A CHEAT who claimed £115,000 in benefits over 12 years while ‘living a lie’, has been jailed for 15 months.

Irene Barnes, 53, got married and her husband was working and supporting her, but she still carried on claiming income support as well as housing and council tax benefits.

Sentencing, Recorder Roderick Carus, QC, told Barnes: “Week in, week out, you were living a lie.”

He said the benefits system was designed to help those in genuine need. The judge told the defendant: “So far as I can see, you weren’t.”

When she was interviewed last year by the Department for Work and Pensions, Barnes at first denied the scam and claimed she and her husband had spilt up shortly after they had wed, Burnley Crown Court heard.

Barnes, who has recently been living on disability living allowance and employment support allowance, broke down and sobbed as she was led away from the dock.

The defendant, of Walter Street, Brierfield, had earlier admitted three counts of false accounting, one of obtaining a money transfer by deception and one of evasion of a liability by deception.

She had no previous convictions.

Edmund Haygarth, prosecuting for the DWP, said it was not a fraud from the start.

Barnes was claiming the three benefits, but her entitlement ceased when she got married on July 18, 1998.

The total overpayment was £114,917.00.

Mr Haygarth told the hearing the defendant’s marriage was not happy and there were short periods totalling 18 months when the parties did not live together.

He said she would have been entitled to benefits during that time and that reduced the amount to just over £101,000.

Mr Haygarth said Barnes and her husband were co-habitating for most of the 12 years and she never declared it to the relevant authorities.

He continued: "When matters caught up with the defendant, she was interviewed under caution on July 12, 2011.

"She denied the allegations and said they had split up very shortly after they had married and Mr Barnes had been living with his parents."

The prosecutor said there would be no proceeds of crime hearing, as a preliminary investigation showed Barnes had no significant assets.

He added : "The prosecution will seek to recover the money in other places."

Zoe Nield, for Barnes, said she had "many serious medical conditions ," and was in poor health.

She had suffered from depression, exacerbated by the stress and anxiety of the court proceedings, which she recognised she had brought on herself. The defendant was on anti-depressants, also had osteoporosis and arthritis and was prescribed medication and painkillers.

Miss Nield continued :"So far as being able to pay back the money, she is a lady of very limited means. She is claiming disability living allowance and employment support allowance, but nevertheless she is certainly willing to pay back what she can."

She said the defendant had had a fall and injured her wrist and was expecting £30,000 in compensation. She was content to give it all to the DWP to make restitution.

Miss Nield urged the court to pass a suspended sentence and went on: "The defendant is terrified at the prospect of a custodial sentence. She understands that this is plainly a case that does cross the custody threshold."

Recorder Carus told the defendant :"You must have been aware of the risk you were running."

He added: "This court is obliged to make the point that such offending will result in immediate custodial terms, even if it's your first appearance before these courts."