Former ANZ bank teller's $56K embezzlement ends in jail time

Financial trust forms the bedrock of our relationship with banks, underpinning the security and reliability of our savings.

In our world, where unexpected emergencies and expenses are inevitable, it is important to have the assurance that our hard-earned money is safe.

However, recent events serve as stark reminders that this trust can be shattered instantly, leaving individuals vulnerable and their financial well-being compromised.


It's a trust violated in the small town of Carnarvon, Western Australia, where a former ANZ bank teller, Mary Mercedes Lea'aetoa, was sentenced to two years for stealing a staggering $56,596 from a pensioner's account.

The Albany District Court heard how Lea'aetoa, 26, exploited her position of trust to make multiple unauthorised withdrawals over nine months from the account of a 63-year-old woman in palliative care.


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Mary Mercedes Lea'aetoa was sentenced to two years for stealing $56,596 from a pensioner's account. Credit: Shutterstock


The method was simple yet devious: forged withdrawal vouchers. The victim, acquainted with Lea'aetoa, initially didn't notice the transactions, but alarm bells rang when larger sums, ranging from $600 to $5,000, began disappearing.

Judge Belinda Lonsdale, who presided over the case, was unsparing in her condemnation of Lea'aetoa's 'despicable' conduct.

‘It's hard to accept you are sorry for anyone but yourself,’ she said.

Despite the defence's argument that Lea'aetoa was under financial duress from her family, who allegedly controlled her finances and left her with a mere $50 each week, the judge deemed a suspended sentence 'not appropriate’.


The repeated nature of the theft and the sheer amount stolen demanded an immediate custodial sentence.

The court was told that Lea'aetoa used the ill-gotten funds for personal indulgences, including purchasing a new iPhone, a detail prosecutors highlighted as ‘greed as opposed to need’.

Defence lawyer Sonia Anderson, however, painted a picture of a young woman burdened by the expectation to financially support her family, buying food and alcohol for them, and now shunned by those same relatives.

ANZ's internal investigation dismissed her, culminating in a lengthy interview with Lea'aetoa.

Although she denied the accusations during the interview, the bank concluded she was likely guilty and took the matter to the police.

In a statement, ANZ confirmed the victim received a refund and emphasised the bank's commitment to customer responsibilities.

Lea'aetoa's eligibility for parole will come in July 2025.


In a contrasting narrative, a senior citizen deceives friends out of more than $400,000 by fabricating an illness.

Consequently, she received a one-year jail term as the magistrate voiced apprehensions regarding community safety. Explore further details of this incident here.
Key Takeaways
  • Former ANZ bank teller Mary Mercedes Lea'aetoa was sentenced to two years in jail for stealing $56,596 from a pensioner's account.
  • Lea'aetoa made multiple unauthorised withdrawals over nine months by filling out forged withdrawal vouchers.
  • ANZ refunded the stolen money to the victim and took its responsibilities to protect customers' interests seriously.
  • The judge rejected the defence's request for a suspended sentence, citing the repeated nature of the theft and the breach of trust. Mary Mercedes Lea'aetoa will be eligible for parole in July 2025.
Have you or someone you know ever experienced financial fraud? Share your story and how you dealt with it in the comments below.
 
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Why are the perpetrators always given excuses for their crimes? There are many in the community with similar or worse circumstances who do not resort to hurting those around them. Stop taking into account past experiences, as they are now traumatising innocent people
 
Why should she get parole if she is sentencing to six years she should serve every single day of the six years there's too much of given parole it is no deterant,
Make all these types of people who pull off theses scams, and let's face it they are scams, serve every single day behind bars where they belong, especially if they are working in the banking industry. If you cannot trust them then heaven help us.
 
I just hope that the bank makes some sort of application to the court to make this "Bitch" repay them for the reimbursement that they made to the victim. Good on "ANZ" in this instance.
 
What exactly was the evidence used to acquire her conviction? As with the Chamberlains, was she guilty beyond reasonable doubt?

Who else has purchased an iphone recently?
 
When I was working in the ANZ Bank about 30 years ago, one of the tellers did exactly the same thing and virtually got away with it. By the time she was caught she had been on a trip to America and bought a new car. It was truly amazing, as she lost her job and was given a new one the very next week by another customer, (because the crime was not made public). She was made to pay back the money at $1.00 per week. She even came back into the bank on a regular basis to deposit money for her new boss. One of my ‘believe it or not stories’ but it is absolutely true.
 
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Hard to accept the defence argument. The phone purchase is telling.
People in a position of trust, taking advantage of the vulnerable warrant a custodial sentence. A good decision by a judge not prepared to give countenance to made up excuses.
The woman in question has a name that sounds somewhat Pacific Islanderish. Having spent a while working in that type of culture I can certainly understand the types of alleged pressures she could have been placed under by her alleged relatives. However, Australian law is based on UK law; so bad luck, Pacific Islanders.

A mobile phone purchase is evidence of criminality? I suppose Australia did start out as a penal colony!
 
