chaytor, Elliot Morley and Jim Devine followed a review undertaken "immediately" after it became clear on Friday they were facing trial. Aides to Mr Cameron pointed out he removed the Tory whip from Lord Hanningfield within a couple of hours of the Conservative peer's charges being announced at the same time.

Mr Cameron used a speech to blame the Prime Minister of helping create the culture that resulted in the collapse of public confidence in politics.

"Now I gather, in a humiliating change, they have actually withdrawn the Labour whip from all three of those MPs. They are now in a headlong retreat," he said. "The last 24 hours, I believe, have shown the instincts of the Conservative Party, when it comes to this issue about expenses, are in tune with the public mood, are in the right place, and Labour's are not."

But the Conservative leader also faced criticism for his outspoken attack on the three MPs' attempts to avoid prosecution by citing parliamentary privilege. Labour figures suggested Mr Cameron risked prejudicing court proceedings. Separately, Commons Speaker John Bercow ordered MPs, under sub judice rules, to avoid any reference to the cases in the House.

Mr Chaytor, Mr Morley, Mr Devine and Lord Hanningfield are all charged with counts of false accounting in their expenses claims. They will appear at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court on March 11. If found guilty, they could face jail sentences of up to seven years.



Copyright 2007 The Press Association. All right reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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