Tag: Blackmore Group

  • THE BOLLOCKS OF OLD BAILEY

    THE BOLLOCKS OF OLD BAILEY

    I don’t often disagree with highly-regarded pensions expert Henry Tapper.  Too much respect and awe.  But his recent blog: “The Balls of Old Bailey” (about Andrew Bailey) merits a polite argument.  It has made me cross – not cross with Henry, per se.  But cross with the failure of Britain’s culture, government, regulation and legal system to address justice justly (or at all).

    Henry has questioned the point of revisiting the balls-up made by former FCA CEO Andrew Bailey and has suggested that “we need to move on”.

    The point of examining Bailey’s sickening catalogue of balls-ups is that we must make sure it never happens again.  Part of that mission is to follow the example of the criminal justice system: we don’t give convicted criminals a jolly good talking to – or even a good bollocking.  We take away their liberty and put them in prison.  This is called a “deterrent”. 

    What did Old Bailey do that was so bad?  The answer is, indeed, a long list – starting with British Steel, Toby Whittaker’s Park First and Neil Woodford’s Fund, and moving on to London Capital & Finance and a long list of other mini-bond scams – including the Blackmore Bond.  Bailey should have stopped that entire horrific catalogue of investment fraud if he’d been doing his job properly.  He could – and should – have prevented hundreds of thousands of victims from losing their life savings and pensions in all of those investment scams.

    The advantage to be had from putting the bollocks – and preferably the head – of Bailey on the block is to send out a warning to future FCA bosses.  They all need to understand that they are public servants, and that with huge salaries come huge responsibilities.   Current overpaid bosses Nikhil Rathi, Christopher Woolard and Charles Randall must be reminded that running the FCA is a serious public duty – and not just an easy stepping stone to an even bigger and better job (however badly they fail consumers).

    Bailey’s numerous failures were rewarded with an eye-watering salary followed by promotion to governor of the Bank of England.

    But Bailey’s balls-up is by no means unique.  He’s in good company with a whole raft of over-paid public servants who have betrayed the public:

    • Post Office boss Paula Vennells was awarded a CBE for falsely prosecuting hundreds of innocent Post Office subpostmasters for fraud – even though she knew full well they were innocent.  In arguably the biggest scandal of corruption and injustice in British history, Vennells oversaw the wrongful conviction and sometimes imprisonment of 700 victims.  Many of these people were financially ruined, lost their homes and committed suicide.  One pregnant woman was sent to jail, and many marriages and families were destroyed. 
    • Former HMRC boss Dave Hartnett was caught arranging “sweetheart” deals with tax evaders such as Goldman Sax and Vodaphone.  And now he’s “got no shame” (according to Margaret Hodge) in taking up another over-paid job with Deloittes. 
    • Former HMRC boss Lin Homer was rewarded for her vast catalogue of disasters and failures with another huge salary and a £2.2m pension
    Paula Vennells (left), Dave Hartnett (middle), Lin Homer (right)
    Paula Vennells (left), Dave Hartnett (middle), Lin Homer (right)

    But to revert to the failings of Andrew Bailey, Henry has suggested that we need to “move on”.  However, those who have lost their life savings and pensions because of the FCA’s defects will have great difficulty putting their losses and harrowing ordeals behind them.  Living in abject poverty won’t help them forget.  They will certainly never forgive the fact that Andrew Bailey could have prevented them becoming victims of investment scams such as mini bonds, Store First, Park First, the Woodford Fund and Blackmore Global etc.

    Henry’s blog concludes that Andrew Bailey, as Governor of the Bank of England, has a great deal on his plate: cost of living crisis, looming recession and Brexit.  But does anybody seriously think that such a negligent, lazy, incompetent person is capable of dealing with that lot – when he couldn’t even listen to frantic whistleblowers such as Paul Carlier, Mark Taber and Brev at Bond Review who were offering to do his job for him?

    In an entirely different blog, however, Henry talks about the sad case of MP Neil Parish:

    This silly twerp got caught looking at lewd images on his mobile in the House of Commons.  His excuse was that he thought porn was spelled “tractor”.  Parish has now resigned and his political career is almost certainly over.  His wife might also be quite cross.  He probably won’t be rewarded with a promotion, a CBE or any kind of public “moving on”.

    Tractor girl

    What Parish did was foolish.  But he didn’t cost thousands of people their pensions and life savings; he didn’t ruin hundreds of subpostmasters’ lives and send some of them to prison or to their deaths; he didn’t aid and abet hundreds of millions of pounds’ worth of tax evasion; he didn’t overcharge millions of taxpayers or lose their records.  

    Parish embarrassed himself and was caught doing something unbelievably silly – that hurt nobody except himself (and his own family).  But the price he will pay for this will be crippling and may have ruined his life.  Meanwhile, Bailey, Vennells, Hartnet and Homer have evaded any kind of sanction and gone on to glittering success, awards and eye-watering pensions.

    Move on?  Anybody?

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  • The Web of Pension Scams

    The Web of Pension Scams

    On the web of pension scams It seems as though criminal convictions against pension scammers might be getting popular. More than a decade has gone by with virtually none of the usual suspects getting jailed – despite a few criminal investigations (that, so far, have not resulted in convictions). Is the system really that hopeless or do these criminals just know how to work it? Probably, both. But is it getting any better?

    Almost all scammers and scams are, in some way, related or connected. If the earliest scammers (circa 2010) had been prosecuted and put behind bars, much of today’s damage could have been prevented.

    Now that there is an intricate web of them passing around their tricks of the trade, it’s no wonder they’ve all been able to bypass the laws and regulations.

    Two scammers have, however, recently been brought to justice:

    Alan Barratt and Susan Dalton have recently been convicted and jailed for a £13m pension fraud – involving alleged pension investments in truffle trees.

    Much of the £13m ended up in the hands of well-known scammer David Austin – who committed suicide after being caught in another pension scam (using his daughter Camilla as the “front man”).

    Susan Dalton & Alan Barratt
    Susan Dalton & Alan Barratt

    The Barratt and Dalton scheme, was also promoted by Julian Hanson – one of the main promoters of the £27m Ark pension scam in 2010/11. Hanson’s vigorous promotion efforts resulted in £5.5m worth of Ark victims (100 in total). One of Hanson’s co-scammers was the notorious Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions who was the “architect” behind the Ark scheme – along with Andrew Isles of Isles and Storer Accountants. Hanson, Ward and Isles were never prosecuted and so went on to operate and promote millions of pounds’ worth of further pension scams – ruining many thousands more lives.

    Ryan Playford
    Ryan Playford

    Sue Dalton, after moving on from the Barratt and Dalton scheme, went to work at Continental Wealth Management in Spain – reporting to head scammer Darren Kirby and his partner Jody Smart (who was the sole director of the company). Dalton’s extensive experience in pension scamming made her a hit at CWM. Ironically, Hanson has not been jailed along with Barratt and Dalton.

    Jumping forward to the present day, another jail sentence has been handed down to drug dealer Ryan Playford. In February 2022, he was convicted and imprisoned for drug-related offences:

    Playford got 15 years for supplying cocaine and canabis. Clearly a wrong-un, and someone who has no respect for the law or for the wellbeing of people’s lives who would inevitably be ruined by drug abuse.

    Drugs

    But what does Playford’s drug conviction have to do with pension scams – you may ask? We have to go back a decade to discover the answer:

    In 2008, Playford and an associate – Natasha Beesley – registered a drug company in Cyprus: R. P. Med Plant. Presumably, the authorities were convinced that by “drugs”, this meant legitimate drugs for medicinal purposes.

    Stephen Ward
    Stephen Ward

    In 2012, however, the pension scammers pounced on this Cyprus company as being the ideal sponsoring employer for another one of Stephen Ward’s pension scams: Capita Oak. Ward and his pension-lawyer friend Alan Fowler, used R. P. Med Plant Limited (Cyprus) as the so-called employer for an occupational scheme – registered by HMRC and the Pensions Regulator.

    Ward and Fowler forged signatures on a trust deed for their new pension scam, and slightly changed the name of the employer to R. P. Medplant Limited (so that nobody could find it easily on the Cyprus Companies House register). It seems likely that Ward and Fowler must have known Ryan Playford somehow, in order to be able to get their hands on his drug company.

    Patrick McCreesh
    Patrick McCreesh

    Capita Oak then became the vehicle for the scamming of 300 victims into investing their entire pensions in Store First store pods. Ward took charge of all the victims’ pension transfers, while another group of scammers took care of the cold calling of thousands of potential victims and signing up of the actual 300 victims.

    Phillip Nunn
    Phillip Nunn

    This group of scammers included Nunn and McCreesh who masterminded the £80m Blackmore Bond and Blackmore Global Fund pension and investment scams.

    Capita Oak’s 300 members were not the only victims invested in Store First store pods. There were thousands more in the Henley Retirement Benefits Scheme and various SIPPS including Carey (now Options and owned by STM), as well as Berkeley Burke and Rowanmoor. There have so far been no convictions – other than Playford’s for drug dealing.

    Store First

    This interconnected web of lies and deceit will keep on spreading unless these criminals actually fear the consequences of their actions. Let’s keep the convictions coming and not just save them for drug lords.

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  • Boris on  Crime (I see no fraud!)

    Boris on Crime (I see no fraud!)

    At the end of January 2022, Boris Johnson claimed he had reduced crime by 14%. 

    Boris shocked a lot of people with this figure. But, apparently, he wasn’t talking about fraud.  He’d forgotten that even some of his own constituents had been defrauded into the Ark pension scam (and that he had promised to “sort it out” back when he was Mayor of London). 

    Sir David Norgrove, chairman of the UK Statistics Authority, came back correcting the PM’s claims. He revealed there has been a 14% INCREASE in crime – including a 47% RISE in fraud and computer misuse.

    Sir David Norgrove
    Sir David Norgrove

    Norgrove headed up the Pensions Regulator (which used to be known as OPRA) from 2005 to 2011. He had issued dire warnings to pension providers against handing over pensions to scammers – saying that just ticking boxes (without checking the receiving scheme was bona fide) would lead to a huge rise in pension fraud. He was, of course, ignored – especially by Standard Life, Aviva, Scottish Widows and Prudential. 

    Norgrove’s correction of Blonde Boris’ clumsy gaff is not surprising at all. This government’s attention and time spent into looking into fraud has been somewhere between minimal and non-existent. Combine that with putting an utter nitwit in charge of the FCA, and you have the perfect breeding ground for an explosion of fraud and scams. 

    It is disgraceful to know that this government’s focus on crime ignores fraud as though it were irrelevant. This huge aspect has been – and is still – affecting hundreds of thousands of people. I suppose our ill-informed P.M. thinks the person in the black balaclava seems a lot more dangerous than the one in the designer suit and tie. 

    But we know the damage these fraudsters can cause.  Such misinformation being spread is highly dangerous; leaving consumers with a false sense of security, and making them even more likely to be scammed.

    Terrence Wright & his wife
    Terence Wright & his wife

    Let’s take Terence Wright for example. Wright’s activities in the pension scam world flourished in 2014 and 2015. Although he most definitely didn’t look like a typical burglar, he caused the destruction of millions of pounds of pensions across the UK.

    Wright had an unregulated Spanish firm called Commercial Land & Property Brokers (CL&P) which introduced hundreds of people to the pension SIPP provider Carey Pensions. From here he invested the victims’ money into Store First and Australian farmland via Gas Verdant where the money will have dwindled away into nothing.

    One victim, Russell Adams, got his destroyed pension reinstated in the Appeal Court. But thousands more are still left stranded with illiquid and sometimes worthless pension assets. 

    There are many more examples: Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund (in an STM QROPS and invested in Dolphin Trust); Blackmore Bond, Blackmore Global (in STM, Optimus, EFPG, Quartermaine and GFS QROPS); Forthplus SIPP which has just gone bust and is full of toxic investments. The list is endless. 

    This type of fraud is committed against British victims routinely.  The crime goes on (and on!) in the UK and offshore. By destroying pension funds with toxic investments, the fraudsters earn millions in hidden commissions. Which is supposed to be illegal. Perhaps Boris the Johnson will wake up to this fact one of these days.  Or perhaps this is as unlikely as him using a hairbrush. 

    Bojo with ridiculous hair
  • 2021/22 Roundup for Pension Life

    2021/22 Roundup for Pension Life

    2021 was a tough year for everybody in the world. But for Pension Life it was especially frustrating because courts and law firms were severely held up as they got to grips with the challenges of Covid, travel restrictions and working remotely.

    Attending hearings and meetings by video conference was a hit-or-miss affair. The success of the communication depended on the reliability of the wifi, the quality of the microphone and camera, the ability of the participants to manage (often complex) IT issues.

    Zoom court meeting where an attendee couldn't turn off a cat filter

    Holding virtual meetings with lawyers working from home often became challenging when interrupted by small children or pets (or partners in the background nipping to the bathroom wearing only a towel).

    The term “beware of the dog” took on a whole new meaning – as well as extending to the cat and budgie. Conversations became disrupted by all sorts of background sounds, and it was frequently possible to miss important bits of a conversation because of noise pollution. This was made even more challenging when trying to work in Spanish and wearing a mask and glasses.

    But still the essential task of working towards pursuing those who carried out or facilitated the scams and preparing claims for victims of pension scams continued. Albeit more slowly and haltingly than normal.

    So, here is a brief round-up of the main developments for Pension Life from 2021 and the plans for 2022.

    Ark – Tax Tribunal trial for pension scam victims

    Judge Peter Kempster
    Judge Peter Kempster

    After a frustrating ten-year wait, the pre-trial conference took place with Judge Kempster and all the parties involved in the Ark Tax Tribunal trial. With desperate attempts by HMRC to put the trial off until the end of 2023, the trial date was finally – thankfully – set for December 2022.

    There are more than half a dozen different categories of appellant; member who did receive a loan; member who didn’t receive a loan; member who did make a loan; member who didn’t make a loan; member who paid their loan back; member who paid the tax on the loan…….

    Most of the appellants have dropped out of the trial for one reason or another. I think the reality of actually appearing in court and being subjected to HMRC’s barrister’s inevitably hostile cross examination may have finally sunk in for some people. We are now down to just two appellants – one represented by me and one by Rebecca Sheldon from Old Square Tax Chambers. Essentially, this will be a contest about who is going to have to pay the tax: those with a loan or those without a loan.

    The next eleven months will see an increasingly urgent series of communications between the court, the appellants and their representatives. In the background, there are now two separate All Party Parliamentary Groups trying to lobby parliament for an amnesty for victims of pension and investment fraud who are facing tax penalties.

    Also, the FCA has asked pension scam victims to submit evidence following an investigation into the activities of Premier Pension Solutions, AES Financial Services and International Pension Transfer Specialists (all involving Stephen Ward and Sam Instone).

    Capita Oak – Tax liabilities and recovery of Store First assets

    Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions with his mythical employer
    Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions with his mythical employer

    Capita Oak was a bogus “occupational” pension scheme set up with a mythical employer in Cyprus by Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions and his pensions lawyer Alan Fowler. The scheme remains in the hands of Dalriada Trustees (appointed by the Pensions Regulator).

    With £10 million of the 300 members’ funds invested solely in Store First, and “loans” paid out by a Gibraltar company called Thurlestone, the victims remain trapped and unable to withdraw their tax-free 25% lump sums, or access a retirement income.

    Dalriada had rejected an offer to sell the store pods back to Store First several years ago. There may be another offer this year – although it is unlikely to be as high as the one Dalriada previously turned down. Sadly, whatever offer is made and accepted, a large chunk of this money would be used up in paying trustees’ and other fees (such as legal costs).

    There had been a large crew of scammers behind the Capita Oak scheme – as well as the parallel Henley and Westminster schemes. Two significant figures among those who operated and distributed these scams were Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh.

