A former south Devon health chief has been given a jail sentence for fraud suspended for two years.

Paula Vasco-Knight, NHS England’s former national lead for equality and an ex-chief executive of Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust, received her punishment at Exeter Crown Court today.

She and her husband Stephen Vasco-Knight were sentenced for fraud against the NHS.

Paula Vasco-Knight was sentenced to 16 months’ imprisonment, suspended for 2 years, together with 250 hours of unpaid work.

Stephen Vasco-Knight was given a 10 months term, also suspended for two years, as well as 150 hours of unpaid work.

Their sentences came after a probe by the national counter-fraud body, NHS Protect.

The couple pleaded guilty at the same court on January 26.

Stephen Vasco-Knight admitted one charge of fraud by false representation, contrary to sections 1 and 2 of the Fraud Act 2006. His crime was submitting a false invoice for £11,072.00 to South Devon Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust (SDFT) in November 2013, and then receiving the payment for work that was never commissioned nor undertaken. He was assisted by his wife in submitting the invoice.

Paula Vasco-Knight pleaded guilty to a charge of fraud by abuse of position, contrary to sections 1 and 4 of the Fraud Act 2006.

Her crime, back in December 2013, was to authorise the £11,072.00 payment to her husband’s graphic design business ‘Thinking Caps’ for work that was never carried out. Notionally, he was being ‘paid’ to produce a document about leadership for NHS chief executive offciers.

After the couple found themselves under investigation, the Vasco-Knights tried to retrospectively manufacture a document to justify the payment of the invoice.

Entitled ‘Transform’ they presented it in March 2015 at an interview under caution with investigators.

NHS Protect investigators established that the document could not possibly have been produced in November 2013 as stated, as it contained large passages of text copied straight from a bona fide King’s Fund document that wasn’t published until November 2014 - a year later.

As part of the investigation a number of laptops, mobile devices and PCs were obtained from South Devon Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and NHS England, and examined by NHS Protect’s computer forensics specialists.

Paula Vasco-Knight was employed as Chief Executive Officer of South Devon Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust in August 2008. Her additional role as national lead for equality at NHS England began in 2012 when it was still known as the NHS Commissioning Board.

She was awarded a CBE for her work on equality and diversity in the NHS in the January 2014 Honours List.

Sue Frith, Managing Director of NHS Protect, which conducted the investigation, said today: ‘Paula and Stephen Vasco-Knight defrauded the NHS of money that is meant for the care of patients and which came from the public purse.

‘The vast majority of those working in the NHS are people of the utmost integrity who will feel extremely let down by these crimes.’

And she warned: ‘NHS Protect will continue to follow up on every suspicion of fraud reported to us. We will investigate and prosecute wherever appropriate so that offenders can be brought to justice.’

Proceedings will commence to recover the funds lost to the NHS.