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Hey trickster DJ

DJ who made fake £837k injury claim against the NHS faces jail

The scammer had been offered £30k but wanted £837k - so the hospital ordered covert surveillance and saw he was DJing

A DJ who exaggerated minor injuries in a bid to defraud the NHS of £837,000 is facing jail for contempt of court.

Sandip Singh Atwal, 33, went to a hospital A&E department with two fractured fingers and a cut lip after a baseball bat attack.

 Sandip Singh Atwal, 33, exaggerated minor injuries in a bid to defraud the NHS of £837k
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Sandip Singh Atwal, 33, exaggerated minor injuries in a bid to defraud the NHS of £837k

The health trust later admitted he was negligently treated and offered £30,000 to settle the case.

But London’s High Court heard that Atwal — who also worked in his family’s taxi business — wanted £837,109.

This included cash for future loss of earnings and future care after claiming he was grossly incapacitated and unable to work following the 2008 attack.

Solicitors for the Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust were suspicious as Atwal’s claimed disabilities were inconsistent with the medical records.

 The DJ who also worked in the family taxi business had already been offered a £30,000-settlement - but wanted £837,000
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The DJ who also worked in the family taxi business had already been offered a £30,000-settlement - but wanted £837,000

In 2015, they commissioned covert video surveillance of him.

It showed him working as a courier, while social media revealed he was performing as a DJ. It led to an allegation of fraudulent exaggeration, and in March 2016 Atwal accepted the offer made five years earlier.

But the £30,000 compensation was swallowed up in paying the trust’s costs so that — after eight years of litigation — Atwal ended up owing them £5,000.

The trust applied to commit Atwal, of Huddersfield, for contempt of court over his claims in what is believed to be the first case of its kind.

Ruling that 14 allegations relating to false statements had been proved, judge Mr Justice Spencer said Atwal had “failed and refused” to take part in the proceedings since his scam was uncovered. And he did not attend a recent committal hearing.

Atwal claimed he knew nothing of the proceedings until a week ago.

Sentencing was ad­journed until June 1.

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