    Despite the Insolvency Service carrying out a comprehensive investigation into these cases, Nunn and McCreesh were not sanctioned by either the Insolvency Service or the FCA for carrying out regulated activities illegally. Nunn & McCreesh went on, in 2014, to set up the Blackmore Group and launched the Blackmore mini bond which was promoted by Surge Group (which also promoted the London Capital & Finance mini bond which is now being wound up by Duff & Phelps).

    Nunn and McCreesh also issued the Blackmore Global investment fund which is now reported to be worthless. The destruction of the original value of the fund is believed to be due to investing in over-priced, speculative property. Any remaining value was extinguished by paying out hefty commissions to the introducers and “advisers” who promoted the fund.

    Adams v Carey

    In 2021, the Appeal Court ordered the SIPP provider Carey (now Options and owned by STM) to reinstate appellant Russell Adams’ pension. Adams had been “advised” by unlicensed scammer Terence Wright of Country Land and Property in Spain. The advice had been to transfer his pension into a Carey SIPPS and invest all of it into Store First.

    The Appeal Court decided that Carey should have rejected the advice as there had been an FCA warning about Terence Wright. However, Christine Hallett – CEO of Carey – deliberately ignored this warning and accepted Wright’s instructions to invest not just Mr. Adams’ pension in Store First, but also hundreds of others.

    At one point, Hallett finally realised that she had been wrongly accepting pension transfers from Terence Wright, refused to accept more transfers, but continued to act on Terence Wright’s investment instructions and invested £millions more in Store First.

    Lord Justice Newey, Lady Justice Rose and Lady Justice Andrews inside a Store First Store Pod

    The Appeal Court determination has set a powerful precedent for hundreds more victims to take similar action to have their original pensions reinstated. Ironically, the Store First store pods are now doing well and more storage facilities are going to be built. However, the fact remains that store pods are not suitable assets for a pension, as they are illiquid and – as Justice Andrews ruled – they are “hard to value”.

    Acquisition of Quilter by Utmost

    Monsterous wedding of Utmost & Quilter

    In 2020, RL360 acquired Friends Provident International. And late in 2021, Utmost (formerly Generali) acquired Quilter (formerly Old Mutual International). So, as hundreds of millions of pounds have changed hands across these two buyouts, deceased victims of fraud facilitated by these four death offices will inevitably turn in their graves.

    Former CEO of Quilter, Peter Kenny, has moved on to even greener pastures as he “pursues different opportunities”. Kenny, who – in 2018 – promised to pay compensation to some of the victims (two of whom have since died), will have done very nicely out of the Utmost acquisition.

    As a former regulator, Kenny should certainly have known better than to do business with the hordes of unlicensed scammers. Who knows – perhaps he will use his ill-gotten gains to set up a charity for death office victims in 2022….

    GFS – Hong Kong QROPS gone bad

    In 2022, the pension-scam focus will drift as far offshore as Hong Kong. Bogus occupational schemes had originally been the speciality of Stephen Ward (Ark, Capita Oak, Westminster, Henley, London Quantum etc). But, in 2014, a group of scammers set their sights on a bogus superannuation scheme in Hong Kong.

    In the UK, anyone with any kind of earnings can join an occupational pension scheme. A person does not need to be employed by the sponsoring employer – as determined by Justice Morgan in the Hughes v Royal London case. This does, of course, sound completely barmy and opens the doors wide for all sorts of scams and scammers.

    However, in Hong Kong, a person can only – by law – join an occupational (superannuation) pension scheme if they are genuinely employed by the sponsoring (principal) employer.

    In 2014, a group of scammers got together. This included John Ferguson, David Vilka and Charlie Goldsmith of the Square Mile group, and Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh of Blackmore Group.

    David Vilka (right) & John Ferguson (left) of Square Mile making toxic investments
    David Vilka (right) & John Ferguson (left) of Square Mile

    Hundreds of mainly UK-based pension holders were conned into transferring their pensions into the GFS QROPS in Hong Kong. The money was then invested in toxic UCIS funds and unregulated mini bonds.  Of course, none of these British victims was employed by the employer.

    The investments included Blackmore Global, Christianson Property Capital, Swan, GRRE and other investment scams. In total at least £27 million was invested – some of it in insurance bonds such as Quilter, Utmost, Hansard and Friends Provident. An attempt was made to transfer some of the funds into Gravitas bonds (a death office in Mauritius), but this was thwarted in 2015 when a new trustee took over.

    In 2022, the Hong Kong version of the Pensions Regulator (the MPFA) will be deregistering the GFS scheme and a liquidator will be appointed. The liquidator will need a robust shovel to dig through all the toxic rubbish assets and recover several million pounds’ worth of stolen cash.

    The good news for some of the members, however, is that Square Mile is now in liquidation. This means that there is a valid claim on the Financial Services Compensation Scheme of up to £85,000 per victim.

    FSCS claims will be made for qualifying GFS members early in 2022 and hopefully this will result in at least some victims getting part or all of their pensions back.

    CWM Criminal Trial – awaiting court’s decision

    The trial against the members of Dénia-based Continental Wealth Management finally concluded in December 2021. The criminal proceedings had been held up for a year due to COVID. But finally, the last of the defendants testified before the judge and procurador. These included Darren Kirby and his girlfriend Jody Smart (formerly Bell, Kirby and now Pearson). While Jody did appear and testify in court, her former boyfriend Darren Kirby remains on the run.

    “Advisers” Dean Stogsdill, Neil Hathaway and Anthony Downs also appeared – along with Darren Kirby’s original partner and co-founder Paul Clarke. Clarke had left CWM early on to run AES Spain for Sam Instone – and continued to operate Darren Kirby’s business model by scamming victims into illegally-sold death bonds and structured notes. Clarke now runs a new firm called Roebuck Wealth under the German license of Trafalgar International.

    Quilter TOB

    In December, the last of the victims appeared in the Dénia court to testify. The judge has now heard 17 victims’ testimonies, and seen the documentary evidence of the investment scams operated by the various members of the CWM team – headed up by company director Jody Smart/Bell/Kirby/Pearson. One victim passed away in early 2021, so the re-starting of the criminal proceedings sadly came too late for him.

    Also in 2021, Jody denounced me for sharing a photograph of her dressed as a prostitute. I did indeed share the photo – as did hundreds of other CWM victims as it was all over social media. Everyone who saw this revolting picture felt and expressed the same disgust. It became ever more astonishing that Quilter, Utmost and SEB had been accepting investment instructions from this woman’s firm.

    The judge dismissed the accusation against me.  The photo is now irreversibly in the public domain. (It was so graphic that it can unfortunately never be “unseen” – and would put even a rhinoceros off its lunch).

    This will, hopefully, encourage death offices such as Quilter, Utmost, RL360 and Friends Provident, to be a bit more discerning in 2022 about the parties to whom they give terms of business and from whom they accept investment dealing instructions.

    Malta Arbiter Appeals – Civil Court upholds most of the Arbiter’s determinations

    Since 2017, around 70 victims of pension scams complained to the Malta Arbiter. The complaints were that QROPS trustees had accepted transfers and investment instructions from unlicensed and unqualified advisers. Many of the complainants reported that their pension funds were placed into insurance bonds and then invested in high-risk investments which were only suitable for professional investors.

    These investments – many of them toxic structured notes from providers such as Commerzbank, Leonteq, Royal Bank of Canada and Nomura – were placed on the insurance bond providers’ platforms. From here, the scammers who had terms of business with these providers could pick and choose the highest-risk investments which paid them the most commissions. These providers included Quilter (formerly Old Mutual – recently taken over by Utmost/Generali), Utmost and SEB.

    Millions of pounds’ worth of pensions were destroyed in the past decade. The Arbiter upheld most of the complaints against the QROPS trustees, but only awarded the complainants 70% of their net investment losses. This was on the basis that the defendants were only partly responsible, and that the advisers as well as the insurance bond providers were also culpable – and contributed to the losses.

    The defendants appealed against the Arbiter’s decisions. In late 2021, the first civil court decisions were issued – dismissing the defendants’ appeals. The rest of the appeal decisions are expected during 2022 and are expected to uphold the Arbiter’s decisions.

    Civil Cases against life offices in Spain

    A determination obtained from the Spanish insurance regulator confirms that virtually all insurance bonds are sold illegally by the scammers who peddle them across the Iberian peninsula and the Balearics.  This is because there are very specific regulations which must be observed when advising on any insurance products – and the scammers operating in Spain routinely ignore these.

    Spanish legal experts advise that insurance bond providers have indeed facilitated fraud, abusive practices and contravention of EU and Spanish laws and regulations.  There are therefore strong cases against the insurers which will be pursued during 2022 – with the first claims due to be issued during the first quarter of the year.

    Spanish Justice

    Obviously, the strength of the civil cases against the insurance companies will be reinforced once the criminal court issues their determination in the CWM case. 

    The civil claims will be seeking rescission – i.e. the reversing of the single-premium payments and subsequent unlawful investments in unsuitable, high-risk investments. 

    Civil Cases against life offices not in Spain

    While Spanish law is fairly unique, and does not resemble the laws of England, the Isle of Man, Ireland or Guernsey (where the majority of death offices are based), there are thousands of pension scam victims who are not based in Spain. 

    Preparations are now being made to bring civil cases against all insurance companies such as Quilter, Utmost, Friends Provident and RL360 who have facilitated fraud and mis-selling (resulting in serious loss for the victims).

    There are already several groups trying to get civil litigation against these insurers off the ground.  One is being brought by Signature Litigation against Quilter and Friends Provident – mainly for the investment losses caused by the failure of UCIS funds such as LM, Axiom and Premier New Earth.

    The other cases are being brought by Forsters LLP.  This case suffered a setback when their funder – Affiniti – went bust in November 2021 and is now being wound up by Quantuma:

    Forsters’ clients have also been told they can make claims against the QROPS providers in Malta for the losses not covered by the Malta Arbiter’s awards.

    Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund – Cayman Islands

    The victims of the STM Fidecs/Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund pension and investment scam are now mostly out of time to bring civil claims in Gibraltar.  The scammers behind the investment of the funds transferred into the STM Fidecs QROPS are now under criminal investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.  Once convicted, this should help with the criminal proceedings being launched in Gibraltar – although this does not stop the criminal proceedings from going ahead anyway.  As they are criminal, as opposed to civil, the time limits do not apply.

    Much of the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund was invested in the Dolphin Trust investment/loan scam – later re-named as the German Property Group.  This fund was paying out huge commissions of around 19% to the scammers who introduced thousands of victims to the “loan” scheme.  There is now mounting evidence that Dolphin was nothing more than a Ponzi scheme and that many of the purported property purchases were fictional. 

    In summary, progress this last year has indeed been slow due to the pandemic. However the legal teams and professional advisors have never slowed down in their efforts to bring redress and justice to the victims.

  • Pension Scam Investments

    Pension Scam Investments

    The world of pension and investment scams is dominated and driven by commissions on investments (usually unregulated). The scammers’ strategy is always identical: get the pensions away from the safety of a reputable pension provider and into the hands of a SIPP, a SSAS or a QROPS. One purported benefit of these types of schemes is that the member has control over where the funds are invested. This means that the scammers have control over where the funds are invested. These types of schemes are open to abuse by unscrupulous commission hunters whose only mission is to fill their own pockets – at the expense of the victim. Once transferred, the victims’ retirement funds are controlled by the scammers and invested in unsuitable, unregulated investments which pay fat introduction commissions.

    It could be argued, however, that not all the investments are necessarily bad. There are some basic rules for pension investments – so let’s take a look at the different types and how they could (or should) fit into a pension portfolio.
    Store pod full of toxic funds
    • Funds. Funds come in all shapes, sizes, flavours and types. As long as the funds are regulated, have a good track record, are appropriate to the risk profile of the individual investor and are competently managed by qualified investment professionals, they can be appropriate for a pension. However, pension scheme members must not be locked into any funds, and the charges must be transparent and affordable. There must not be any hidden commissions, and any one fund should form part of a diverse portfolio.
    • Bonds. Bonds are term loans with supposed “guaranteed” returns or interest. They are not regulated investment products, so there is no guarantee or protection in the event that they fail (as they often do). Typically, they are sold to victims as being “asset backed” and with unrealistically high returns or interest. They also typically pay high commissions to the scammers who promote them. These should be avoided at all costs as they are entirely unsuitable, risky and illiquid for retail investors – and so many of them are out and out scams.
    • Structured Notes. These are “derivatives” and are very complex instruments which are only suitable for sophisticated or professional investors. They also pay hefty commissions to the scammers who use them indiscriminately to “churn” their victims’ funds. Churning means investing the same sum of money multiple times in different structured notes to generate the maximum amount of (hidden) commissions. An experienced and sophisticated investor might want to consider having a small part of a pension portfolio invested in structured notes – as long as the commission taken by the “adviser” is low enough (or preferably non-existent).
    • Property. Residential property cannot form part of a pension’s underlying assets. However, commercial or agricultural land or property is acceptable. The main problem with property, however, is that it is illiquid – so it should only be used with extreme caution as part of a diverse portfolio of well-spread assets. Property also typically attracts high commissions and can frequently be used and abused by scammers. Store pods and car parking spaces fall into this category, along with holiday accommodation, forestry and industrial units.

    The key to building a sensible and appropriate portfolio of assets for a pension is to ensure that only a licensed and qualified adviser is used to recommend the investments. Such professionals should only be charging for advice – and should not be earning commission on the investment products which are sold. If an adviser is receiving commission from the investment provider, then he cannot be independent – and should not be giving advice at all.

    store pod full of toxic mini-bonds

    The key to making sure that the whole pension investment package is in the interests of the investor – rather than purely in the interests of someone posing (often fraudulently) as an adviser – is to look at each stage in the process.

    What I mean by the “package” is this:

    A. The transfer out of the existing pension scheme should be in the interests of the investor

    B. The transfer in to the new pension scheme should be in the interests of the investor

    C. The investment of the pension fund should be in the interests of the investor – and not just the adviser (or introducer)

    D. There must be no offers of “loans” or “cashback”

    The timeline of the past eleven years is littered with sordid and tragic examples of the whole “package” being nothing but a scam. But often this is true even when one of the component parts is legitimate or even harmless. It is the combination of all the elements which can, together, produce a fatal result: loss (to the investor).

    In the UK, every pension scheme member has a statutory right to a transfer from one HMRC-registered scheme to another HMRC-registered scheme. However, this can often be a terrible move if it results in the investment of the money falling under the control of a commission-hungry scammer who has no regard for the interests of the victim.

    store pod full of structured notes
    The most risky part of any pension transfer “package” is always the investment. Here are some examples:

    Capita Oak

    Bogus occupational scheme set up by a squad of known, serial scammers with a mythical sponsoring employer (in Cyprus). Promoted and distributed by boiler-room cold callers and “introducers”. 300 victims’ pensions transferred into the Capita Oak scheme, and all £10 million of their funds invested in Store First. The scammers behind the scheme earned up to 46% in commission. The scheme was placed in the hands of Dalriada by the Pension Regulator. Dalriada reported that the investments were worthless and Store First was placed into liquidation in 2019.

    Carey Pensions

    Hundreds of victims’ pensions were transferred to the Carey SIPP scheme purely so their funds could be invested in Store First. With the same result as in the Capita Oak scam, victims found that the “guaranteed” returns of 16% did not materialise. This was because the 16% had been paid “accidentally” to the scammers. One such victim – Russell Adams – took his case to the High Court and lost. But the judgement was overturned in the Court of Appeal and Carey must now reinstate his original pension. Other SIPP providers involved were Berkeley Burke, Montpelier (Curtis Banks) and Lifetime (Hartley).

    London Quantum

    Another bogus occupational scheme – run by the notorious Stephen Ward. 100 victims were scammed out of their pensions for the sole purpose of investing their funds in high-commission, unregulated funds and bonds. Investments included Quantum PYX – a forex trading fund; Dolphin Trust – now in liquidation; Park First Glasgow; Colonial Capital Loan Notes; The Resort Group holiday flats in Cape Verde and The Reforestation Group in Brazil. The scheme was placed in the hands of Dalriada by the Pension Regulator. Dalriada reports that most of the investments are worthless.

