
A woman who stole more than half a million dollars from her employer over 14 months has brought the business 鈥渢o its knees鈥, leaving seven colleagues without a job.
As struggling business owner Michael Anselmi and his team brainstormed ways to cut costs, Elizabeth Audrey Donohue was living the high life; splashing out on holidays, jewellery, health and beauty procedures, and handing out thousands to family members.
Her theft ultimately crippled Customkit Buildings, meaning Anselmi, and wife, Jude, were forced to shut it down in November last year.
Today, the 49-year-old former employee appeared in the Pukekohe District Court for sentencing on charges of theft by a person in a special relationship and money laundering before Judge John McDonald.
Donohue鈥檚 former colleague Julie, who helped hire her, labelled her a 鈥渃ommon thief ruining years of hard work by other people鈥.
鈥淢ake no mistake, your actions have seen Customkit Buildings brought to its knees, with the final blow being the closure of the company and the loss of all our jobs.
鈥淚 worked the most closely with you Elizabeth and it disgusts me that you could do you what you did.
鈥淲hatever you thought you were, I can assure you that you are no Robin Hood ... I hope that whoever gets to make the call on your punishment for your crimes against us all sees everything that you鈥檝e done .. and realises that you are only sorry that you got caught.鈥
鈥榊ou knew you wouldn鈥檛 be caught'
Anselmi said Donohue had 鈥渃ompletely destroyed our company financially and left us unable to operate鈥 and left him with no option but to wind up the company.
He said she was involved in cost-saving meetings where the team would brainstorm ways of cutting costs.
鈥淎nd yet the whole time you were systematically stealing from us ... you stole from us in every way that you can think of .. all the time being confident that you wouldn鈥檛 be caught because we trusted you.鈥
Anselmi analysed the accounts himself and discovered her spending on 鈥渂otox, laser, and nail treatments鈥, and also paid for family funerals, 鈥渉uge amounts of jewellery鈥 and her son鈥檚 tattoos.
鈥$522,769.41 pocketed by making 58 fake invoices鈥
Donohue, known as Liz, began working at Customkit, which designed, manufactured, and supplied barn-style residential dwellings, as an office administrator in April 2023.
Her role largely consisted of operating the Xero accounting software and being in charge of invoices and payments.
Invoices were processed individually by Donohue however payment left the company accounts in one large batch payment. Batch payments were approved by Anselmi, but individual details were not reviewed.
Between April 23, 2023, and June 20, 2024, Donohue created 58 invoices for fictitious work or supplies totalling $522,769.41.
Elizabeth Donohue in the dock of the Pukekohe District Court this afternoon. Photo / Belinda Feek
The fake invoices related to actual suppliers of goods and services to the business.
After entering them into the system, she would then change the bank account number to a Rabobank account under her name. She used that account to avoid using her own BNZ account which her wages were paid into.
After the payments were made Donohue would then change the account number of the genuine supplier back to their correct bank account.
Donohue made more than $72,000 in payments to Afterpay, $80,000 to PayPal, $19,000 to her son, $16,000 to her partner, $43,000 to Harmony, $35,000 to Webbs Fine Arts, $48,000 to Cash Converters, $20,000 to various health and beauty businesses, and made more than $8,000 in cash withdrawals.
Since being charged, Donohue has repaid $54,851.80 and handed over a 9ct gold and diamond pendant.
Arrangements are being made for other jewellery - worth around $171,000 - to be seized.
When questioned by police, Donohue said she鈥檇 spent it on jewellery, health and beauty procedures, gifts, repaying debt, and holidays.
Police prosecutor Sergeant Paul Watkins said this wasn鈥檛 a case of opportunistic theft, rather a 鈥渟ustained deception against a family-owned business鈥.
鈥楬er remorse is genuine鈥
Counsel Shane Cassidy urged the judge to give his client credit for cooperation with police and the victim company, both before and after being charged, which led to various items, including jewellery, being handed over.
He also pushed for guilty plea credit of 25% and 5% for 鈥渨hat appears to be genuine remorse鈥 and further credit for previous good character.
Cassidy urged the judge to consider a starting point lower than five years.
He also took exception to some of the victim鈥檚 comments in their statements, submitting that at points they 鈥渟trayed beyond鈥 the realms of the Victims' Rights Act.
He also opposed 九一星空无限鈥檚 in-court photo application, saying it wasn鈥檛 in the public interest.
However, Judge McDonald ultimately allowed photos to be taken, with Cassidy responding saying he found 鈥渢he whole process quite ghoulish鈥.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the law, Mr Cassidy,鈥 the judge replied, 鈥渁nd they鈥檙e entitled to do it鈥.
Do you have a justice story we should be covering?
Judge McDonald said Donohue鈥檚 actions 鈥渢o all intents and purposes destroyed鈥 the victim鈥檚 business.
He didn鈥檛 blame Anselmi for not 鈥済oing through each and every invoice to ensure it was correct鈥 because he trusted her.
He found she was motivated by 鈥済reed鈥.
鈥淧ure and simple, so you could live a lifestyle you considered was your right.鈥
Another aggravating factor was the fact she sat around a table with Anselmi and her colleagues to come up with ways to make the company more profitable.
鈥淎ll the while you know why it was failing because you were stealing all the money.鈥
Donohue told a pre-sentence report writer that she didn鈥檛 have a reason why she stole the money and said she was 鈥済lad she got caught鈥.
He took a starting point of five years prison, allowed 20% for her plea, 5% for the reparation she had paid so far and jailed her for three years and five months.
Belinda Feek is an Open Justice reporter based in Waikato. She has worked at 九一星空无限 for 10 years and has been a journalist for 20.
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