Britain faces new expenses scandal

More than 50 British MPs and peers have overclaimed for council tax, it emerged today.

More than 50 British MPs and peers have overclaimed for council tax, it emerged today.

The claims, amounting to thousands of pounds in some cases, are on the lawmakers' designated second homes, the Daily Telegraphsaid today.

The "phantom" council tax claims centre around lawmakers rounding up figures or making 12 monthly claims even though their annual bills are divided into 10 instalments.

The disclosures over a series of weeks has effectively ended the careers of more than a dozen members of parliament who have said they will not stand at the next general election, due by mid-2010.

Yesterday Scotland Yard said it would investigate the alleged misuse of expenses by a small number of MPs and peers in the upper chamber, the House of Lords.

A police and Crown Prosecution Service panel will continue to consider a small number of other individuals, it added.

Police would not say who was under investigation, or which party they belonged to.

Individual MPs have paid back thousands of pounds after they were found to have milked the system in a variety of ways.

PA