9218: Top Headmaster Who Faked His CV Spared Jail As Judge Says He’s Learned His Lesson

He faked 24 years as a teacher in a USD 700,000 scam despite being a college dropout, court hears. 

Neil Lennie who lied about his qualifications in a 24-year teaching career has been spared jail.

VICTORIA, Australia — A former and much-lauded headmaster who lied about his qualifications and faked his way through a 24-year teaching career has been spared jail.

Neil Lennie dropped out of university and used his father’s legitimate teacher registration in Victoria between 1976 and 2000.

He taught at Victoria’s Mount Scopus Memorial CollegeHaileybury College, and Overnewton Anglican Community College.

Lennie also spent six years as a headmaster at Caulfield Grammar School through the 1980s and 1990s.

The 73-year-old was spared jail in Victoria’s County on Thursday after he admitted obtaining AUD 1088455 ($843,567) in remuneration by deception.

Instead, he was handed a suspended three-month sentence and year-long community correction order.

Judge Patrica Riddell said Lennie’s case was unique among fraud cases.

While his lies were premeditated, deliberate, and rather brazen, Judge Riddell said Lennie caused no harm to and, in fact, greatly enriched the schools at which he taught.

Former students “speak of you with one voice as one of the most outstanding and influential teachers they were fortunate to have”, the judge said.

She rejected the prosecutor’s arguments Lennie was motivated by personal benefit, ego, or beating other teachers to jobs.

“You did see teaching as a vocation, a calling,” said Judge Riddell. “COVID-19 showed the hard work of teachers had long been undervalued. It would be difficult to find any teacher who enters that position because of greed.”

One of Lennie’s students from Mount Scopus became a leading infectious diseases expert and an inaugural director at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity.

“I often credit Mr. Lennie with my enduring love of science, the pursuit of academic excellence, and self-belief in my own capabilities in science,” Professor Sharon Lewin AO wrote in a letter to the court. “I remember him very clearly telling me that I was capable of doing anything in life and to shoot for the stars.

“As a young woman in the 1970s, I now understand that this kind of encouragement for women in science was most unusual.”

Judge Riddell noted none of Lennie’s employers sought to verify his qualifications. 

His registration was canceled in 2009 after the Victorian Institute of Teaching discovered discrepancies in his records.

The institute in 2014 charged him over another role as headmaster at a different school, again without qualification.

He was fined AUD 10322 ($8000) and in 2015 referred to police for possible criminal charges, which were laid in May 2020.

Judge Riddell said there had been almost no attempt to explain the lengthy delay by authorities.

She also cited intense media scrutiny on Lennie’s case, and the public disgrace and scorn suffered.

 

(Edited by Sid Roy and Saptak Datta)