Major General is jailed for 21 months

A Major general has today become the most senior officer to be convicted at a court martial in over 200 years for cheating taxpayers out of nearly £50,000 in private school fees.

Major General Nick Welch has been jailed at Bulford Military Court for 21 months after he was convicted of fraud by falsely claiming more than £48,000 in allowance to pay for his children’s boarding school fees.

The 57-year-old had claimed he and his wife Charlotte, 54, were living in Putney, South-West London while he served as Assistant Chief of the General Staff in Whitehall.

Welch, who earned a ‘lofty’ £120,000-a-year salary, used the military’s ‘Continuity of Education Allowance’ to put two of his children through two private schools in Dorset.

Mrs Welch, a freelance consultant, in fact spent the majority of her time at the family’s £800,000 country home in Blandford Forum, Dorset, Bulford Military Court in Wiltshire heard.

Judge Advocate General Alan Large and a panel of senior officers also sentenced Welch, who left the military in 2018, to retrospective dismissal from the Army which means he can no longer benefit from his rank of retired major general.

He was also ordered to pay back the fraudulently claimed money.

Major General Nick Welch has been jailed at Bulford Military Court for 21 months

Major General Nick Welch falsely claimed £48,000 to pay for his children's boarding schools

Major General Nick Welch falsely claimed £48,000 to pay for his children’s boarding schools

Major General Nick Welch: Glittering career of the retired British Army officer awarded OBE in 2006 

Major General Nick Welch left the Army in 2018 after an illustrious career which spanned more than three decades.

He joined the military as a Second Lieutenant in 1984, eventually rising through the ranks to become a two-star general.

In that time he served as Commander of the The Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire regiment and of the 7th Armoured Brigade based in Bergen-Hohne, Germany.

Maj Gen Welch was awarded with the Queen’s Commendation for Valuable Service in recognition of ‘gallant and distinguished services in the former Yugoslavia’ in 2005 and received his OBE in 2006.

He has served in Afghanistan – where he was second in command of British and US troops in Helmand province – Germany, Northern Ireland and Belize.

In 2014 he was appointed Chief of Staff of the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps.

In 2015, he became Assistant Chief of the General Staff, the highest ranking Army officer working in the Ministry of Defence in London.

In this role Maj Gen Welch would have been earning around £120,000 a year.

He held this post until 2018.

He retired from the military a year later to enter the private sector, becoming Chief Operating Officer of Bournemouth Arts University, Dorset. 

Welch was caught after an anonymous tip from neighbours claimed he and his wife were never at their London address.

The complaint was dismissed at the time by Mrs Welch as the actions of a jealous spouse.

‘Perhaps they are daunted by Nick’s rank, all of their husbands are two or three ranks below,’ Mrs Welch wrote in a text message to a friend.

The verdict means Welch, who was previously awarded the OBE, is the most senior officer to be found guilty at a court martial since Lt Gen John Murray in 1815.

Lt Gen Murray was hauled before a military court in Winchester accused abandoning 18 siege guns during the siege of Tarragona in 1813.

He was found guilty of a single charge ‘that he unnecessarily abandoned a considerable quantity of artillery and stores’, and admonished by the court.

The court martial panel took five hours to find Welch guilty of a single count of fraud yesterday. He stood stony faced and showed no emotion as the verdict was delivered.

The four-week trial heard that Welch lied about how much time he and his wife spent at their Dorset home, just 15 minutes’ drive from his children’s schools.

He claimed £48,388 between December 2015 and February 2017 to put them through the £37,000-a-year Clayesmore School and £22,500-a-year Hanford School.

After Colonel Jeremy Lamb complained to the Army, Welch ordered his wife to drive up to London the following morning.

The court heard Mrs Welch promised to put on a show of living at the property and would be ‘out and about and very sociable all week’.

Welch said he believed he satisfied the ‘underlying principles’ and ‘spirit’ of the Continuity of Education Allowance rules as long as he and his wife ‘endeavoured to be together’. 

Mrs Welch was said to only spend around one in three days at the residence in Putney.

The Continuity of Education Allowance is offered by the Ministry of Defence to help fund 90 per cent of the education of military families’ children when they relocate on assignment, as long as their spouses live with them, a practice known as ‘serving accompanied’.

The 57-year-old, pictured in Afghanistan with then-Prime Minister David Cameron, had denied fraud

The 57-year-old, pictured in Afghanistan with then-Prime Minister David Cameron, had denied fraud  

Maj Gen Nick Welch claimed he thought he satisfied the 'underlying principles' of the allowance rules as long as he and Charlotte Welch 'endeavoured to be together'

Maj Gen Nick Welch claimed he thought he satisfied the ‘underlying principles’ of the allowance rules as long as he and Charlotte Welch ‘endeavoured to be together’

Welch (pictured in 2014), told the hearing that his understanding of the rules was that his wife had to be staying where he was staying in order to comply with the definition of accompanied service

Welch (pictured in 2014), told the hearing that his understanding of the rules was that his wife had to be staying where he was staying in order to comply with the definition of accompanied service

Prosecutor Sarah Clarke told the court that Welch used his rank to deceive the Army as ‘who is going to question the word of a Major General?’

Several former high ranking Army officers were called on to give evidence in praise of Welch’s character during the court martial, including General Sir Richard Barrons, former Commander of Britain’s Joint Forces Command.

Welch retired a two star general in 2019, having served in Afghanistan, Germany, Northern Ireland and Belize.

He has since taken a post as chief operating officer of Bournemouth Arts University.

How Lieutenant General Sir John Murray was convicted in 1815 of abandoning his seige guns without due cause in Napoleonic Wars

Lieutenant General Sir John Murray was convicted of abandoning his siege guns without due cause in the Napoleonic wars.

His 1815 trial at Winchester, Hampshire, took place two years after the shambolic siege of Tarragona in southern Spain.

The siege ended his distinguished military career.

Lieutenant General Sir John Murray was convicted of abandoning his siege guns without due cause during the shambolic siege of Tarragona in southern Spain

Lieutenant General Sir John Murray was convicted of abandoning his siege guns without due cause during the shambolic siege of Tarragona in southern Spain

In 1813, Duke of Wellington ordered Murray to use 16,000 troops to capture the Spanish port of Tarragona.

In 1813, Duke of Wellington ordered Murray to use 16,000 troops to capture the Spanish port of Tarragona (the battle, pictured)

In 1813, Duke of Wellington ordered Murray to use 16,000 troops to capture the Spanish port of Tarragona (the battle, pictured) 

Murray surrounded the port and the Franco-Italian army of just 1,600 men retreated inside its inner defences.

Rather than storm it, Murray chose to use his guns to reduce them by siege. 

But he panicked when he heard rumours of a large number of advancing French troops.

He cancelled a planned attack and withdrew his entire force onto waiting ships.

He abandoned 18 heavy siege cannons and issued a series of orders which apparently confused and enraged Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell Carew.

Days later, Murray was relieved of his command.

After the war ended in 1814, Murray was court-martialled and found guilty of abandoning his guns without due cause and admonished by the court.

Murray was also a Tory MP, representing the Dorset constituency of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis between 1811 and 1818.

He died in October 1827 at the age of 59.