    GFS Hong Kong QROPS

    A group of known unlicensed scammers – including Square Mile in the Czech Republic – advised hundreds of UK residents to transfer their pensions to this Hong Kong scheme. All the victims had their pensions invested in worthless, high-commission, unregulated funds and bonds such as Blackmore Global, Swan, GRRE, Granite and Christianson Property Capital. The scheme is now being re-registered by the Hong Kong regulator – and the funds are deemed to be worthless.

    Continental Wealth Management

    Unlicensed CWM, based on the Costa Blanca in Spain, defrauded 1,000 British expats out of £100 million worth of pensions and life savings. Victims had their funds invested in high-risk (and high-commission) structured notes which were only suitable for professional investors. The clients’ signatures were forged on the investment dealing instructions. Most of the structured notes suffered catastrophic losses, and what little remained of the victims’ funds were further eroded by the high fees on the illegally-sold insurance bonds provided by Quilter, Utmost and SEB. The CWM crew – along with Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions (who signed off all the pension transfers) – are now facing criminal charges of fraud and forgery in Spain.

    A pension scheme is a bit like a store pod. It is a container – no different to a cardboard box or shopping trolley. By itself, the scheme (or the pod) is harmless. The harmful ingredient is the greedy, unlicensed introducer or “adviser”. Fill a shopping trolley with unhealthy foods, alcohol and cigarettes and you have a recipe for an untimely death. Fill a store pod with flammable chemicals, and you risk an explosion. Fill a pension scheme with high-risk, high-commission, toxic investments, and you have the perfect recipe for poverty in retirement.

  • Goodbye Bond Review

    Goodbye Bond Review

    Brev at Bond Review has been doing the FCA’s job for it for more than four years. He (or she) has warned the public on the excellent Bond Review blog about the dangers of investment scams in the form of “bonds”. While the FCA have sat around doing little of any use – except keeping the cleaners busy in the men’s toilets – Brev has performed the function of an essential lighthouse for potential victims.

    Sadly, Brev has announced his (or her) retirement. Having saved potentially thousands of victims from financial ruin, we all wish this magnificent keyboard warrior well. Thank you from all of us who care about exposing investment scams in the face of the FCA’s sickening failure to prevent them.

    Goodbye – from Brev at Bond Review

    Regular readers will probably have noticed that the output of Bond Review has continued to drop recently.

    In the first year of Bond Review I reviewed over 60 investment schemes that were being promoted to the public; in the past 12 months I’ve reviewed a third of that number.

    Bond Review comments on FCA ignorance of minibond scams
    FCA has repeatedly ignored minibond warnings & complaints for years

    Although there are still far too many high risk investment schemes being promoted with impunity to the general public by search engines and social media, there are signs that the tide has lessened somewhat. When Bond Review was founded, there was a constant stream of people signing up for consumer finance forums asking whether London Capital and Finance was a safe investment. That is no longer the case, at least not to nearly the same extent.

    In 2017 minibonds were mostly ignored by the press other than very occasional articles warning investors of the risks (and sometimes promoting them). They were also, as covered here extensively, completely ignored by the FCA. That is certainly no longer the case, with the collapse of London Capital and Finance (along with lesser schemes) hitting the mainstream press and the subject of Parliamentary enquiries.

    But the main reason I am bringing the blog to a close is that I simply don’t have the time any more. Maintaining the trickle of bi-weekly articles (with regular lapses) has often meant staying up past midnight (and drinking too much wine) simply because it was the only hour in the day available. I have a full-time job, a family, a sports club to get back up off the ground after being shut down during the pandemic, and the blog. Something has to give.

    Bond Review has saved investors millions
    Bond Review has saved investors millions

    I remain proud of what Bond Review has achieved. I know for a fact that as a result of my reviews, millions of pounds whose owners could not afford to lose them have been saved from high-risk investment schemes which subsequently collapsed. I know this because the people that ran them told me so in the course of their legal threats.

    All I have done for three and a half years is to post the facts, and nothing but the facts, about the risks of unregulated investments, so that investors can make their own minds up. At times this meant my coverage was open to charges of being “anodyne” or “mealy-mouthed”, but it was sticking to what was verifiable and in the public domain that allowed me to stand behind my coverage for this long.

    I considered going public with my identity but have nothing to gain from doing so. At least three different people have been identified as Brev by various idiots posting spam online. None of them are me.
    Bond Review remains anonymous
    Brev remains anonymous

    I originally called this article “Indefinite hiatus” but then I remembered how annoying it was when I was reading webcomics twenty years ago and authors would forever be going on “hiatuses” (hiati?) that left you forever wondering whether they’d come back. So no hiatus, just an unambiguous goodbye, and an end to three and a half years that has often been stressful, draining, fascinating, heartbreaking and (emotionally) rewarding in equal measure.

    Thanks to all the readers who have read this far. In the early weeks of writing Bond Review I got excited whenever my pageview count went up by 1 (and even more excited when it wasn’t from me). For many weeks posting articles felt like shouting at the bins. The stats, comments and messages of support all helped keep me going for as long as I have.

    Oz, writer behind MLM
    Oz, writer of Behind MLM

    A special thanks to everyone who donated. If anyone feels they have been shortchanged by the sudden cancellation, get in touch via the Contact link above and I will happily refund any previous donations to their source. The handful of recurring donations to Bond Review have been cancelled at my end.

    A final credit goes to Oz, the writer behind the website BehindMLM.com, which was a huge inspiration for Bond Review. If there are any readers of both they will have noticed a few similarities of style which are partly homage and partly lack of imagination on my part. It showed that it was possible to shine a light on an under-covered part of the financial world and keep it going in the teeth of concerted and relentless opposition. How Oz has kept it going for a decade (with a much higher output than I ever had) is beyond me.

    Comments on all articles will be closed in a week on June 1st. I will continue to pay the hosting bill to keep Bond Review up for another year. It will then close for good on 25 May 2022.

    I can continue to be contacted via the contact link here.

    All of the investment-scam bonds that Bond Review has blogged about
    All of the investment-scam bonds that Bond Review has blogged about

    Have you thrown in the towel due to legal action?

    When I started Bond Review I knew I needed to be prepared to stand up for myself in court, or there was no point in writing articles on this subject in the first place. A total of 13 different investment schemes have made legal threats to me. None of them have gone to court. Until today I had (unless memory fails me) withdrawn one solitary article from publication: a report on Blackmore Bonds‘ brief sponsorship of the Kent Police rugby team.

    So any suggestion that I have been intimidated into shutting down the blog is a perfectly reasonable guess but incorrect.

    Nor have I been paid off. I have never (despite offers) accepted money to remove any article from Bond Review, and never will.

    A number of articles have been pulled from view today because keeping them up for another year is not worth the time and money it would require. This should not be misinterpreted as an admission that anything in them was false. I cannot comment further. There are special circumstances and anyone who thinks I might be persuaded to pull other articles for no reason (before the website closes) should save their breath.

    FCA shit on the floor

    Brev has been careful not to lay too much overt criticism at the door of the FCA. This may have been a conscious effort not to divert too much attention away from the fraudulent, risky bond investment itself. Or it may have been in order to focus attention on the necessity to educate consumers. Whatever the real purpose, Brev pulled no punches in the blog which did openly slam the FCA’s disgusting culture of laziness, slovenliness and negligence in this powerful blog: “FCA officials shit on the floor, as well as the bed“.

    Bye bye Brev x 😘

  • Blackmore Global pension scam victim who cares

    The following blog was written by Stephen Sefton: a Blackmore Global Victim who cares about pension scams.

    Stephen Sefton scammed by David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services.

    Stephen was scammed by David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services around six or seven years ago.  Vilka, who had neither qualifications nor a license to provide pension or investment advice, arranged the transfer of Mr. Sefton’s substantial final salary pension.


    Stephen’s pension was transferred to the Optimus QROPS in Malta
    . It was placed in an Investors Trust offshore bond in the Cayman Islands. Then it was invested in high-risk, high-commission, unregulated funds. One of these was Blackmore Global.


    A determined fight on the part of the tenacious Mr. Sefton did eventually result in the recovery of a large part of his funds.  But his case was a rare exception.  He was, indeed, very fortunate that he didn’t lose the whole lot.  Most victims suffer total loss in such circumstances.

    It is now looking very likely that Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh’s Blackmore Global Fund is going to be as worthless as their other investment scam: Blackmore Bond (now in administration).

    Pension Scam victim Stephen Sefton writes:

    Finally, after two months of radio silence, Angie Brooks once again pens an article. It’s about time!

    It’s an interesting title: Who cares about Careys and the world of pension scams?”

    I care. I don’t know why I should but I do. Maybe because I am seeing a media frenzy over the recent collapse of mini bonds in the UK. Especially LC&F and Blackmore Bonds plc to name just two. Meanwhile, victims of pension scams from the last decade are being forgotten and swept under the carpet. Much to the delight of many of those that oiled the wheels of the scams and helped them to happen – especially the QROPS and SIPPS!

    Interconnected web of pension scammers

    There are many (especially the scammers) that really don’t like me. This is why they tried to offer me a paltry £6000 to silence me. Seriously?

    There are many that don’t like my rhetoric and I regularly get blocked on Twitter, or thrown off Facebook. Here, I get to tell it like it is, however unpalatable the truth may be.

    What I have learned over the years is that there’s an intricate web, woven around these scams. This interconnects a number of players whose names just keep on cropping up.

    Malta was clearly the jurisdiction of choice for many pension scams. It seems to have hundreds, if not thousands, of victims. Many of these are not yet even aware that they face financial ruin in their retirement.

    In my opinion, Malta has much to answer for and really should clean up its act. Journalists rarely focus their gaze on the real facilitators of pension scams: the Mickey Mouse jurisdictions that turn a blind eye and allow them on their patch.

    Why are they not aware? QROPS Scheme Administrators are sending out fictitious statements implying members’ pensions are still intact. One member of STM Pensions Malta was sent a statement in Sep 2020 showing his pension still intact just one month after STM wrote to members invested in Blackmore Global – Nunn & McCreesh’s offshore unregulated collective – that in fact they (STM) have no idea what the value is!

    As it happens, STM did manage to get Nunn & McCreesh to publish the underlying assets for Blackmore Global, in May 2020 (over 6 years since the fund was launched). Even with this list, there is little idea what the fund is worth because the underlying assets are themselves useless, opaque, private ventures in yet more Mickey Mouse jurisdictions. One offshore fund is already being pursued by Dalriada as part of other failed pension schemes from early in the last decade – but Dalriada are getting nowhere with it.

    I am not convinced that “The Adams v Carey case is likely to herald a flood of similar claims …”.

    Manita Khuller won her appeal against Guernsey-based trustee FNB International
    Courageous Manita Khuller in front of the Guernsey courthouse

    The Ombudsman case that went in favour of Mr. N against the Northumbria Police Authority (PO-12763) in July 2018, was also a landmark case against a negligent UK pension provider that had a tick box culture. The ceding provider transferred Mr. N’s pension without due regard for the Pensions Regulator’s requirements of 2013 for extra due diligence when handling transfers.

    That decision doesn’t appear to have “herald[ed] a [likewise] flood of similar claims” three years on.

    Also, the landmark appeal, Khuller v First International Trustees Ltd (Guernsey) (“FNBIT”) that was won by Manita Khuller, hasn’t seen any likewise “flood of similar” cases.

    Why not?

    The reason, in my opinion, is twofold:

    Firstly, the victims were targeted by scammers because they were “ignorant”. That’s not meant to be derogatory.

    They knew diddly squat about pensions, regulations, investments – nothing! They trusted the “adviser” – the con man persuading them to transfer their pension. For a con to be successful you need the essential skill of gaining people’s trust. Scammers have this skill in abundance. The ignorant fall for it every time.

    Angie Brooks' Blackmore Bond and Global Fund Facebook Group

    Victims not only knew nothing about pensions and investments, they didn’t even know how to spot they were being conned. They were the perfect mark for scammers. They didn’t know what they didn’t know. Like taking candy from a baby – although a baby knows it is being robbed and often screams quite loudly (so maybe not the best analogy).

    Secondly, even if victims have now discovered they have lost their pension, they have absolutely no idea what next to do about it. The ones I have come across are like fish out of water. Completely at a loss of where to go.

    On Angie’s facebook group, one person recently told of their father’s loss of pension to Nunn & McCreesh’s Blackmore Global. In an attempt to do “something” the person went to the FCA on behalf of their father only to be told that investing in unregulated funds on the advice of unregulated advisers bars them from the compensation scheme and Ombudsman service. The FCA suggested looking into the Malta compensation scheme – which is a joke! That was the extent of help from the FCA. As useful as a chocolate teapot.

    It hadn’t occurred to this person that either the ceding provider is guilty of maladministration for the transfer in the first place, AND/OR the receiving scheme in Malta is in “breach of trust” because it too is bound by legislation controlling its activities.

    So the best next step is to pursue one or other side of the transfer – or both.

    Manita Khuller went after the receiving trustee through the courts and eventually won. However, such legal action isn’t for the faint hearted. It cost her huge sums of money, which she took out loans to fund. Losing was not an option. On top of already losing her pension. It was a nightmare for her. I know – I was with her every step of the way since 2018 when we were introduced by a journalist. This was her only option because the Mickey Mouse jurisdiction, Guernsey, had no “Ombudsman” service. Moreover, the incestuous nature in Guernsey meant law firms declined to represent her. She had to go it alone for the first trial, adding a layer of stress no person should be subjected to. There are few victims with this determination or courage willing to take this course of action – so they don’t, even though she has paved the way.

    Mickey Mouse Incestuous Jurisdiction of Guernsey

    We in the UK, at least, have the Ombudsman and now – relatively recently – Malta also has one (the Office of the Arbiter for Financial Services (“OAFS”)).

    Guernsey is a backward, biased, Mickey Mouse, incestuous jurisdiction – which is why scammers love it.

    The Scheme administrators on both sides of the transfer will fight tooth and nail and argue the victim is wholly to blame for their losses. Many victims just have no idea how to go about presenting their case.

    There is no “free” professional service available to help victims navigate this minefield. Mr. N (referenced earlier) paid lawyers £25k to make his case. But the Ombudsman did not award costs – saying that it is not necessary to engage lawyers. However, it is not easy to fight a pension scheme that will employ a top notch law firm to present its defence. So by and large, the victims I have come across are at a serious disadvantage because they have no idea how to seek justice and have nowhere to go and don’t know how to present their case. That’s why they were targeted by scammers in the first place. They were (and still are) easy pickings.

    In the article above, Ms. Brooks quoted from the appeal. I will do same. A more appropriate section, §115(i),

    “… while consumers can to an extent be expected to bear responsibility for their own decisions, there is a need for regulation, among other things to safeguard consumers from their own folly.”

    Carey Olsen staff in shorts
    Members of Staff (in shorts!) from Carey Olsen

    These victims are indeed victims of their own folly, but they never realised what they were doing. On both sides of the equation (ceding providers and the receiving schemes) there were duties of care designed to protect these victims “from their own folly”. In all cases I have come across, neither side fulfilled those duties of care. On the UK side there was contempt for the Pensions Regulator’s requirements of 2013, despite growing industry concerns for pension scams. On the receiving side, the QROPS didn’t (and still don’t) care about their members – period. And neither did the authorities in these Mickey Mouse jurisdictions. It was the perfect match and thousands of vulnerable victims are paying the price.

    Carey Pensions was started in 2009 by the Carey Group. The Group is controlled in Guernsey by ten partners and ex-partners of the Law Firm Carey Olsen. This is an amusing coincidence in my opinion. Carey Olsen, perhaps the top law firm in Guernsey, represented FNBIT against Manita Khuller – and LOST at appeal by the way.

    STM acquired Carey Pensions in 2019.
    STM also had/has victims of the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund scam which collapsed in 2016
    STM announced its purchase of Harbour Pensions with some 1600 members. Some are invested in Blackmore Global.