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When I was working in the ANZ Bank about 30 years ago, one of the tellers did exactly the same thing and virtually got away with it. By the time she was caught she had been on a trip to America and bought a new car. It was truly amazing, as she lost her job and was given a new one the very next week by another customer, (because the crime was not made public). She was made to pay back the money at $1.00 per week. She even came back into the bank on a regular basis to deposit money for her new boss. One of my ‘believe it or not stories’ but it is absolutely true.
There is a bit of internal crime that goes on in the banking industry, that the general public do not get to hear about. I worked for ANZ for 27 years and was aware of at least 2 local employees who stole and got caught.
 
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There is a bit of internal crime that goes on in the banking industry, that the general public do not get to hear about. I worked for ANZ for 27 years and was aware of at least 2 local employees who stole and got caught.
Yes, bank clerks clearly are subject to temptations; a bank clerk at the BNZ in a small west coast town in NZ stole my silver coin collection dating back to 1842 that my father had intended to be placed in a safe deposit box at the bank. Dad put the coin collection on the counter in front of the bank clerk with appropriate verbal instructions, went to write a cheque, turned his back on the bank clerk at his counter and lo! The bank clerk denied ever having seen the coin collection the Dad had placed in front of him.

My father was a very mild-mannered man and the town was a very small countryside town where the occasional boganoid stuff just happened now and again on a regular basis. Such as the family car being stolen out of our garage; I am pleased to say that the car was rather distinctive so that the local copper stopped the pair of thieving louts from completing the theft before they had got past the main street.

That was a while back, so if anyone ever gets shown a coin collection with 2 mint Churchill Crowns and a silver 4d dated 1842, and a range other British silver coins spanning the Glory Days of English Empire, please let me know.
 
The woman in question has a name that sounds somewhat Pacific Islanderish. Having spent a while working in that type of culture I can certainly understand the types of alleged pressures she could have been placed under by her alleged relatives. However, Australian law is based on UK law; so bad luck, Pacific Islanders.

A mobile phone purchase is evidence of criminality? I suppose Australia did start out as a penal colony!
You may have a point.

Best bet following research suggests she is most likely of Tongan origins.

As an aside, the best known with that surname is Tonga Lea'aetoa, who played as a versatile prop for various teams, including Nottingham, Pau, London Irish, Toulon and Bayonne. He represented Tonga and the Pacific Islanders in international rugby.

I am a little bit familiar with a few Fijians here in Australia. The blokes definitely appear to be in charge, suggesting the pressures you speak of could be real, if she is indeed a Tongan because research on Tongans says traditional gender roles often emphasise respect for elders, hierarchical family structures and, yes, male leadership. I've seen that type of pressure in action myself, and most of these boys are really big physically.

So is this why the justice symbol wears a blindfold?

But, the line in the article appears to suggest there were other personal indulgences besides the phone, so it's difficult to make a distance call on that without more detail in the article regarding evidence that might have shown it was her who did the dirty deed.

At the end of the day, whilst there may have been mitigating circumstances that the judge could/may have have taken into consideration when sentencing, Mary Mercedes is an adult who can make choices. She made hers and the judge made hers.
 
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Why should she get parole if she is sentencing to six years she should serve every single day of the six years there's too much of given parole it is no deterant,
Make all these types of people who pull off theses scams, and let's face it they are scams, serve every single day behind bars where they belong, especially if they are working in the banking industry. If you cannot trust them then heaven help us.
If a Magistrate doesn't set a minimum sentence the PRISON SYSTEM DOES. That is why you regularly hear in the news that a person received 'X' years sentence but will be out in 'Y' months & dependent on the length of the sentence the prisoner can apply for up to a further 10 days maximum early release towards the end of their sentence.
 
If this "Lady: was an employee in the banking system in Iran, she would have been executed by now. Iran is extremely good & quick in executing female wrong doers, also, along with males. No parole system there.
 
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If this "Lady: was an employee in the banking system in Iran, she would have been executed by now. Iran is extremely good & quick in executing female wrong doers, also, along with males. No parole system there.

Ah yes, the old return to barbarism (said in the voice of a Monty P character) - an absence of culture and civilisation -

Pressure the females to do the dirty work so they feel the stones and the more 'important' one is kept safe.

Oohh, but she committed the crime!!

Yes, but which crime was the worst.
 
Ah yes, the old return to barbarism (said in the voice of a Monty P character) - an absence of culture and civilisation -

Pressure the females to do the dirty work so they feel the stones and the more 'important' one is kept safe.

Oohh, but she committed the crime!!

Yes, but which crime was the worst.

The influenced motivated adjustment made.
Sorry to read about Ag it must have been devastating to say the least.
 
Ah yes, the old return to barbarism (said in the voice of a Monty P character) - an absence of culture and civilisation -

Pressure the females to do the dirty work so they feel the stones and the more 'important' one is kept safe.

Oohh, but she committed the crime!!

Yes, but which crime was the worst.
Be serious. First offence, 50 lashes in public with the cat o' nine tails. That's retrospective equality with the male seamen before the mast in the British Royal Navy. Although we used to shoot Admirals so as to encourage the others.
 
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