On 9 September 2001 Ingram became a contestant on the
ITV game show
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, following his wife, Diana, and her brother Adrian Pollock, each of whom had won £32,000 as a previous contestant. To prepare, Ingram practised for about 20 minutes per day on a homemade "
Fastest Finger First" machine. Ingram got into the "hot seat", but used two of his three lifelines early, ending the day at £4,000 and with only the 50/50 lifeline remaining. The production team did not expect him to proceed much further, but he ended up making it all the way to the £1 million prize on the second day of recording. Rod Taylor, an executive producer, later said in a documentary about the scandal, "It became obvious that he wasn't under the pressure that he should have been, somehow... He should have been very, very careful, and very certain. And he certainly wasn't [either of those]." After Ingram had won the £1 million, producers were suspicious enough that a search was performed on him. His hair, clothing, and shoes were searched; however, the method of cheating used meant that nothing incriminating was found on his person. After he left the set, the show's production company,
Celador, was tipped off by the show's producers about the assumed irregularities within the episode, and they suspended the jackpot payout to investigate the matter. At the same time, the show's presenter,
Chris Tarrant, overheard that the Ingrams had been arguing, despite Charles's success, moments before Tarrant joined them in their dressing-room for champagne. Another member of the production team felt similarly about the couple's behaviour. While reviewing the recording, the production team made a connection between Ingram's answers and coughs coming from one of the waiting contestants, Tecwen Whittock; for one question, the coughing came from Ingram's wife Diana whilst she was in the audience. Based on this evidence, all three were accused of cheating, and the matter was handed over to the police to investigate further. Whittock and the Ingrams were eventually charged with "
procuring the execution of a valuable security by deception".
Trial Following
a trial at
Southwark Crown Court lasting four weeks (including jury deliberation for three and a half days), Ingram, his wife and Whittock were convicted by a majority verdict of their offences on 7 April 2003. Both of the Ingrams and Whittock were given prison sentences,
suspended for two years—the Ingrams were sentenced to 18 months; Whittock was sentenced to 12 months—and each
fined £15,000 and ordered to pay £10,000 towards prosecution costs. Within two months of the verdict and sentence, the trial's judge ordered the Ingrams to pay additional
defence costs, which left them paying a total of £115,000. On 19 August 2003, the
Army Board ordered Ingram to resign his commission as a major after 16 years of service, but this did not affect his
pension entitlements. On 19 May 2004, the
Court of Appeal denied Ingram leave to appeal against his conviction and upheld his sentence but agreed to quash his wife's fine and prosecution costs. On 5 October, the
House of Lords denied Ingram leave to appeal against his fine and prosecution costs, and he appealed to the
European Court of Human Rights. On 20 October, the original trial judge reduced Ingram's defence costs order to £25,000 and Diana's defence costs order to £5,000. Ingram's defence costs were later further reduced to £5,000 on appeal. In 2006, the journalist
Jon Ronson, who covered the case at the time for
The Guardian, wrote that he believed the Ingrams might be innocent. Ronson, who attended every day of the trial, had observed that when the word "cough" was mentioned, pensioners in the public gallery had coughed.
James Plaskett, a
chess grandmaster who had appeared in the Fastest Finger First round several times before winning £250,000 in January 2006, argued this was an example of coughs caused by unconscious triggers; Whittock or others had simply coughed involuntarily upon hearing the correct answer. Whittock was also accused of having coughed after Ingram mentioned an incorrect option and quickly followed it with a smothered "no". However, Plaskett, who had sat in the same seat, argued that someone might have said it in response to an incorrect option in the same way that other contestants have been known to whisper "no".
Recorded evidence In court, Ingram claimed the videotape of his appearance on
Millionaire was "unrepresentative of what I heard", and he continues to assert that it was "unfairly manipulated". A video recording, with coughing amplified relative to other sounds, including Ingram's and Tarrant's voices, was prepared by Celador's video editing company Editworks for the prosecution and "for the benefit of the jury" during the trial (and later for viewers in television broadcasts). Ingram claims that he neither "listened for, encouraged, nor noticed any coughing". The prosecution alleged that, of the 192 coughs recorded during his second-night performance, 32 were recorded from the 10 Fastest Finger First contestants, and that 19 of the 32 coughs heard on the video tape were "significant". The prosecution asserted that these "significant" coughs were by Whittock when the correct answer had been spoken. During the trial, Tarrant also denied hearing any coughing throughout the episode, claiming he was too busy to notice.
Testimony of Larry Whitehurst Larry Whitehurst, another contestant who had appeared on the show as a Fastest Finger First contestant on four occasions, was adamant that he had known the answers to Ingram's questions. He told the court that he had been able to detect a pattern of coughing, and that he was entirely convinced that coughing had helped Ingram.
Testimony of Tecwen Whittock Whittock claims to have suffered a persistent cough for his entire life, insisted that he had a genuine cough caused by a combination of
hay fever and a dust
allergy, and that it was only coincidence that his throat problem coincided with the right answers. Whittock also insisted that he had not known the answers to three of the questions he allegedly helped with. However, the police found the answer to the twelfth question, regarding the artist who painted
The Ambassadors, in a hand-written general knowledge book at Whittock's home. Davies, the floor manager on
Millionaire, said that as soon as the coughing came to his notice during the recording he decided to find out who was responsible. "The loudest coughing was coming from Tecwen in seat number three", he said. "He was talking to the person to his left when I was observing him, and then he turned towards the set and the hot seat to and while Davies described this as "bizarre", Whittock remarked during the trial, "You do not cough into someone's face". During the trial, Whittock portrayed himself as a "serial quiz show loser" because he had been eliminated in round one of
Channel 4's
Fifteen to One, had also failed on ITV's
The People Versus and had been able to win only an atlas on his appearance on ITV's
Sale of the Century. He had also done poorly on
Beat the Bong, although he did reach the semi-final stage of the
BBC radio quiz show
Brain of Britain. ==After
Millionaire==