    At least one was invested in The Resort Group according to this money marketing article.

    Justin Caffery of Harbour Pensions ironically teaching stress relief
    Justin Caffery floating in the sea while preaching stress relief

    Harbour Pensions was started by Justin Caffrey, in 2013 and says in the STM announcement, “Harbour was always a five year plan…”. Justin made his money and now runs meditation classes (seriously?). He should meditate on the misery, caused by Nunn & McCreesh, of hundreds – if not thousands – of vulnerable victims of Blackmore Global that he allowed into his pension scheme, in my opinion, willingly and knowing the consequences of such an unsuitable investment. He permitted 100% allocation of one member’s pension into a fund that has never published audited accounts. At the material time, knowing the fund was opaque and unregulated, Harbour (and other QROPS) were happily permitting transfers and 100% allocations.

    The fund’s offer document, which Harbour had, says the investment has a ten year lock-in. That condition, which the QROPS knew and willingly accepted, effectively locked Harbour (and subsequently STM) into an asset they knew nothing about – and still don’t – for ten years, with absolutely no knowledge or control of what Nunn & McCreesh were doing with the money.

    The Scheme administrators in these QROPS in Malta were, and still are, completely at the whim of Nunn & McCreesh – who could misappropriate the pensions as they wish and the administrators could do absolutely nothing about it. The QROPS effectively abdicated all powers they had to run the scheme and mitigate risks in the interest of members, to Nunn & McCreesh. They have been passive bystanders to the destruction of their members’ pensions ever since. This is, in my opinion, in breach of the Malta Trust and Trustees Act. They are also willingly and knowingly in breach of trust.

    All this really begs the question whether STM go looking for dodgy pension schemes or are they just plain stupid? What on earth is going on and why hasn’t the MFSA taken them to task? They seem to attract scams like flies to a pile of dung.

    Blackmore Global Victim who cares about pension scams – says victims are being forgotten

    Victims are being forgotten by the media and authorities. Victims had no idea what they were doing or how to seek restitution. They are guilty of nothing but ignorance and ALL the actors in these scams have gotten away with it. They have ALL dipped their hand in the pension pots and kept the spoils – and now moved on, leaving the pension pots empty.

    This is frustrating in the extreme because I see no evidence of any “flood of similar claims”. The victims are, for the most part, still ignorant and there is no one “helping” them. This site (Pension Life) once purported to “help” victims but I am not at all convinced it has done much and now has long periods of radio silence. The newbies in this scam space, the journalists claiming to be the heroes that “blew the whistle” or warned the FCA, are just chasing big headlines for their editor on today’s flavour of the month: mini bonds. Soon the mini bond victims will be forgotten just like the victims of Defined Benefit Pension transfers. The blood sucking journalists will move on to the next headline. I have no time for these insincere upstarts because they don’t stay in it for the long haul.

    Victims are on their own by and large and still ignorant. No one seems to care and there is no help from any quarter. They face a retirement with a significantly reduced standard of living and that’s the hard truth of the matter. There will be no “flood of similar cases”.

  • Slater and Gordon and Blackmore (poacher turned poacher)

    Slater and Gordon and Blackmore (poacher turned poacher)

    On July 18th 2017, Slater and Gordon Lawyers wrote me the below email. Lawyer Steve Kuncewicz clearly stated that Slater and Gordon acted for their client: Blackmore Global PCC Limited; Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh. The full transcript is below – complete with my comments in bold. This is a 25-page document, so I don’t expect most people (except the most tenacious and determined) to read all of it. So I have put the basic highlights below.

    It is clear that Slater and Gordon was a poacher back in July 2017 when the firm represented clients Blackmore, Nunn and McCreesh. And now in 2020, Slater and Gordon, is an even bigger poacher as it attempts to profit from the losses suffered by Blackmore Bond victims.

    As Bond Review reported yesterday that the FCA knew all about the doomed Blackmore Bond three years ago, it is clear that Blackmore’s own lawyers – Slater and Gordon – also knew what Nunn and McCreesh were up to at the same time, but did not report their clients to the authorities as they should have done (not that it would have done any good). But both the FCA and Slater and Gordon could have prevented the Blackmore Bond tragedy and saved hundreds of victims from losing their life savings.

    Meanwhile, Slater and Gordon is now advertising all over social media:

    Slater and Gordon Lawyers tried to stop Pension Life from warning the public about Blackmore Group in July 2017 and is now touting for business for claims in respect of the failed Blackmore Bond.

    We’re investigating how to protect bondholders interests following the administration of Blackmore Bonds Plc.

    Slater and Gordon is also denying that Blackmore, Nunn and McCreesh were ever their clients. Slater and Gordon is now trying to attract clients by promising:

    “We’re keen to assist investors and help them understand their position. We’re investigating if any steps can be taken to protect their interest in the funds within Blackmore’s mini-bond schemes, following the administration of Blackmore Bonds Plc. These schemes promised a high rate of return to investors but continually failed to pay-out. If you invested in mini-bonds or an ISA through Blackmore, we’re keen to speak with you. “

    Although the communication with Slater and Gordon is more about the Blackmore Global Fund scam than the mini-bond, it does cover a number of crucial issues including:

    1. Slater and Gordon confirmed that they acted for their clients: Blackmore, Nunn and McCreesh in both a ” business and personal capacity “
    2. Slater and Gordon was trying to shut me up so that their clients could keep scamming hundreds of victims out of their pensions and life savings
    3. Slater and Gordon was falsely portraying their client as: “a prestigious, multi-asset investment house with over £60 million in assets under management, offering institutional and high net-worth clients access to a wide variety of investment products in order to maximise their returns”. This was completely false as Blackmore only targeted retail investors with small pension pots or personal savings – with their entirely unsuitable, illiquid, high-risk investments
    4. Slater and Gordon claimed: “The Blackmore Group was founded on the core belief of putting the needs of its clients first, developing diverse portfolios backed by real assets containing a blend of capital growth and fixed income”. This is nonsense: Blackmore worked closely with known, serial scammers to promote their products and target naive, vulnerable victims. They locked pension savers into their fund scam for ten years without their knowledge and they spent the bondholders’ money on huge amounts of promotion fees (e.g. Surge Group) and commissions for the scammers who helped distribute their toxic wares.
    Blackmore's Phillip Nunn has made a fortune out of scamming since 2012.  And now Slater and Gordon want a slice of that too.

    But most serious of all is this next point:

    5. Your only intention can be to divert business from them and to cause serious financial harm as a result.

    I replied: “I have no interest in causing your clients financial harm – why would I? But I do think that vulnerable pension savers have a right to know the background of the people behind a fund which is being promoted to retail, UK-resident investors.

    A lot of the Blackmore Bond victims invested AFTER this letter. Slater and Gordon did NOTHING to warn the public about their client. All they did was to try to shut me up and prevent me from warning the public.

    And now they want to make money out of the Blackmore Bond victims? Seriously?

    Slater Gordon Lawyers 18 July 2017 URGENT — IF YOU DO NOT RESPOND TO THIS CORRESPONDENCE, COURT PROCEEDINGS MAY BE ISSUED AGAINST YOU WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE Ms Brooks t/a Pension-Life.com 24 Calle Cuatro Esquinas Lanjaron 18420, Granada SPAIN 58 Mosley Street Manchester M2 3HZ DX 14340 Manchester 1 Tel: 0161 383 3500
    Fax: 0161 383 3636 wwwslatergordon.co.uk Your Contact: Steve Kuncewicz Assistant: Rebecca Young Direct Tel: 01613833708 Email: Steve.Kuncewicz@slatergordon.co.uk Your Ref: Our Ref: RZY03/UM1389098

    BY E-MAIL AND RECORDED DELIVERY POST:
    anqiebrookspension-life.com

    Dear Madam

    Our Clients: Blackmore Global PCC Limited, Philip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh Proposed Claim for Defamation and Malicious Falsehood

    Shame Slater and Gordon didn't try to protect victims from being scammed by Blackmore back in 2017

    We act for the aforementioned clients in their business and personal capacity and have been instructed to contact you in relation to various untrue, defamatory and wholly unjustifiable allegations published on your website at httq://pension-life.com (the Website) relating to our clients, their products and services which are designed to (and in fact already have, as set out below) damage their respective reputations and financial interests.

    Our client, Blackmore Global PCC Limited, is part of the Blackmore Group which is a prestigious, multi-asset investment house with over £60 million in assets under management, offering institutional and high net-worth clients access to a wide variety of investment products in order to maximise their returns.

    If it is indeed true that Blackmore Group is a prestigious organisation, then I have no doubt the directors will be keen to ensure that the damage done to victims’ pensions is put right and that Blackmore’s purported “good name” is protected. However, when you Google Blackmore Group PCC nothing comes up about it being “prestigious” – but what does come up is a link to one of Offshore Alert’s warnings regarding Brian Weal – – and as you know at least one of the underlying assets was run by Weal.

    Further, there are cautionary warnings on the Money Saving Expert forum which mentions that investors were given a “pension review” by Aspinal Chase (run by your clients) and promised 10% returns p.a. There is absolutely nothing available on Google which describes Blackmore Global as “prestigious”.

    Further, the clients are not high net-worth, under the FCA definition. Are you aware of the FCA definition of “High net-worth”? Your clients, with 25 years’ experience, will know this. Just to remind you, a high net-worth client, according to the FCA has-

    • an annual income to the value of £100,000 or more. Annual income for these purposes does not include money withdrawn from pension savings (except where the withdrawals are used directly for income in retirement).
    • net assets to the value of £250,000 or more.

    The definition specifically excludes pension savings. Yet, your clients are involved in the marketing, processing and investing of retail pensions of those that are not high net-worth clients. I would be interested to see if ANY sophisticated or institutional investors are in the Blackmore Global Funds. Surely, such experienced investors would demand audited accounts.

    Slater and Gordon Lawyers' Steve Kuncewicz was representing Blackmore, Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh in July 2017 and trying to stop Pension Life from warning the public about them.

    “The Blackmore Group was founded on the core belief of putting the needs of its clients first, developing diverse portfolios backed by real assets containing a blend of capital growth and fixed income.” (Steve Kuncewicz of Slater and Gordon – 18.7.2017)

    If the assets are “real” – tell us what they are. Do you even know what they are? Have you seen an independent audit or are you relying solely on what your client is telling you?

    Blackmore Global PCC Limited offers a medium to long-term investment vehicle for its clients with a diversified investment portfolio under one structure which allocates investment between four distinct protected cells which diversify assets between property, sustainable energy, private equity and lifestyle. In order to take advantage of as wide a range of investments as possible, it invests in a number of vehicles including funds, companies, joint venture projects and equities.

    I know all about the cells as they are described in the factsheet and brochure. However, based on the fact that we know some of the information contained therein is untrue, I am not sure the cell information can necessarily be relied on. What we really need to know is exactly what the assets are. Steve, I mean no disrespect but your letter contains 21,290 words – and not one word about what the assets really are. You seem to be trying to claim your clients have done nothing wrong – but you are providing no evidence.

    Further, among those many words, you refer to loss suffered by your clients multiple times, but you never once refer to the considerable loss and distress suffered by the Blackmore Global investors (or indeed the Capita Oak and Henley ones).

    Patrick McCreesh and Philip Nunn founded the Blackmore Group (of which Blackmore Global PCC forms part) in 2013,

    That would be just after the Capita Oak and Henley scams, which Nunn and McCreesh were promoting, collapsed.

    and jointly have more than 25 years’ experience in the financial services sector, growing their business to the extent of it having over £17m of assets under management across multiple asset classes.

    With respect, if they have jointly more than 25 years’ experience in the financial services sector, they should know that their fund is not suitable for pension schemes – just as they should have known that empty boxes (store pods) were not suitable investments for the Capita Oak and Henley victims. And I sincerely hope that (apart from the victims of which I am aware) none of the remaining £17m represents pension investments.

    By contrast, the Website describes your activities as follows:

    “Depending on the type of pension or investment scam a victim has been involved in, there are various things we can do to help. We charge annual membership fees so that members know exactly what they will have to pay and there will be no legal or accountancy fees on top.

    • Deal with trustees, advisers and fund managers
    • Complain to regulators and ombudsmen
    • Appeal tax liabilities with HMRC and the Tax Tribunals
    • Analyse and quantify investments, losses and fees/commissions
    • Instruct solicitors to make a claim against negligent parties to obtain redress for losses and liabilities (paid for by litigation funding)”

    Am not sure what the point is that you are trying to make here. You have used the phrase “by contrast” which to me suggests you are trying to ascertain that, unlike your clients, I have never been involved in running or promoting a pension or investment scam. Which, of course, I haven’t. Indeed, I vigorously oppose such crimes and am working with the regulators, police and ombudsmen to help stamp out such activities and bring those responsible to justice.

    Notably, you refer to yourself as “one of the leading experts on pension liberation scams”.

    Indeed, I am widely acknowledged as such. Further, in your above statements, you have now correctly identified the following problems associated with Blackmore Global:

    • Problem no. 1: the victims were neither “institutional” nor “high net-worth”. They should never have had their pensions invested in the Blackmore Global fund at all.
    • Problem no.2: you have said Blackmore develops “diverse portfolios backed by real assets”. So what are these “real” assets? Do you even know? Has Blackmore ever told you or shown you proof? Because they won’t tell the victims what the assets are. Nor will they tell the pension trustees.
    • Problem no. 3: Blackmore Global offers a “medium to long-term investment vehicle”. So, not suitable for pensions then. Members of a pension scheme have a statutory right to a transfer as well as to be able to reach the age of 55, or retire or die, so there must be liquidity. Also, at least one victim was close to retirement age when he entered the scheme so he should never have been put into long-term investments.
    • Problem no. 4: Blackmore Global has £17m worth of assets – if these are all members of pension schemes such as the victims who are members of the Pension Life Group Action, then there is a very serious problem indeed for your clients.

    You refer to my activities and expertise on pension liberation scams – if you need any clarification or corroboration of this I am sure your colleague Craig will be happy to fill you in.

    The Website contains a number of posts which refer, either directly or indirectly, to our clients, specifically:

    • “Action Fraud are nobody and have no authority”: John Ferguson, Square Mile Financial Services: November 30, 2016;
    • Government Consultation on Pension and Investment Scams (The Square Mile): December 5, 2016;
    • “Scammers Are Criminals” : April 11, 2017;
    • “Gambling With Your Pension”: May 14, 2017;
    • “Serious Fraud Office Requests Pension And Investment Scam Reports” : May 24, 2017; and
    • “Blackmore Global Fund — Asset Or Black Hole?”: July 7, 2017

    Copies of these posts are attached to this letter marked Annex 1.

    The content of these various posts (and the content of various other social media posts and other direct communications with third-party professional intermediaries who refer work and clients to our clients, which will be adduced in evidence in due course), led our clients to write to you on January 17 this year to put you on notice of their objection to your various claims.

    Forgive me, but I am not sure what point you are making. Ferguson did indeed write to a victim and state that “Action Fraud are nobody and have no authority”. He even copied in his lawyer to this. There was indeed a government consultation on pension and investment scams. Scammers are indeed criminals (as confirmed by the Pensions Regulator). Gambling with your pension is not advisable. The Serious Fraud Office has indeed requested reports on a number of pension scams – some of which your clients were involved with. Finally, we don’t know whether Blackmore Global is an asset or a black hole because there is no independent audit. Until and unless the long-awaited audit is forthcoming, the jury will have to remain out on that.

    As our clients summarised, borne out by the contents of the Website, you purport to act in a professional capacity for individuals who are beneficiaries of trusts or pension schemes, who have been advised by independent financial advisers (including, without limitation, Square Mile, who are also referred to at various points in the posts referred to above) to transfer some or all of their existing pension funds to the Optimus Pension Scheme using an Investor Trust Wrapper.

    As I am sure you will realise, Slater and Gordon already did comprehensive due diligence on me and the Group Actions several years ago, so there is no need to “purport” – just ask Craig McAdam.

