Former Tower Hamlets mayor Lutfur Rahman has assets frozen by High Court judge

Rahman was found guilty of corrupt and illegal practices

Brian Farmer
Tuesday 07 July 2015 16:22 BST
Lutfur Rahman was cast from office after a report found him he had committed multiple electoral frauds
Lutfur Rahman was cast from office after a report found him he had committed multiple electoral frauds (AFP/Getty)

A former mayor has had hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of assets frozen by a High Court judge after being found guilty of corrupt and illegal practices.

Lutfur Rahman - who was the directly-elected mayor of Tower Hamlets in east London - was today also ordered to disclose detail of income and expenditure.

Rahman was in April found guilty of wrongdoing by Election Commissioner Richard Mawrey QC after an Election Court trial in London.

Rahman was also ordered to disclose detail of income and expenditure (PA)

Four voters - led by writer and film maker Andy Erlam - had taken legal action against Mr Rahman under the provisions of the Representation Of The People Act.

Mr Mawrey also said Rahman should pay the four voters' legal costs - estimated to be £500 000 - and ordered him to hand over £250,000 on account.

But lawyers for Mr Erlam today told a High Court judge - at a hearing in London - that nothing had been paid.

Barrister Francis Hoar said Rahman had been shown to be "in substance, dishonest".

Mr Justice Edis ordered Rahman to disclose income and expenditure going back five years and said assets to the value of £350 000 would be frozen.

The judge said Rahman should also disclose tax returns going back seven years.

He said he would review the case in the near future.

Rahman was not at today's hearing but was represented by barrister Edward McKiernan.

Press Association

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