Juliette D’Souza posed as a shaman for more than 12 years, tricking 11 people, telling them the money would be used as a spiritual offering to cure health problems, including terminal illnesses and infertility.
The 59-year-old from Hampstead insisted the cash was a “sacrifice” and that it would be hung in the Amazon rainforest.
She claimed two other shamans would perform rituals around the money before it was sent back, and their problems would be resolved.
Instead, the cash went on designer handbags, luxury holidays and antique furniture. Many of D’Souza’s victims were financially ruined, with one man left “as poor as a church mouse”, the court heard.
D’Souza also “remorselessly extracted” more than £200,000 (€234,000) from an elderly woman over several years.
On Thursday, she was convicted at Blackfriars Crown Court of 23 counts of obtaining property by deception and fraud relating to victims targeted between January 1998 and June 2010.
Judge Ian Karsten QC said she had cast a “spell” over her victims and persuaded them to hand over the money or face “terrifying” consequences.
Blackfriars Crown Court, judge Ian Karsten QC said: “It is the worst case of confidence fraud I have ever had to deal with, or indeed that I have ever heard of,” he said.
Blackfriars Crown Court, judge Ian Karsten QC added: “The most serious aspect of this case is that you wrecked the lives of a number of your victims and you have done it out of pure greed.”
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