    As our clients stated, they understand that some of these individuals may have invested certain of their pension fund assets into underlying investments which may include investments managed by our client. As you will be well aware our client as an investment house has never, nor would they, ever deal directly with any of your “clients” as beneficiaries.

    I have never said Blackmore Global (of which Messrs Nunn and McCreesh are directors) did deal direct with the investors. However, they do run a cold calling/lead generation business called Aspinal Chase which dealt direct with the clients. See below the details of the Aspinal Chase website:

    Registrant Organization: Nunn McCreesh 
    Registrant Street: Albion Wharf 
    Registrant City: Manchester 
    Registrant State/Province: Manchester 
    Registrant Postal Code: M1 5LN 
    Registrant Country: GB 
    Registrant Phone: +44.1612346506 
    Registrant Phone Ext: 
    Registrant Fax Ext: 
    Registrant Email: patrick@nunnmccreesh.com 
    Registry Admin ID: 
    Admin Name: Phillip Nunn 
    Admin Organization: Nunn McCreesh 
    Admin Street: Albion Wharf 
    Admin City: Manchester 
    Admin State/Province: Manchester 
    Admin Postal Code: M1 5LN 
    Admin Country: GB 
    Admin Phone: +44.1612346506 

    I am not sure you understand how this unpleasant, calculated and deliberate targeting of unsophisticated retail pensions operated. Let me spell it out for you.

    Your clients (again I refer to the individuals – as I they cannot hide behind the corporate entity) had websites offering pension reviews and cold-called members of the public. Those that agreed to a review were introduced to what they believed was an IFA (and IFA has a duty to look at the whole market and act in the clients’ best interests). The “IFA” then assessed the client’s needs and objectives and recommended Blackmore Global. Then, your clients dealt with the processing of the transfer from the ceding trustees into a pension and their own funds. At no time was the client ever informed of the conflict of interest. There was never an intention to provide the client with a pension review, it was just a calculated ruse by your clients to get their hands on the pension funds of gullible members of the public.

    So effectively, your clients were generating leads and introducing people to their own fund via Aspinal Chase.

    It is further evidenced that Messrs Nunn and McCreesh’s firm Pension & Life were acting as pension transfer administrators for the victims who were subsequently invested in the Blackmore Global fund:

    Subject – Transfer from: Unisys Pension Scheme Member name: Mr A B C Driver: Our reference: Transfer Out – 9999999 Your reference: B00047 We have been advised by Pension & Life UK Ltd to proceed with the transfer of this member’s benefits from Unisys Pension Scheme to Optimus Retirement Benefit Scheme No 1. We can confirm that the member has received appropriate independent advice in respect of the transfer to the receiving arrangement. The total transfer value amounts to £4xx,xxx.xx and has been paid direct to your bank account.”

    Please note, that your clients – in their role as transfer administrators Pension & Life – confirmed to the ceding provider that Mr. Driver had “received appropriate independent advice”. However, with their 25 years’ experience Messrs Nunn and McCreesh should have known full well that the advice had come from a firm which was not regulated for pension and investment advice.

    We now direct our and your attention (to the extent that you were not fully aware of their content, which we doubt), to the specific posts on your Website, and how the same are both untrue and seriously defamatory of our clients.

    I am not sure what you mean by this statement – how could I not be aware of the content of the blogs on my website? I wrote them all personally. Not a single one is untrue.

    Below, in accordance with the Pre-Action Protocol, we set out what we consider to be the defamatory comments (Defamatory Comments)

    1. “Action Fraud are nobody and have no authority”: John Ferguson, Square Mile Financial Services

    And what is your point? John Ferguson wrote this statement. I didn’t write it – I only quoted it. There is nothing defamatory about repeating this – it is a clearly evidenced fact.

    The above post contains the following statements:

    “Mr. Ferguson has invested a number of victims’ pensions in the Blackmore Global and Symphony funds and was asked to provide a copy of the audit for Blackmore Global which his firm has been promoting and which appears to have some questionable assets — described as “esoteric” and “alternative”. He was also asked to provide evidence of his firm’s regulation to provide pension and investment advice.”

    Again, I am not sure what your problem is with this – it is perfectly true and clearly evidenced that Ferguson (and other unregulated advisers) have indeed invested victims’ pensions in Blackmore Global. The assets of the fund are indeed questionable – and will remain so until the audit is produced. The fund is invested in esoteric and alternative assets. Ferguson has been asked to provide evidence of his firm’s regulation to provide pension and investment advice on several occasions but he has never done so.

    “One victim had threatened to report the matter to Action Fraud when he discovered multiple irregularities with his pension scheme”

    Again, this is perfectly true – and evidenced.

    “The factsheet for the Blackmore Global fund had falsely claimed a firm in Barcelona was the Investment Manager for the fund — robustly denied by the furious firm in question.”

    And? Both the factsheet and the brochure stated this – falsely.

    Meaning

    On any consideration of the above two paragraphs, this post is intended to cause damage to Blackmore Global PCC Ltd’s reputation and its business by suggesting that our client’s underlying assets into which funds are invested are “questionable”.

    The questions are “where is the audit” and “what are the assets”? There was no intention to cause damage to anyone’s reputation and business – but every intention to discover what the assets are. There is compelling evidence that the assets are linked to very suspicious investments and people with a track record of dealing in investment scams. In fact, if you were genuinely interested in protecting your clients’ reputation and good name, you would simply send me a statement confirming what the assets are. The very fact that you haven’t suggests you don’t know and your clients haven’t told you. So how can you refute that the assets are questionable?

    The natural and ordinary meaning attached to the suggestion that an investment is “questionable” is that it is disreputable, uncertain as to its credibility or validity, and generally morally suspect. You seek to further compound the damage to our client’s reputation by describing the assets as “alternative” and “esoteric”.

    For a pension saver, the investment is indeed questionable. And the evidence is that the assets are alternative and esoteric – and there is nothing to prove otherwise. If you can prove that the fund is not disreputable, I will happily apologise. But even if it turns out that the underlying assets are low-risk, prudent, diverse and suitable for pensions, the fact that there is a ten-year lock-in precludes the fund from being suitable for pensions.

    Even more seriously, however, this post makes the most serious of defamatory allegations in that it alleges that our client is involved in investments which should be (reported?) to the police, via Action Fraud, and that our client is therefore engaged in unlawful, criminal activity.

    Your client was indeed engaged in unlawful, criminal activity in the Capita Oak and Henley schemes as well as various SIPPS invested in Store First. I cannot comment further on this because the matter is now in the hands of the Serious Fraud Office.

    Please be clear that my motive and intention was not to cause damage to Blackmore Global’s reputation, but to get the victims disinvested as quickly as possible and further to warn the public that they too might be in danger of being similarly invested in this fund by unregulated “Chiringuitos”. The distress caused to the victims who are invested in Blackmore Global has already been appalling and as a solicitor you too have a duty to help protect the public.

    You have claimed I intended to cause damage by stating that the fund’s underlying assets are “questionable”. So what are they? Prove they are not questionable – of course you can’t, because there is no audit. The audit was promised last summer, then xmas, then Easter. Either Grant Thornton can’t find the assets or somebody doesn’t want the audit made public because of what it will reveal.

    You go on to state that our client has produced Factsheets containing “false information”. This is strongly rejected by our client. Our client’s investments, and their underlying asset classes, are wholly reputable and completely transparent to investors.

    I am sorry but this is absolute nonsense. The factsheet did contain false information. The investments and underlying assets are not at all transparent – there has been no audit and your clients won’t tell anybody what they are. And to be fair, you keep going on about the assets, but you won’t say what they are – so you are being just as opaque as your clients. We know what the asset classes are – and the explanation of the sub classes are horrendous as they contain all the usual asset types so beloved by investment scammers (gaming, spread betting, wine, waste to energy etc.). One victim has written:

    All I can offer, is to reiterate, that I have no recollection of any correspondence with an IFA prior to signing up with Harbour Pensions and Blackmore Global. It was always, Aspinal Chase and in particular Marc Rees. He told me what a great move it all was, how it made sense to have all my individual pension funds in one place, that having a fund of over £250k, I’d get a personal manager that would work specifically on my fund and keep me regularly updated. Needless to say this never happened. In addition, Marc told me that investing in Malta, with Harbour, would give me better returns and be tax efficient. I took this all as “advice”.  Only after a few years, when I wasn’t getting updates and I had to ask for them, and I asked him some questions about surrendering, did he say that was bordering on advice which he wasn’t qualified to answer, and my IFA, David Vilka, would contact me. He never did. I badgered Harbour Pensions and got fobbed off. Then Vilka emailed me to say he understood I was in discussion with Harbour Pension and he couldn’t do anything more than what I was doing myself.”

    Marc Rees- a name familiar to your clients as he worked for them.

     Go to individuals and click on Previous Involvement…

    I

    Name  Individual reference number  Status
    David Marc Lewis Rees DMR01166 Inactive

    It is correct to describe the underlying asset classes as “alternative” in that they are not what would otherwise be classified as “mainstream” investments such as gilts or shares in publicly listed companies. Investments into property or renewable energy sources are considered “alternative”. However, the manner in which you seek to adopt this term is to the detriment of our client by implying that the asset classes themselves are irregular. An investment is “alternative” where it departs from the norm. Therefore, the threshold by which an investment could be determined as “alternative” is low.

    You are mixing apples and oranges: asset classes are one thing; actual assets are another thing. But again, I come back to the simple resolution to this debate: provide me with a list of the underlying assets and then we can put this issue to bed once and for all. In fact, it is interesting to note that you have never once stated what the assets are and I have to assume you simply don’t know as your clients have not disclosed them to you.

    I think we should get comment from professional qualified advisers and actuaries to see if they think the funds are irregular for retail pensions. I will happily be guided by them on this matter. Remind me, what qualifications do your clients hold that would prove they are competent to run such a fund? We already know one of their colleagues, Brian Weal, was found to be incompetent.

    It is further correct to describe the investments as being “esoteric,” that is, out of the ordinary and traditional model of investments. It is common for investment portfolios to have an element of “esoteric” asset classes, as part of a wider diversification of assets and potentially offering the higher returns that investors require to achieve their objectives, based upon the input of independent financial advisers. However, you seek to adopt this term, which you will be well placed to understand as being regularly used within the media in a negative sense, whilst referring to alleged “victims” of our client’s allegedly unlawful behaviour, as referred to above. It is used frequently in a negative sense by the media and other professionals within the context of financial services, hence why you have chosen to do so.

    I am afraid I would have to correct you on the assertion that it is common for an element of esoteric asset classes to be used as part of an investment portfolio for pensions. Perhaps for sophisticated investors or HNW individuals who like a bit of risk – but not pensions. The term “esoteric” is indeed frequently used by the media in a negative sense – and there is a good reason for that: many of the failed funds which have destroyed victims’ life savings have been invested in esoteric assets.

    You cannot possibly believe or claim that alternative and esoteric assets are suitable for pensions. Why not provide me with a definitive list of the assets and then we can debate this properly. You must surely know that funds for pensions must, by definition, be low-risk, liquid, prudent and diverse – which Blackmore Global clearly is not.

    To clarify the position in regards to our client’s Factsheet, our client’s investment manager in relation to the background to which this post refers was one Gerald Rodriguez, who formerly operated the firm IIG Financial Services before moving under the banner of Meriden Capital. Mr. Rodriguez is no longer responsible for the management of this fund.

    I did indeed state that your client has produced Factsheets containing “false information”. This is true and clearly evidenced by both the Blackmore Global factsheet and brochure. Both documents claim that the Investment Manager for the fund is Meriden Capital Partners in Barcelona. But the directors of Meriden state they have never heard of Nunn, McCreesh, Ferguson or Vilka – or indeed Blackmore Global. However, when I jogged their memory that they had actually completed an application form to become the Investment Manager, their English suddenly got worse. But they still insisted they had never been the Investment Manager to the fund as they were not regulated to carry out such a task.

    Your explanation about Gerald Rodriguez of IIG Financial Services being the Investment Manager is, I am afraid, mistaken. I called Mr. Rodriguez (19th July) who now works for the Gibraltar International Bank. He confirmed that he did once work for IIG but that it was many years ago. He also confirmed that he had never been the investment manager for Blackmore Global – indeed he had never even heard of it – and that he had never worked for Meriden Capital Partners. Perhaps you should ask your clients to conjure up another answer to that one.

    2. Government Consultation on Pension and Investment Scams (The Square Mile)

    We direct your attention to the entire blog posting at Annex 1, and below we set out the extracts which are most concerning, and defamatory, to our client.

    “Blackmore Global was full of toxic, illiquid, high-risk assets, had no audit and as a UCIS (unregulated collective investment scheme) was illegal to promote to a retail UK investor. The brochure made a fraudulent claim as to who the investment manager was.”

    “The trouble is, while Mr Driver has fought hard to get some of his money back, there are around 1,100 other victims stuck in this fund who may yet have no idea their pensions are invested in —how shall I say this- worthless crap”

    Meaning

    This post purports to discuss alleged pension and/or investment “scams”. By including a

    reference to our client within this blog, the clear inference is that our client is such a “scammer”, that is, behaving dishonestly and not in accordance with clear ethical and regulatory guidelines, and in breach of its obligations (both express and implied) to its stakeholders. Again, this is a most serious allegation to make, and is repeated across the post, through repeated and unjustified allegations that our client is involved in criminal activity.

    Our client, Blackmore Global PCC Ltd, is an investment company based in the Isle of Man. It was set up as an unregulated investment company under the Companies Act 2006, to operate in that jurisdiction.

    I am not at all sure what you mean by “unjustified allegations”. It is evidenced on the FCA website that it is illegal to promote UCIS funds to UK retail investors.

    You have kindly confirmed that your client is an unregulated investment company – and there is no argument about the fact that it has been promoted by, among others, associates of Nunn and McCreesh: Ferguson and Vilka, (not regulated to provide investment or pension advice) to retail, low-risk pension savers. And further, Nunn and McCreesh were involved in the promotion of a number of pension scams which are now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. What do you have a problem with?

    Your reference to our client’s investment company being “toxic, illiquid, (and containing) high risk assets” has a natural and ordinary meaning that the product is harmful to an individual’s pension, worthless and of little value as there is no market within which it can be re-sold. You cannot have underestimated the significance of calling the product in question “toxic” to our client and its reputation. You go on to describe it as being “worthless crap”, the meaning of which we trust we need not set out in correspondence save to confirm that the use of vulgar abuse does not offset or place into favourable context your other allegations, as referred to above.

    I see no merit in further debating this point: you are aware of my position on the assets of the fund but you repeatedly fail to provide any evidence to prove me wrong. You cannot object to my references, descriptions and allegations unless you disprove them. Tell me what the assets are, provide independent and credible valuations, and disprove what I have written. Your repeated failure to disclose what the assets are merely serves to reinforce the point that the fund is opaque and your clients are failing to be transparent with the victims or the trustees – or, indeed, you.

    We understand that the value of Blackmore Global PCC Ltd has increased some 11% since its inception.

    Exactly how do you “understand” this? Have you seen an audit? Have you seen the accounts? Have you got evidence of 11% growth since inception? If you are right, then 11% since 1.5.14 isn’t actually that much at all – a simple tracker fund would have done just as well, been cheaper, much lower risk and not had the ten-year lock in. And further, if the fund has grown, why did Mr Driver get less back than the scammers invested in the fund in the first place?

    We again note that you fail to make any mention of this fact, which ultimately would not further your evident intention to damage our client’s reputation and blatant attempt to self-promote your own “business”.

    What fact? Provide the facts.

    I genuinely do not understand why you think my intention is to damage your client’s reputation. What benefit would that produce for anyone? Nunn and McCreesh do indeed have a chequered history because of their involvement with Capita Oak, Henley and multiple SIPPS invested 100% in Store First, but I wouldn’t have a motive to take the slightest interest in their reputation. But I would most definitely want to prevent more victims from having their pensions invested in Blackmore Global – and I am sure the existing victims would attest to that intention because of the profound distress they have gone through. But I am not sure how or why you think commenting on the unsuitability of your clients’ fund does anything to “self-promote” my business.

