Your best bet is really to speak to your solicitor to make sure but in general, I feel the answer is: "It depends".
Under your sentencing you should've been made aware of any stipulations in regards to disclosures etc. In regards to the 'it depends' remark would be that it depends on what you currently do as a job and what your contract/employee handbook says. If you work for say a bank or insurance company I feel they will almost certainly want to be made aware of any kind of conviction relating to fraud/money. Failure to do so would almost certainly be considered gross misconduct and you'd likely find yourself on the receiving end of P45.
Even though a lot of companies will state any criminal conviction would be seen as gross misconduct they do also have a bit of discretion as to what they want to do. For example, in my previous employment which was in a private office, a member of staff was convicted three times over a 2 year period for assault and kept his job. I was convicted of a sexual offence once and was sacked within 24hrs of my name hitting the paper.
Honestly, I'd try and get on top of it if I was you: I'd speak to my boss in a one-on-one and let them know the situation, what your sentence was, any restrictions etc. Most companies would certainly offer up a mutual termination so it wouldn't effectively mean you're sacked (so looks better on your CV for future employment) however the honesty could potentially mean they keep you on, perhaps maybe just discipline you or something as opposed to them finding out a month later or whatever and then get upset at you for it.
It really boils down to how long you've been with the company as anything less than 2 years they can basically sack you for any reason, and the other situation is how close/comfortable you are at the company with your boss. Would they be understanding?
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