Former AFL player Nick Stevens locked up after jury finds him guilty of defrauding multiple families

Following three abandoned trials, the 200-gamer is now set to serve time behind bars.

Digital Staff, AAP
7NEWS Sport
Former AFL star Nick Stevens has been found guilty of defrauding six Mildura families out of more than $170,000 in a swimming pool installation scam.

Former AFL player Nick Stevens has been locked up after a jury found him guilty of defrauding multiple families with his regional pool business.

The ex-Carlton and Port Adelaide footballer was found guilty of obtaining financial advantage by deception in Victoria’s County Court on Monday in a fourth trial after three earlier ones were abandoned.

Stevens, 46, was accused of defrauding six families in Mildura, in Victoria’s north, a total of $171,000, prosecutors told a jury in Melbourne.

Sign up to The Nightly's newsletters.

Get the first look at the digital newspaper, curated daily stories and breaking headlines delivered to your inbox.

Email Us
By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

Prosecutors said Stevens did not install the pools legally and built them with faults such as cracks or failed to install a pool at all, leaving “giant holes in their backyards”.

Stevens pleaded not guilty to 18 offences including theft, obtaining financial advantage by deception and using a false document, and took the matter to trial.

His first trial in May 2025 was aborted after the judge excused themselves from it, with a second trial starting earlier this year.

However, jurors were discharged from that trial one day after openings, on February 25, over issues with evidence.

A third jury was empanelled, but they were again discharged on March 5.

Prosecutor Toni Stokes said Stevens installed six legally compliant pools under the supervision of a registered builder, but then went out on his own without the required licence, registration, permits or insurance.

She said he took money from six families, promising to install pools in their backyards, but none of them were legally compliant.

Jurors in his fourth trial returned with a verdict on Monday after retiring to deliberate about their decision on March 25.

Stevens was found guilty of 13 charges of dishonestly obtaining financial advantage by deception and one charge of using a false document.

He was found not guilty of one further charge of dishonestly obtaining financial advantage for an alleged $3000 deception.

Judge Fiona Todd thanked jurors for their assistance as she sent them home.

Stevens, who had been on bail, was taken into custody after the verdict as Ms Stokes said he was now “very likely” to be facing a reasonable prison term at sentence.

He will return to court for a pre-sentence hearing on May 21.

Stevens played 231 games for Port Adelaide and Carlton across 12 years in the AFL, before retiring in 2009.

Originally published on 7NEWS Sport

Latest Edition

The Nightly cover for 30-03-2026

Latest Edition

Edition Edition 30 March 202630 March 2026

How did one crazed killer evade an epic manhunt for seven months and hide in plain sight 200km away.