- Tania Amisi, 27, tricked 22 councils out of hundreds of thousands of pounds
- The single mother boasted about her lavish lifestyle on a BBC documentary
- Used several different names and two Congolese passports to claim benefits
- Judge slammed her lack of remorse as he jailed her for four years for 21 offences
By Amie Gordon For Mailonline
Published: 09:00 EST, 12 December 2017 | Updated: 10:16 EST, 12 December 2017

Tania Amisi has been jailed for four years
A benefits cheat who cheated 22 councils out of more than £244,000 in bogus housing benefit claims has been jailed for four years.
Congolese mother-of-three Tania Amisi, who lived in Chelsea Harbour in London, used fake names and different passports to trick local authorities over a six-year period into paying housing and council benefits for properties she did not live at.
The single mother arrived in the UK as an asylum seeker aged 12 and was granted indefinite leave to remain.
She had also put in applications for a further £65,000 that was not paid to her, and claimed benefits on properties which already had tenants as well on her own property.
Amisi sparked fury among viewers when she featured in the BBC documentary Britain on the Fiddle in March, which revealed her lavish lifestyle and exposed other wealthy benefit claimants.
The 27-year-old made thousands every month from each council, submitting 37 claims against 22 councils – 21 of which were in London.
She blew some of the cash on her £25,000 handbag collection and luxury holidays to the Congo, Ivory Coast, America, Egypt, Morocco, and Turkey.
But she cut off her electronic tag and went on the run in Europe for two years after pleading guilty to three counts of fraud in January 2015 at Westminster Magistrates Court.
Bank statements showed when she was due for that trial at Southwark Crown Court she had bought Eurostar tickets and booked herself into a hotel in Paris.


Amisi featured in a BBC documentary Britain on the Fiddle this March which showed her lavish lifestyle


Viewers were left furious by the BBC show which revealed Amisi's haul of designer goods worth tens of thousands of pounds
Two days later she went to the Sheraton hotel in Brussels, which costs over £100 a night.
She also posed on Facebook bragging about her travels to the Congo and Istanbul.
When local authorities discovered the fraud the genuine tenants who have nothing to do with it got evicted.
On one trip she spent 2,600 Euros in a Prada outlet and had Chanel Louis Vuitton, Hermes, YSL, Givenchy and Dolce and Gabbana bags thrown at the bottom of a wardrobe.
Amisi also set up a false fashion company called Le Chateau Dior and used the fake name Tania Westwood to claim against Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.
Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) agents carried out surveillance on Amisi after she tried to cash fake cheques and discovered thousands of pounds being paid into her account by councils across London.
She was also known as Tania Abidi, Becca Amisi and Tania Alicia with seven different credit cards linked to these four aliases, plus two Congolese passports.
When the DWP raided her Chelsea Harbour home they found pictures of her in designer dresses on the wall and her posing for photoshoots posted on Instagram.
The fraudster claimed she earned the money to pay for her lifestyle by working in a minimum wage job at a local betting shop.
Amisi was pregnant with her fourth child when she was finally arrested in Paris in July after a European Arrest Warrent was issued, before she was extradited back to Britain and will give birth in prison.


Givenchy, Hermes, YSL, Givenchy and Dolce and Gabbana bags were thrown at the bottom of her wardrobe


Amisi also set up a false fashion company called Le Chateau Dior and used the fake name Tania Westwood to claim against Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. Pictured, one of her Vivienne Westwood bags


Amisi sparked fury among viewers when she featured in the BBC documentary
She was convicted in her absence of a further 17 fraud offences between September 2008 and December 2014 plus one charge of skipping bail.
Southwark Crown Court heard the frauds were 'an addiction' and she spent some of the money on a Cartier watch and Christian Dior clothes.
Amisi came to the UK from the Congo as an asylum seeker aged around 12 after her father was assassinated, the court heard.
Judge Michael Grieve QC jailed her for a total of four years for all 21 offences.


Amisi was jailed for four years for 21 offences
He said: 'The methods used to commit these frauds involved careful planning and an even increasing degree of complexity, involving false names and forged bank documents.
'The nature of this offending was fraudulent from the outset and committed to fund your lavish and extremely comfortable lifestyle.
'This was not a case of a person in dire financial straits submitting to temptation and making fraudulent claims to get by.
'You committed these offences to fund your very affluent lifestyle on holidays, restaurants and designer handbags and clothes.
'You had a flat in Chelsea paid for by your fraudulent activities and your son had all the material benefits he could want.
'Once discovered you could not face up to the consequences and you fled to mainland Europe until you were brought back.
'There's very little evidence you have shown any remorse before you went to ground in Paris.'
Amisi was also ordered to pay a statutory victim surcharge and the Department of Work and Pensions will seek a court order to reclaim the money stolen.
Original Article
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