A FORMER UKIP MEP from Hampshire fraudulently claimed almost £500,000 in European Parliament expenses, using some of it to fund his domestic court battles, a court heard.

Ashley Mote, 79, from Binsted near Alton, is accused of a string of fraud-related offences including acquiring criminal property and obtaining a money transfer by deception.

A jury at London's Southwark Crown Court heard that he denies a total of 11 offences alleged to have taken place between November 2004 and July 2010.

Prosecutor Jonathan Davies told the court that as an MEP, Mote was entitled to claim expenses, including something known as Parliamentary Assistance Allowance, or Secretarial Allowance, to help fund his work.

Jurors heard that some of the money Mote allegedly made from the fraud went towards funding various legal costs he had built up as a result of being prosecuted in the UK for benefit fraud offences.

Mr Davies said: ''What the prosecution say happened between 2004 and 2009, when Mr Mote ceased to be an MEP, is that he abused that allowance by submitting false claims for payment for work which he said to the European Parliament had been done by organisations working on his behalf.''

Jurors heard that two of the organisations had previously campaigned against UK membership of the European Union. They were the Better Off Out Fund (BOOF), and Direct Action Resistance To Tyranny (DARTT).

However, it is alleged that neither of these companies conducted any work for Mote, who made claims of £16,000 against BOOF, and £54,000 in relation to DARTT.

''They were simply used as a front to perpetrate, carry out fraud and to receive monies form the European Parliament,'' said Mr Davies.

Mote is also said to have falsely claimed £5,000 a month for work he claimed had been carried out by Estonia based company ICOS (Information Centrum Owned State).

It is alleged that he even set up a Danish bank account under the similar name of ''Information Centrim OS'' for funds from the European Parliament to be paid into, ''dishonesty obtaining'' approximately 355,000 euro.

Giving details of Mote carrying out fraud to fund his rising legal bills, Mr Davies said: ''He asked for payments to be made to the firm of solicitors on the basis that they were providing him with advice in relation to his duties as an MEP.

''In fact the money was being used to fund a number of criminal and civil proceedings related to Mr Mote's prosecution for benefit fraud offences, and indeed some unrelated civil proceedings.

''Basically we say he was using European Parliament money to fund his defence and various appeals in connection with being prosecuted for benefit fraud.''

Mr Davies continued: ''This was a sophisticated fraud committed over several years during which Mr Mote made a number of false representations and produced a number of false documents in order to deceive the European Parliament into believing that significant amounts of work were being done on his behalf, relating to his work as an MEP.

''In total he dishonestly obtained approximately 355,000 euro and £184,000 of allowances to which he was not entitled. It's not quite half a million pounds, but it's not far short.''

Jurors heard that while MEPs were allowed to make certain legitimate claims for expenses from the European Parliament, they were not supposed to use this money to enrich themselves.

Between 2004, when he was elected MEP and 2009, Mote claimed a total of £750,000 in Parliamentary Assistance Allowance, taking into account his legitimate claims and any alleged fraudulent activity.

Mote was elected a Ukip MEP for southeast England in 2004, but shortly before he actually took up his seat was thrown out of Nigel Farage's party because he was being prosecuted by the Department for Work and Pensions for benefit fraud. However, he sat as an independent MEP until 2009, when he decided not to stand for election.

Mote denies four counts of obtaining a money transfer by deception, three of false accounting, two of fraud, and one each of acquiring criminal property and concealing criminal property.

Proceeding