    It is correct that the product referred to in this post as “illiquid”. Our client offers a ten-year close- ended product that is not designed to be liquid. It is entirely normal for illiquid products to be offered for investment, where the investment opportunity is designed to be long-term. In itself, the term illiquid is correct, however the manner and context in which it is adopted by you, alongside the terms “toxic” and “scam” is clearly designed to be harmful to our client’s reputation.

    I am beginning to realise you know little or nothing about investments in general or investments for pensions in particular. It is also clear you are relying entirely on what you “understand” from your clients – and it has been evidenced that some of this is not true. Investors who specifically want an illiquid investment into which they are locked for ten years, would have no problem with Blackmore Global. Or at least, they would have no problem if they knew what the assets were (which clearly you don’t). Provided the assets were not toxic or associated with known investment scammers, then a sophisticated, HNW investor could do his own due diligence and decide for himself. But illiquid funds are not suitable for pensions.

    I would contend that no one would lock up their funds for 10 years. I have spoken to a number of Chartered advisers who all have this opinion.

    One raised an extremely good point. Among the spurious reasons that were used to entice people out of perfectly sound pensions was the promise of access from the age of 55. Yet, all the people that I have spoken to, invested in Blackmore, are over 45 years of age. The sales pitch of 55 is meaningless. Of even greater concern is that their whole pension fund is locked up to 10 years in some cases and this is an outrage!

    What if an investor were to die within 10 years, how would the family get the much needed funds? If you have any conscience at all, think about that.

    It is incorrect to describe the product as “solely high risk”. As with any balanced investment portfolio, there will and should be asset classes within it which fall within the definition of “high risk”. Overall, however, the overall apportionment of such “high risk” assets is low and, the portfolio in question is balanced.

    Without knowing what the assets are, neither you nor anyone else could make that statement with any confidence. How can you state that the overall apportionment of high risk assets is low and the portfolio in question is balanced if you don’t know what the assets are and have never seen an audit?

    If it is so good, I am sure you have invested all your own pension savings into the Blackmore Fund. I look forward to seeing your investment statement.

    The sweeping statements you make regarding suitability, or any purported lack thereof, of our corporate client’s close ended investment are of serious concern, especially when made without any objective attempt at justification. There can be no justification for your assertion that the products in issue are wholly unsuitable for any pension fund or that its nature as a 10-year, closed-ended product renders it “worthless crap”.

    If you are so sure that I am wrong about Blackmore Global, give me the evidence – and also provide me with evidence that confirms you yourself have seen and know what the assets are. You cannot argue that the Blackmore Global fund is not harmful to individuals’ pensions, because one has suffered loss upon redemption already (£1,663.17) and others are being denied their statutory right to transfer out of their schemes because no reputable pension trustee would accept an in specie transfer in something so illiquid and with no audit.

    I will be able to get a considerable number of high profile, well-known and respected advisers to assert that the product is wholly unsuitable for retail pensions. And, since they were sold in the UK, why was the commission filched from the funds not disclosed?

    You state that you “understand that the value of Blackmore Global has increased 11% since inception”. How did you come to that conclusion? Did you see an audit – or are you taking your clients’ word for it? If your client’s word on the value of the fund is anything like their word on who the Investment Manager was, I would think you are making a somewhat shaky assumption.

    Blackmore Global PCC Ltd is not a UCIS.

    Yes it is.

    Again, the suggestion that our client “promotes” itself to consumers/customers and that such activity is illegal is a most serious of allegations to make.

    Your client promotes itself to consumers through Aspinal Chase.

    The product in issue is a closed-ended investment and not a UCIS.

    It is a UCIS

    Furthermore, our client’s customers are not “retail’ clients. Instead, they are investment managers, professional pension trustees or the like rather than investors in their own right.

    This is a common ruse employed by scammers to deflect attention from their negligent or fraudulent advice or investments – and I am disappointed to see you using it. You know very well that we are talking about ordinary people with pensions so please don’t be obscure and opaque.

    The trustees I have spoken to have made it clear that they are not the clients. The investor is the client and the recommendations for the investment was made to the individual client. All the money going into the fund is from retail clients’ pension funds. Of course the customer is a retail client, it is the retail clients’ money that is invested.

    We addressed above the position in regards to the identity of the investment manager in question,

    Yes you did – falsely. Can you please tell me the truth now?

    and again we are gravely concerned as to your use of the word “fraudulent” within your blog.

    It was indeed fraudulent to state that Meriden Capital Partners was the Investment Manager when it clearly was not. Then, the subsequent “explanation” about Mr. Rodriguez of IIG being the Investment Manager was also wholly untrue.

    Your conclusion that this implies “criminal, deceitful and dishonest conduct seeking to scam people” is perfectly natural. Indeed, if you would like to call Mr. Gerald Rodriguez at the Gibraltar International Bank – +350 200 13900 I am sure he will confirm to you himself that your client is lying. https://www.gibintbank.gi/contact

    The natural and ordinary meaning which our client attributes to it is that it is involved in criminal, deceitful and dishonest conduct, through which it seeks to “scam” people of their pensions.

    Your client is indeed involved; has clearly exhibited deceitful and dishonest conduct, and people have been scammed out of their pensions. I have explained how the deceit was organized, all verifiable.

    Such a description of our client can only seek to lower its reputation in the eyes of the reasonable reader, without any exercise in strained construction.

    If your client helps the victims to redeem their Blackmore Global investments without further delay, there is no reason why their reputation should not recover. Your clients need to acknowledge that the fund should never have been used for pensions and put right any loss or damage suffered by the victims.

    Our client is not involved in the provision of financial advice to consumers/customers. Its ultimate clients are pension trustees, and it has no direct communication with underlying beneficiaries. Our client is not in any way involved in the provision of advice to consumers who go on to invest. There is no obligation upon our client to have their company “audited”. Despite such, our corporate client has voluntarily sought an audit of its business by Grant Thornton,

    The fund was indeed promoted to numerous UK residents – illegally. I have their details and documentary evidence. The clients are not the investment managers or the trustees – but the investors themselves. This is a ruse frequently used by scammers to justify investing clients’ pensions in high-risk, toxic, illiquid – sometimes professional-investor-only – funds and instruments. Please be clear, the “advice” was given to the clients – not investment managers or trustees. This is clearly evidenced and confirmed by the trustees.

    Your client was involved from the targeting of prospects, through to the advice process and investment into their own funds.

    which remains underway and to which you refer. The product is administered through registered regulated custodians and agents, who control all relevant bank accounts.

    And who are these custodians and agents? The factsheet and brochure state they are Corporate Options Ltd and OrmCo Ltd. Corporate Options (IoM) claims to provide the following: company management and administration; offshore company formation and management; ship and yacht registration; e-gaming; bookkeeping and accountancy; intellectual property rights; IoM relocation; services for IoM businesses and individuals.

    Based on these claims, I see no reason why Corporate Options should not simply provide a print out of the investments – if indeed they do the bookkeeping and accountancy for Blackmore Global. How difficult would it have been for them to simply provide a transaction report to the victims, trustees, you and me? Instead of making vague, unsubstantiated claims about the quality of the assets, and refuting my fears about the toxicity of the fund, you could have simply provided the evidence instead of demonstrating you have no idea what the assets are.

    OrmCo PLC is staffed by qualified chartered accountants. So, again, there is no reason why the accounts for Blackmore Global could not have been easily produced. In fact, it is becoming more and more ludicrous (and suspicious) that neither Corporate Options nor OrmCo nor Grant Thornton nor Blackmore Global has produced a transaction history of the investments.

    We understand from our clients that your references to Mr Driver are also factually incorrect. Optimus was the entity who recommended Blackmore Global PCC Limited, and who contracted with our corporate client, rather than Mr Driver. Blackmore Global is, once again, a 10-year investment and contractually there is no right to redeem before the end of that 10-year period. Any early redemption fee that would have applied to that investment was in fact waived in full by our clients as a gesture of goodwill, which would usually amount to 7% of the funds invested.

    Optimus was the trustee, not the adviser. The adviser was Square Mile – a firm in the Czech Republic which was not regulated for pension or investment advice. I hope your clients have made you aware that Mr Driver has this confirmed in writing by the FCA. Mr. Driver was not aware that his pension had been invested in a fund with a 10-year lock in. The early redemption fee was not waived but eventually refunded retrospectively.

    There was no financial detriment to Mr Driver. Yes there was. The loss was only relatively small, but there should not have been any loss – since according to you the fund has grown 11% since inception. So Mr. Driver not only suffered an actual loss but also lack of growth for the period his pension was invested in Blackmore Global.

    Additionally, he was advised to transfer out of a final salary pension with no proper analysis. Something that would result in a UK FCA registered adviser being closed down. No doubt the poorly qualified and unregulated adviser from Square Mile will say that there was no obligation for a non-UK firm to provide this analysis at the time. However, the movement from a final salary scheme will have resulted in substantial and, as yet, unquantifiable detriment. How many others suffered the same fate? On that note, does your client ensure that the advisers are all properly qualified to undertake pension transfer activities?

    The structures into which his funds were invested are registered in a variety of commonly-used and well-regulated financial jurisdictions subject to appropriate trust and segregation arrangements, and far from the “scam”, “toxic fund’ or “swamp” to which you refer. The allegation that our clients’ products are “toxic” is simply the worst description which can be applied to a product in the investment market, and cannot be justified on any basis, objective or otherwise.

    Given the recent spate of fund failures in the Isle of Man, I would question the well-regulated jurisdiction comment.

    I absolutely stand by the terms I used to describe the fund. Indeed, this is borne out by the description of the cells in the Blackmore Global documentation:

    Lifestyle Cell”: gaming, spread betting, sports events, construction of facilities, travel solutions, fine wines, art and antiques.

    These are all categories of investments which are typical of the classic investment scams and are certainly not suitable for pensions.

    Private Equity Cell”: venture capital, growth capital and leveraged buyouts.

    Very high risk and entirely unsuitable for pension investments.

    Property Cell”: commercial and residential property developments.

    Illiquid, speculative and high risk. Entirely unsuitable for pension investments.

    Sustainable Cell”: renewable energy including biomass, solar, wind, hydro and waste to energy projects.

    Again, illiquid, speculative and high risk. Entirely unsuitable for pension investments.

    3. Scammers are Criminals

    As the title to this post suggests, herein you discuss the alleged lack of regulation and activity taken by regulators and the police to prevent “scams” and to sanction those involved in the same. By including our client within this post, the clear inference is that our client is involved in fraudulent, criminal and deceptive conduct. You go to list a number of “failed” investments including Capita Oak and Ark, and the implication of such is that our corporate client is or was involved in those investments or seeking to promote a similar product.

    You need to be clear about which clients you are referring to. You have three clients (according to your own letter): 1. Blackmore Global 2. Phillip Nunn 3. Patrick McCreesh. Blackmore Global is a corporate entity so cannot of itself “do” or “say” anything – except those in control of the entity, i.e. Messrs Nunn and McCreesh, can. Messrs Nunn and McCreesh were involved in the promotion of Capita Oak and Henley and numerous SIPPS – all of which were 100% invested in Store First store pods. Store First is subject to a winding up petition and the entire schemes and all parties involved in the promotion, distribution and administration of the schemes are subject to a Serious Fraud Office investigation.

    The deceitful conduct of your clients is clear and detailed above.

    “This so-called Malta-based pension trustee is running the Optimus Retirement Benefit Scam No. 1 QROPS. it is illegally promoting UCIS funds to UK residents and these include toxic, illiquid funds such as Blackmore Global and Richard Reinert’s Symphony.”

    A QROPS on its own is merely a wrapper and on its own is relatively harmless – except for the fact that should HMRC decide at some point it does not meet the requirements, it can be removed from the QROPS list without notice to the members of the scheme. However, it should not have been promoted to UK residents at all, should not have accepted transfers from advisers (Square Mile) who were not licensed for pension advice, should not have allowed investments in entirely unsuitable UCIS funds such as Blackmore Global – a high risk, opaque fund with no tradable assets.

    QROPS are sold to UK residents, in these cases, for one reason. To get the funds away from the regulated jurisdiction of the FCA where UCIS and undisclosed fees are rife. A real IFA would recommend regulated funds in a UK pension at a fraction of the cost, with no commissions being taken.

    “Optimus permitted UK residents to be put into a QROPS and then be invested in Blackmore Global and Symphony UCIS funds: toxic, high risk, illiquid and volatile. Blackmore Global is run by Nunn McCreesh: one of the cold calling scammers behind Capita Oak, Henley and other scams invested 100% in Store First — the promoters are now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office and Store First is subject to five winding-up petitions.”

    Correct.

    Meaning

    Again, you describe our corporate client’s products as being “toxic, illiquid funds”. Correct.

    We address above that, whilst it is correct to describe the product as “illiquid” the manner and context in which that term is used is designed to be harmful to our client. My intention is to warn the public against having their pensions invested in the fund as it is indeed entirely unsuitable for pension investments.

    The funds are not liquid, hence the term illiquid.

    The product offered is not worthless or “toxic” as you repeatedly seek to describe it as. So prove it. You keep claiming it is not worthless and toxic, but you provide no evidence and you clearly don’t even know what the assets are.

    The value of the product has in fact increased since its inception and, again, is designed as a long-term investment of 10 years. As above: prove it.

    For the sake of clarity, Nunn McCreesh was a financial advisory firm established in around 2008 to 2009 by our clients, Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh. Nunn McCreesh has been dormant since 2013, and is now wound up. Both our clients Messrs Nunn and McCreesh were directors of this firm. It was never involved in “cold calling”.

    Nunn McCreesh was involved in cold calling and I have several witnesses prepared to testify to this, and are looking forward to their chance to do so.

    For the sake of clarity, I will also refer you to the Insolvency Service’s witness statement dated 27.5.2015:

    • Documents and information received from four members of CAPITA OAK indicated they were initially contacted by Craig Mason or Patrick McCreesh of Nunn McCreesh of Its Your Pension Ltd and offered pension review services prior to them being referred to JACKSON FRANCIS or Sycamore for the transfer of their pension to CAPITA OAK.
    • On 3.3.15 I received an undated letter in which it was stated that Its Your Pension had not traded and was a dormant company and that Nunn McCreesh had traded as an insurance brokerage between 2009 and 2012 when they entered into a verbal arrangement with TRANSEURO where in return for providing pension leads to JACKSON FRANCIS they received a commission from TRANSEURO.
    • Nunn McCreesh provided JACKSON FRANCIS with 100-200 leads per month which were provided by email and/or telephone for which they received £899,829.86 from TRANSEURO during the period 26.3.12 to 14.5.14.

    As your clients clearly received a substantial sum of money from the Transeuro scam, perhaps you would like to suggest they return this money to the victims to help them with their profound distress, loss of their life savings and tax liabilities? I am sure this would be much appreciated and would mitigate some of their inevitably poor reputation.

    Rather, it generated business through the purchase of leads through reputable providers such as moneysupermarket.com. This is a well-known and established practice that many businesses engage in, and this business was largely an insurance brokerage, also dealing in wealth management.

    This is also an established practiced used widely by scammers. Nunn McCreesh only had a license for selling insurance so if it was also dealing in wealth management, then it was doing so illegally. Also, Nunn McCreesh was an appointed representative of Sage Financial Services which had gone into administration by July 2012 – just before the Capita Oak et al scams were launched.

    As part of that business’ operations, it inevitably generated leads for mortgages or investments in respect of which it would give customers/consumers the option to refer to another firm that may be able to assist them. As clearly evidenced by the Insolvency Service’s witness statement, Nunn McCreesh and Its Your Pension were supplying up to 200 leads per month to Jackson Francis – one of the cold calling scammers involved in these schemes.

