Index  ›  legal  ›  BBC
legal · BBC ↗

MoD civil servant from Suffolk jailed over pay-off

BBC Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Timothy Grogan accepted a bribe of £64,000 from a firm that won a £1 million‑per‑year contract at RAF Lakenheath.
64000 GBP · bribe payment1000000 GBP per year · contract value
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Timothy Grogan accepted £64,000 in bribes.
64000 GBP · bribe amount
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Grogan was sentenced to eight months in prison.
8 months · jail term
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The firm that paid Grogan had a contract worth £1 million per year at RAF Lakenheath.
1000000 GBP · annual contract value
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Grogan was given landscaping and paving work valued at £10,000.
10000 GBP · value of landscaping and paving work
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Grogan received cash payments of £1,000 each, paid in instalments over an eight‑year period starting in 1998.
1000 GBP · cash instalment8 years · payment period
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Grogan received £1,000 cash instalments over an eight‑year period starting in 1998.
1000 GBP · cash instalment amount8 years · payment schedule length
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Grogan also received landscaping and paving work at his home valued at £10,000.
10000 GBP · value of landscaping and paving work
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Grogan was arrested in January of the previous year.
Prosecutor Nick Staite, Prosecutor
View source ↗

A civil servant at RAF Lakenheath who accepted £64,000 to "grease his palm" from a firm which won a £1m a year contract at the base has been jailed.

Timothy Grogan, 50, of Woolverstone Close, Ipswich, admitted a charge of misconduct in public office and was jailed for eight months.

Ipswich Crown Court heard that the offence was committed when he was working for the Ministry of Defence.

Judge John Holt said: "It is no more and no less than greasing the palm."

The court heard that Grogan was responsible on behalf of the Ministry of Defence for supervising the administration of a contract worth £1m a year at US air base.

Grogan was paid in £1,000 cash instalments over an eight-year period from 1998 by the former managing director of Ground Control Ltd which had won a maintenance contract.

In addition Grogan received landscaping and paving work at his home in Ipswich valued at £10,000 and provided at no cost to himself by sub contractors connected to Ground Control Ltd.

Prosecutor Nick Staite said when Grogan was arrested in January last year, he claimed to have been approached by the former managing director of Ground Control Ltd and asked for assistance in preparing invoices.

But Mr Staite said that inquiries by the MoD Police found no evidence to back up that claim with staff at the company.

The former managing director of Ground Control Ltd could not be interviewed about the case because he had committed suicide, the court heard.

Mr Staite told the court police had established that Ground Control Ltd were in no way involved in making payments to Grogan and had done nothing wrong.

Mitigating, John Donnelly said that Grogan had until now lived an "exemplary" life, regularly achieving top grades in his MoD work assessments.

As a result of the case, Grogan feared he would lose his MoD pension.

Sentencing Grogan, Judge Holt said because of the large amount of money involved and the persistence of the offending, a suspended sentence was inappropriate.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error