Fraudster found guilty after funeral fiasco

Kereby walking with a walking stick in each hand, outside a building. There is concrete and grass behind him. He wears sunglasses, a pale pink shirt and blue jeans. He has thinning grey hair and a neat beard.
Image caption,

Mark Kerbey, pictured in 2018, has a string of previous convictions for fraud

  • Published

A man has been found guilty of fraud for "duping a grieving family" over funeral costs.

Mark Kerbey, from Station Road in Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex, took £2,600 from the victims to arrange the service, even though he had been banned from organising funerals in the area.

The congregation arrived at Basildon Crematorium on 21 February 2020, to discover that no funeral would be taking place, Essex Police said.

Kerbey, 62, who has previous convictions for funeral fraud, was convicted by a jury on Wednesday at Chelmsford Crown Court.

The victim's husband died at Southend Hospital in January 2020, and she paid Kerbey for the funeral under the business "Trinity Funeral Home" - not realising that this company was banned from using the facilities at Basildon Crematorium and Southend cemetery.

Kerbey's attempts to book the crematorium had been refused, but the night before the funeral, he visited the family and presented them with an order of service, police said.

When the congregation turned up to find no service had been booked, Kerbey tried to blame others and invited the family to his own funeral home.

When the mourners arrived, they found it was a small 15ft by 15ft room and much of the group had to wait outside.

Essex Police said the 20-minute service "bore no relation" to the man who had died.

To add insult to injury, a limousine sent to pick up the family was "inappropriately" prepared for use in a child's birthday.

'Web of lies'

The family had to pay an extra £700 to Kerbey for the body to be released into the care of a new funeral service.

When the victim's husband was finally laid to rest on 17 March 2020, no family were present due to the money they had already paid out.

PC Daniel Hart, who co-led the investigation, said: "Kerbey preyed on vulnerable, grieving victims and promised them tailored and respectful funeral services for their loved one, which he knew they would never be able to deliver.

"His actions are despicable, dishonest and disrespectful and I am glad today that those who were sadly engulfed in the web of lies finally have justice."

His colleague PC Leigh Stevenson re-scheduled her retirement in order to bring the case to court and "seek justice for the victims".

A second man was charged in relation to these offences but was found not guilty of fraud by false representation.

Kerbey is due to be sentenced on 25 April.

Get in touch

Do you have a story suggestion for Essex?