    Our clients had no control over what financial investment advice may have subsequently been given to customers/consumers, and whether those customers/consumers then acted upon that advice. Nonsense. Your clients had already entered into an agreement with Transeuro regarding the 100% investment of all 1,000+ victims’ pensions into Store First store pods and would have shared some of the 46% commission (of £120 million) – 16% of which had been stolen/defrauded from the victims.

    I have already proved your clients gave the advice (Remember Marc Rees for example?) and they dealt with the UK trustees to move the funds into Blackmore. I would call that control, what would you call it?

    It is wholly false to state that our clients are “behind” Capita Oak or Henley. Read what the Insolvency Service wrote: it was clear the Messrs Nunn and McCreesh were central to the promotion and distribution of Capita Oak and Henley. Given their purported “25 years’ experience in financial services”, had they possessed any ethics or conscience they would have tried to stop this scam rather than becoming part of it.

    Furthermore, it is utterly untrue and wholly insupportable to suggest that our client is now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. Again, I can only refer you to what the Insolvency Service has stated, and also what the Serious Fraud Office has put in the public domain. Numerous victims have made their statements to the SFO personally and under oath – as indeed have I.

    The implication of your reference to “promoters” is that you are referring to Messrs McCreesh and Nunn. By seeking to associate our clients with funds such as Capita Oak and Henley, the clear inference is that our clients are unskilled, dishonest and deceptive so as to mislead their clients and stakeholders. That could not be further from the truth. As above: Again, I can only refer you to what the Insolvency Service has stated, and also what the Serious Fraud Office has put in the public domain. Numerous victims have made their statements – as indeed have I.

    1. “Gambling with your Pension”

    We direct you to the above post on the Website, and are gravely concerned as to its content.

    “So, make sure you only use an advisory firm which is licensed to provide pension and investment advice….I have no idea who the jolly pair of gamblers are in the photo on this blog, but I am sure no informed person would entrust them with a pension and I reckon Kipling would have had a thing or two to say about them. Away from the fun fun fun of Vegas, these two amiable-looking scallywags could probably scrub up and look like respectable independent financial advisers with a business-like suit and a leather portfolio full of impressive documentation about funds with imaginative names such as “Symphony” and “Blackmore Global”. But if they did so without a license, they would be criminals.”

    Do you have permission to use the Las Vegas picture? Investors Trust are very worried that people are using this photograph as it is their property.

    Meaning

    Our client is not an “advisory firm”. Our corporate client is in no way involved in the provision of advice to consumers/customers, as we make clear above. Again, you need to be clear which client you are talking about. Blackmore Global the corporate entity or Messrs Nunn and McCreesh. Nunn and McCreesh was indeed involved in introducing/promoting investment into Blackmore Global.

    If a customer/consumer considers that they were inappropriately advised upon the risks associated with an investment, or the fact that they would be locked into an investment for a period of 10 years, their first and only recourse is to seek redress from the relevant financial advisor. Had your clients not been actively promoting the Blackmore Global fund themselves to unlicensed firms purporting to be financial advisers, I might have agreed with you to a limited extent.

    The clear inference from your blog is that our corporate client is deceptive, deceitful and dishonest in the promotion of its products, and in its literature, that is distributed to customers/consumers by any financial advisor. We have already established that the inclusion of Meriden Capital Partners as Investment Manager was deceitful and dishonest – as was the subsequent claim made by you that Gerald Rodriguez of IIG was the Investment Manager.

    The blog is clearly intended to harm our client’s reputation by dissuading any investment in its products. You stated earlier in your letter that the fund was for High Net Worth individuals – and I seriously doubt that my blog would dissuade them from investing in Blackmore Global if they were enthusiastic about investing blindly in high risk, illiquid funds with no audit. The intention was to warn cautious, low-risk, pension savers against the dangers of having their entire life savings invested in such a fund.

    Reference to “imaginative names” suggests that the product themselves are imaginary and do not exist, or are presented in a manner to infer respectability or credibility where none exists or could exist. This again could not be further from the truth. Blackmore Global is a well-established investment house, with clear documentary evidence demonstrating its existence and into what products monies are invested. We have already established that the documentary evidence (factsheet and brochure) contained false statements. Further, there is no audit so there is no evidence as to where the monies are invested – and even you don’t know.

    1. “Serious Fraud Office Requests Pension and Investment Scam Reports”

    Again, this post begins with reference to an “investigation” by the Serious Fraud Office into Capita Oak and other funds, where it is well reported within the media that retirees have lost the entirety or significant portions of pensions as a result of investments into them. By deliberately linking our client to these entities, Your clients are linked to these entities – as clearly evidenced by the Insolvency Service’s witness statement

    your only intention can be to divert business from them and to cause serious financial harm as a result. We quote below the salient paragraphs within the post, which refer to our clients. I have no interest in causing your clients financial harm – why would I? But I do think that vulnerable pension savers have a right to know the background of the people behind a fund which is being promoted to retail, UK-resident investors.

    “Of course the blooming obvious happened — all the scammers went on to operate further scams and ruin thousands more victims’ lives. The cold calling firm, Nunn McCreesh, went on to operate the toxic UCIS fund, Blackmore Global; many of the cold callers upgraded their operations to “introducers” and the Ginger Scammer promoted himself to fund investment manager in the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund (£21 million now suspended).”

    And all of that paragraph is 100% true.

    Meaning:

    On any ordinary consideration, a reference to “all the scammers went on to operate further scams and ruin thousand more victims’ lives” is intended to create the impression that our clients are criminals, and have engaged in fraudulent and deceitful practices, which they are seeking to replicate through Blackmore Global PCC Ltd. You adopt highly emotive language in describing those that invested in funds that have “failed”, but what you neglect to accurately describe is our clients’ (limited) involvement. Your clients’ involvement was far from “limited” as you put it. Nunn McCreesh earned £900k providing up to 200 leads a month to a cold-calling scam outfit (Jackson Francis) over a two year period. They had entered into an agreement with Transeuro, so they were in on the plan from the start.

    A reference to our clients’ former business, Nunn McCreesh, as being a “cold calling firm” is clearly intended to discredit our clients. The reality is that at no point was Nunn McCreesh a cold calling firm, as set out above. Nunn McCreesh had indeed been cold calling directly, as well as working closely with cold calling scammers – feeding them thousands of leads.

    Referring to our client, Blackmore Global PCC Ltd, as a toxic, UCIS fund is an attempt to describe its business as worthless. It is not, as you will be aware, a fund. Rather, it is, as set out above, a closed-ended investment company. The underlying asset classes are not “worthless”, but rather have increased in value since establishment. Again, you are confusing the asset classes with the assets themselves. The classes may not be worthless – because they are generic and loosely refer to a type of asset. But the assets themselves may or may not be worthless – we won’t know until the mysterious, long-promised audit makes an appearance. My worry is that the sustainable cell which states it invests in “waste to energy projects”, might contain some Premier New Earth Recycling – which is indeed now worthless.

    6. Blackmore Global Fund — Asset or Black Hole?

    Of serious concern to our clients is your most recent post entitled “Blackmore Global Fund —Asset or Black Hole”. By reference to the title alone, the clear inference is that our corporate client’s product is worthless and that any monies invested have been forever lost. So, provide the accounts and the audit and prove what the fund is worth. It is simply not credible that a firm like Grant Thornton could take almost a year to produce an audit. I think we can agree the lack of information about the fund could be referred to as a black hole.

    We set out below the salient paragraphs of the post:

    “A fund like Blackmore Global really ought to be audited as soon as possible — to make sure it isn’t simply a “black hole” into which victims’ hard-earned pensions have sunk. Numerous worried pension savers are stuck in the Blackmore Global Fund and finding it difficult — if not impossible — to get out. They are seemingly “locked in” for ten years.”

    “Nunn and McCreesh generated up to 200 leads a month to pension scammers in relation to a series of pension/investment scams which are now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. This entailed £120 million worth of pensions being invested in Store First store pods which are now the subject of a winding up petition — and arguably worthless.”

    “The Blackmore Global NAV Factsheet also states that there is a ten-year lock-in to the fund. So why would anyone invest a pension in such a fund? A pension saver has a statutory right to a transfer and might want to take his PCLS — 25% tax free withdrawal at age 55 — or retire, or even die. What on earth is the point in using Blackmore Global for a pension at all? Ever.”

    “Most of the victims of the Blackmore Global fund were initially cold-called by a firm called Aspinal Chase. And all the victims were advised by unregulated investment advisers such as

    Forth Capital and Square Mile Financial Services (an insurance license does not cover regulated investment advice). But more worryingly, all of them were put into a QROPS in Malta or the Isle of Man. So why were UK residents transferred to an offshore pension at all, and why were most or all of their pension funds invested in a UCIS which is illegal to be promoted to UK residents?”

    “And here, we get back to whether the unscrambling of these pension and investment scams is more about who you know rather than what you know. One victim had his pension invested 75% in Blackmore Global and 25% in Symphony. Symphony was a fund invested in derivatives and highly leveraged.”

    “Now we have gone round in a complete circle. A catalogue of lies, deception, fraud, mis-selling, negligence and incompetence.”

    “I don’t envy Grant Thornton (if indeed they are the auditors) because they have got to unscramble this unholy mess. And I strongly suspect that, behind the scenes, there are certain parties who are busting a gut to ensure the audit is never published. Two of these may well be John Ferguson and David Vilka of Square Mile in the Czech Republic who seem to have a strong vested interest in promoting this black hole of a fund.”

    “Meanwhile, the longer the victims are held back from transferring out of this toxic swamp of a fund, the more serious the complaints against the various parties involved will be. These will include the cold-calling scammers; introducers; advisers; pension trustees and insurance companies such as Investors Trust who allowed this investment and the pensions transfers from unlicensed advisers.” And? All of the above is true.

    Meaning

    You describe investors in our client’s products as being “stuck” and “locked in”, with numerous “worried pension savers”. The natural and ordinary meaning of this statement is that investors cannot exit the fund and that their investment potentially forever lost in a “black hole”. This highly emotive paragraph can only be intended to create fear and misstates the fact that the product in question is, as set out elsewhere, intended to be fixed for a period of 10 years. The purpose of fixing the product for a 10-year period is to ultimately increase returns for investors and to enable the underlying asset classes to embed, generating the highest return whilst allowing a period where investors do not call upon the company to extract monies invested. So tell your clients to let the retail investors out of the fund – and give them a copy of the audit. I am sure there will be enough sophisticated and institutional investors that wish to remain. Have you asked your clients what percentage of the funds come from UK retail pensions and from sophisticated investors/institutions? This will be a question raised in court.

    The suggestion that our clients Messrs Nunn and McCreesh, generated up to 200 leads to advisors now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office, as it led to investment into assets that are now worthless, is obviously designed to impact our clients’ credibility and reputation. It doesn’t matter what the “design” was – it is true and clearly evidenced. There is quite enough smoke and mirrors already without trying to hide your clients’ background.

    The natural and ordinary meaning of such a statement, to any ordinary reader, is that our clients facilitated or engaged in conduct that is criminal, and in fact the most serious of conduct that deceived retirees and led to the loss of their pension funds. Capita Oak and Henley were repeatedly determined by the Pensions Ombudsman as being scams. And scammers are criminals (as confirmed by the Pensions Regulator). Your clients, Messrs Nunn and McCreesh did facilitate and were engaged in the promotion and distribution of Capita Oak and Henley and had entered into an agreement with Transeuro – so they would have known the pensions were going to be invested in store pods. You claimed several thousands of words ago that your clients had 25 years’ experience in the financial services sector – therefore they should have known better than to get involved in such an obvious scam which would inevitably ruin thousands of people’s lives. They would have known that the object of the exercise was to earn substantial amounts of investment introduction commission from Store First at the expense of the victims.

    This statement is wholly untrue. As above, your clients had an agreement with Transeuro and knew what the whole scheme was about.

    In fact, the correct position is that through Nunn McCreesh they purchased leads through reputable companies, such as moneysupermarket.com. Where that lead potentially also generated opportunities which were not serviced by Nunn McCreesh, on the consent of the customer/consumer how did the consumer “consent”?, this was referred to several other firms. Yes, the cold-calling scammers who were also involved in the whole scheme.

    Our clients had no control whatsoever over the advice subsequently given, as set out above, and whether that advice was acted upon. But they knew that every lead which was successfully converted would end up with the investor losing his or her entire pension as it was due to be 100% invested in store pods.

    Our clients were not involved the process of giving that advice. They were a part of the conduit which harvested the leads and passed them over for conversion to the scammers. They were the process.

    Our clients are, in reality, no more responsible than the company from which they first purchased the relevant lead. Your clients were an integral part of the whole process and were fully aware that every lead they passed on was in danger of facing financial ruin.

    However, you seek to present our clients as dishonest and deceptive, and imply that their conduct/involvement is also under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. This is an extremely serious allegation to make and one without any factual basis or truth. How would you describe a firm that passes on 200 leads a month for two years knowing that if converted, each individual’s entire pension would be invested in store pods, and that the value of the assets would immediately drop by at least 46% due to the investment introduction commissions (in which they shared to the tune of £900k)?

    DEFAMATORY MEANING

    Your comments appear to be based on a number of fundamental misconceptions and errors:

    As we refer to above, our corporate client’s product Blackmore Global is not a UCIS. Yes it is.

    It is, again as set out elsewhere and above, a 10-year closed-ended product and as promoted by an unregulated investment company. Your statements that Blackmore Global is a UCIS fund at all, and also that it is a UCIS fund that is being illegally promoted to retail investors are simply wrong. This has already been dealt with several times above.

    In any event, and again as stated above, our corporate client does not and has never contracted directly with retail investors (ie. individual personal investors) in respect of the Blackmore Global product. Your corporate client is a corporate entity which cannot of itself “do” anything. But the directors can and do. Messrs Nunn and McCreesh ran Aspinal Chase which was a cold calling, lead generating introducer, which was contacting members of the public so that they could have their pensions invested in Blackmore Global. Mr. Driver mainly dealt with Aspinal Chase, and the pension transfer administration was handled by Pensions & Life – another company run by Messrs Nunn and McCreesh.

    It only contracts with professional and institutional investment entities. The individual investors (who you are wrongly describing as “victims”) are in fact (and again, as set out above) direct clients of those professional investment entities who make investment recommendations to their personal clients. Already dealt with above.

    Once again, our corporate client provides no advice or recommendation as to the suitability (or otherwise) of the relevant product to the professional investment advisers. Any complaints about the unsuitability of an investment choice for a particular individual are a matter for that individual to take up with their own professional investment adviser. Our client has no relationship with those individuals, and only with professional and institutional investors who undertake their own extensive due diligence on all of its investment products. Your client has no relationship with anybody – there is no communication with the trustees or the investors.

    If this gets to court, I will be demanding to see evidence of the extensive due diligence. Since there are no accounts, no valuations, a banned fund manager involved in other scams (Weal), evidence of collaboration with the Capita Oak scam (subject to an SFO investigation) and no evidence of your clients’ qualifications to run a fund- I would question the word “extensive”.

    Accordingly, whether a fund is “wholly unsuitable for a pension fund” is a matter to be taken up with the relevant independent financial adviser involved and assessed on each individual case. So why were your clients Messrs Nunn and McCreesh, acting as Aspinal Chase, contacting retail members of the public in the UK in order to persuade them to move their pensions to a QROPS so that they could be invested in their own fund, Blackmore Global? Why was the adviser they introduced, after an assessment, recommending their funds?

    There can be no justification for your assertion that our clients’ products are, without exception, unsuitable for any pension funds when in fact they will in many cases be wholly, suitable. There is, indeed, every justification – because until and unless the mythical audit appears, we won’t know for certain what the underlying assets are. There is very compelling evidence that the assets have clear links to other investment scams, but let us wait and see when the audit comes out.

    Furthermore, your various inferences of conflicts of interests are made without any semblance of objective foundation or justification. It is a clear conflict of interest for your clients to be promoting the fund as well as running the fund to the general public – i.e. ordinary, retail pension savers.

    Blackmore Global is not a toxic investment. Based on the clear evidence we already have which is published on your clients’ own documentation, it most certainly is a toxic investment. This can be further reinforced or refuted once the audit is available. But to be honest Steve, to keep on repeating statements about the fund without having a clue what the investments are is pointless.

    Despite the length and content of your various posts, without carrying out your own detailed due diligence (no evidence of which is present in any of them), you simply cannot be in a position to make the Defamatory Statements, either as statements of opinion or fact. This being the case, and based upon the serious financial harm already done to our clients’ interests as a result of their content, your various claims are seriously defamatory and allow our client to seek redress from the Queen’s Bench Division of the High Court. This begs the question whether you yourself have carried out any detailed due diligence. You keep denying that Blackmore Global is toxic, but you haven’t a clue what the assets are.

    You also state that our corporate client is directly involved in “pension scams”, that their investments are “esoteric” in nature (and so less of a “mainstream” and viable option than others). Similarly, your reference to our client being “unregulated’ against a context of their not needing to be in the Isle of Man is clearly intended to damage its reputation in the minds of readers of the Website and the posts — our client has, for the avoidance of doubt, the requisite “Regulated Custodian”, of which you should be aware and have failed to clarify in an attempt to strike a more justifiable and balanced tone in the relevant post. This has all been dealt with above.

    Again, any individuals would have received professional advice in that regard before the relevant investments were made and our client was under no obligation (nor could be, nor could any of its market comparators) to investigate the nature of the advice provided by independent

    and professional financial advisers which they can only expect to have been supported by detailed suitability assessments on the type of investments into which relevant funds were placed to achieve the relevant client’s stated investment aims. This has all been dealt with above.

    Our clients run their businesses to the highest professional standards So where are the audit and the accounts?

    in conjunction with a carefully-selected external advisory team. Carefully selected like Meriden Capital?

    Their reputation is unblemished and hard-won, and your attacks upon them should not, and will not, be tolerated. If your clients have a hard-won, unblemished reputation, why haven’t they come forward to help the Capita Oak and Henley victims? They now know that over 1,000 victims have lost their pensions due to them being 100% invested in store pods and that many of them are facing crippling tax charges. So, how many times have they come forward and offered to help the victims which they helped put in this position in the first place? Have they offered to put up the £900k they earned out of ruining these people to help them?

    After Capita Oak and Henley imploded, did they devote their lives to help save and rescue the victims? No, they set up a toxic, illiquid, speculative fund and then promoted it to more retail pension savers.

    DEFAMATION AND MALICIOUS FALSEHOOD

    The content of the Defamatory Statements can lead, and in this case have in fact already led, to our clients suffering serious financial loss, and as such serious harm to their reputation as a business. All they had to do was to offer to help the Capita Oak and Henley victims and their reputation would have been fine. Another thing that would have helped would have been to publish a clear disclaimer on the Blackmore Global: “for professional, institutional, high-net-worth investors only”.

    Messrs Nunn and McCreesh have also seen their personal and professional reputations tarnished as a result of your allegations. Because of your posts, at least one lender has refused to deal with our client, Was that by any chance in respect of a loan application to secure funds to help the Capita Oak and Henley victims? Your clients are without question mistaken because lenders would not refuse a loan on the basis of a blog – they would refuse a loan on the basis of lack of security or bad credit history. No lenders have come to me asking for confirmation or evidence of information contained in my blogs.

    various intermediaries have refused to deal and introduce clients and opportunities to them, Can you blame them when your clients were involved in the promotion of Capita Oak and Henley and far from stopping to help the victims they are working on creating more victims?

    and at least one financial services provider with whom they have enjoyed a longstanding association has indicated that they no longer intend to deal with our client. Can you blame them when your clients were involved in the promotion of Capita Oak and Henley and far from stopping to help the victims they are working on creating more victims?

    Dependent upon your response and the extent of the financial damage which you have sought and have been able to do to date (which we will quantify in due course), our client reserves the right to seek relief from the Court by way of an award in damages for inducement to breach contract over and above or in conjunction with the damages which it may seek to recover from you in defamation (again, to which we refer below). I don’t think the financial damage your clients have caused can be finally quantified until we see the audit for Blackmore Global. I was speaking to one of the trustees yesterday, and he said he still can’t get a sensible answer as to where the audit is or what is taking so long. He has tried speaking to both Grant Thornton and Blackmore Global – but there is no conclusive news. I can tell you quite accurately what the financial damage suffered by the Capita Oak and Henley victims has been.

    The statements set out above have caused and are likely to cause our client serious financial damage, thereby constituting “serious harm” pursuant to section 1 of the Defamation Act 2013. In particular, our clients are extremely concerned that, were they to be further repeated to recipients over and above the content of, our corporate client is likely to incur further losses by way of other clients looking to terminate their contracts with them. If these clients are retail, UK-resident pension savers, then they should all be released from Blackmore Global immediately. To refuse to allow them to redeem would now be entirely irresponsible and negligent now.

    Regardless of the serious harm already cause to our clients by the publication of the Defamatory Statements, and given what we believe to be the wide level of dissemination to an audience likely to (at least initially) place some trust in their contents as a result of your intent to “rescue and prevent pension and investment scam victims”, the sheer gravity of your allegations, namely that our clients have behaved dishonestly, looked to mislead clients and effectively defraud them of very substantial sums of money largely makes any discussion around the harm caused as a result of their publication academic, and the Court would in our view have no difficulty in inferring serious harm having been caused even where it is borne out by the evidence already available to our clients. It is beginning to become somewhat tedious reading the many repetitions of “your clients having suffered serious harm”. What about the 1,000+ victims who have lost their pensions? What about those who have had heart attacks, strokes, nervous breakdowns? What about those who have died – some of whom committed suicide because of the unbearable stress of their predicament: i.e. losing their entire life savings and never being able to retire. You have already said that the Blackmore Global fund is aimed at high net worth individuals, institutional and professional investors. So let them get on with promoting the fund to them. The reality is, of course, that those types of investors would carry out their own due diligence and would never touch a fund without an audit with a very long barge pole.

    In the circumstances and given their substance, there can be no real doubt as to the meanings of the Defamatory Statements, as we set out above, in the eyes of right-thinking members of society (including our clients’ students and other stakeholders). Students? I sincerely hope your clients are not teaching others the same methods and approaches to pensions and investments.

    The Defamatory Statements are wholly unsupportable and indefensible on the basis of being substantially true, statements of honest opinion or made in any manner or circumstance which could conceivably be protected by statutory or qualified privilege. 100% of what I have written is clearly evidenced and absolutely true.

    Given their audience (insofar as we are aware of the extent of publication without further disclosure from you) and the niche nature of our clients’ products and services, our clients’ concerns are well-founded and in the circumstances are further monitoring their impact whilst being entirely justified in looking to issue proceedings against you in defamation for an award in damages to vindicate the damage done to its reputation, in addition to an appropriate and prominent apology to be published to each and every recipient of them. How many apologies have your clients made to the Capita Oak and Henley victims? And how many apologies have they made to Mr Driver?

    In the alternative and in the very unlikely event that the Court were not to agree that our clients are entitled to recover damages from you in defamation, given that the statements above were made despite the fact that you knew them to be entirely untrue, I did not know them to be entirely untrue. I never say anything unless I know it to be true and have clear evidence.

    with the malicious intent of causing damage to our clients’ business and financial interests and have already cause our clients actual financial loss, our clients would in any event be well-advised to issue proceedings against you for an award of damages in malicious falsehood. I have no interest in causing damage to your clients’ business and financial interests. But I do want to stop the Blackmore Global fund from being promoting (by your clients) to retail investors.

    Your acts of defamation and/or malicious falsehood I have neither defamed nor written falsehoods – malicious or otherwise.

    are wholly unacceptable to our clients and, in the circumstances, it intends, if this matter cannot be resolved on a more informal basis, to pursue a claim in defamation and/or malicious falsehood against you, in addition to a potential claim for inducement to breach contract. I think many of the various victims of Capita Oak, Henley and Blackmore Global would be absolutely delighted if this were to come to court. They would all be queuing up to provide witness statements and testimonies. Indeed, I also think it would be a good thing if this were all put in the public domain – as long as it does nothing to compromise the Serious Fraud Office investigations and prosecutions.

    REMEDIES

    In the circumstances, we urgently seek the following remedies from you:

    • Publication of an immediate suitable apology to any and all recipients of the Defamatory Statements and any and all other similar messages; I am afraid I cannot do that as I have made no defamatory statements
    • Your undertaking not to repeat the allegations complained of above; I have made no allegations – I have made factual statements which are clearly evidenced
    • Compensation for the damage to our clients’ reputation and for any financial loss it has suffered; Your clients can make up for their own poor reputation by offering to compensate the Capita Oak and Henley victims and by allowing all the Blackmore Global investors who are in pensions to redeem immediately and pay them compensation for their losses (and obvious charge no early redemption fees)
    • Reimbursement of our clients’ legal costs. What legal costs? Slater and Gordon is a no-win-no-fee firm and you personally are a mate of Phillip Nunn so I would have thought you are doing this as a favour (especially as you have no expertise in defamation).

    If proceedings prove necessary and unavoidable (which may, dependent upon your Response or failure to respond as requested), the remedies which will be granted to our client by the Court include:

    • An injunction,
    • Damages;
    • Publication of a suitable apology,
    • Your further assurance that the statements referred to above (or any similar statements) will not be made or repeated;
    • Legal costs and interest.

    What I will propose:

    • Your clients pay £900k into an escrow account for the benefit of the Capita Oak and Henley victims
    • Your clients agree to release all pension savers out of the Blackmore Global fund and make a clear undertaking not to allow any further retail investors/pension savers to become invested in it
    • Your clients to pay compensation to all retail investors/pension savers in Blackmore Global for financial loss and distress caused due to the refusal to redeem out of the fund
    • You and your client will immediately provide a complete transaction history of all asset purchases from inception, quarterly NAVs and a definitive date for publication of the audit
    • You and your clients to confirm that the following are among the assets of the Blackmore Global fund:

    Swan Holdings PCC (controlled by Brian Weal)

    Kingston Capital Partners (Belize private equity vehicle controlled by Nunn & McCreesh)

    GRRE Invest – fund manager for aptly-named GRREIF fund (Green Renewable Redeemable Energy Investment Fund)

    GRRE Investment Fund – suspended by Anguilla FSC. (Brian Weal recently resigned as a director but still holds a controlling interest in the Fund – https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/09132685/persons-with-significant-control)

    Spinaris 90 – UK sports spread betting

    NEXT STEPS

    Please reply to this letter as a matter of urgency, in the most complete manner possible and in any case by 4:00 PM on 1 August 2017. Should you delete the Defamatory Statements from your Website pending resolution of this matter, our clients would (subject to the provision of appropriate reassurances as to your current and further conduct) consider taking no further action against you. I cannot delete the “defamatory statements” you refer to, because there are none.

    Pending your response, our clients reserve all rights against you, including in relation to an application for urgent injunctive relief, in the event that the undertakings requested above are not provided and the remedial action requested above and therein not taken. We strongly recommend that you seek legal advice in relation to the contents of this letter from a solicitor specialising in the law of defamation. You should not underestimate our clients’ determination to seek redress as a result of your wholly unfounded, profoundly damaging and completely unjustifiable allegations. And you should not underestimate my determination to obtain redress for your clients’ victims – and to prevent further victims.

    Yours faithfully

    K014,—-

    Slater & Gordon (UK) LIP

  • Blackmore Scam by Nunn & McCreesh

    Blackmore Scam by Nunn & McCreesh

    Blackmore is two scams for the price of one: Blackmore Bond and Blackmore Global Fund. Both run by Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh of Blackmore Group. Blackmore Bond is a “loan” scheme (bond) which has conned £25 million out of hundreds of victims and is now in default. Blackmore Global is an “investment” scam which has never provided any evidence as to where the money has gone and what it is invested in. It is thought that more than £40 million is invested in the fund. Both scams have left hundreds of investors worried sick that they may never see their money again.

    Blackmore Scam by Nunn & McCreesh

    Much has been written about both scams – by interested observers, bloggers, journalists, distressed investors/lenders and by me.

    Bond Review; This is Money; Evening Standard; Money Marketing; The Daily Telegraph; The Times; Pension Life

    Also, two Facebook groups have been set up to support worried victims:

    Investors of Blackmore

    Blackmore Bond and Global Fund

    Investors of Blackmore is a closed Facebook group run by Mat Noakes. Mat created the group for Blackmore Bond victims, and makes sure that those who apply to join are genuine investors. He has strict rules about conduct on the group (as he is entitled to). Mat is raising funds to take legal action against Blackmore and has provided a substantial amount of information and evidence on this scam. Most revealing of all is that the so-called property development projects which victims have funded are incomplete and bound to be difficult (or impossible) to sell. Blackmore has run out of cash and is in default. Nunn and McCreesh are using a series of lame delaying tactics to try to assuage the victims’ fears. As with most Ponzi-style scams, once new money dries up, existing lenders/investors don’t get their promised returns and can’t get their money out.

    Blackmore Bond and Global Fund is an open group run by me. I created it for both Blackmore Bond and Blackmore Global victims. Anyone can join – even the scammers if they want to (although I doubt they’d have the balls – scammers are almost always spineless cowards). There are no rules – anyone can say whatever they want. Especially me. I say openly and publicly that both Blackmore Bond and Blackmore Global are scams run by Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh who have used a series of other known scammers to promote and distribute these two scams.

    Blackmore Bond was promoted by Surge Group run by Paul Careless. He has been arrested and is under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office. Surge earned £6 million out of promoting this high-risk, illiquid, unregulated bond to low-risk investors. Surge also earned £60 million out of promoting the London Capital & Finance bond scam which is now being wound up by Finbarr O’Connell of Smith & Williamson.

    Blackmore Global was promoted by two spivs: David Vilka and John (Gus) Ferguson of Square Mile Financial Services. Another spiv – Charlie Goldsmith – lurks in the background and appears to make even more money out of promoting Blackmore than Vilka and Ferguson.

    Behind the lies, deception and undoubted fraud perpetrated by Nunn and McCreesh, let’s look at their history in some depth. In 2012/13, they were running a firm called Nunn McCreesh which was an appointed agent of Sage Financial Services. Their legal permission was to sell (mediate) insurance. But clearly they didn’t earn enough out of doing legitimate business, so they turned to financial crime.

    Joining the string of scammers behind the Capita Oak, Henley, SIPPS scam led by XXXX XXXX, Nunn McCreesh set out to help scam hundreds of victims into bogus occupational pension schemes and have their life savings invested in store pods (out of which the scammers earned 46% in commission).

    The scam was investigated by the Insolvency Service in 2014 (and later by the Serious Fraud Office). Here’s what the Insolvency Service’s witness had to say about Nunn McCreesh on 27.5.2015:

    • Documents received from members of CAPITA OAK indicated they were initially contacted by Patrick McCreesh of Nunn McCreesh and Its Your Pension Ltd and offered pension review services.
    • Its Your Pension had not traded and was a dormant company.
    • Nunn McCreesh had traded as an insurance brokerage between 2009 and 2012 when they entered into a verbal arrangement where in return for providing pension leads they received a commission.
    • Nunn McCreesh provided 100-200 leads per month which were provided by email and/or telephone for which they received £899,829.86 during the period 26.3.12 to 14.5.14.

    It is important to understand the pedigree and psychology of Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh to understand why they should never have been allowed to handle anybody’s money. And why they would have been better off in prison rather than being left free to put what looks like over £65 million worth of victims’ money at risk.

    • The Insolvency Service’s own research established that the pair had been masquerading as trading legitimately from a non-trading company. This establishes their dishonesty.
    • “Pension reviews” have been a classic feature of many pension scams in the past ten years. They are a way of conning victims into handing over their pensions to bogus schemes such as Capita Oak and Henley – and placing them into the hands of serial scammers such as XXXX XXXX and Stephen Ward.
    • Nunn McCreesh was mainly interested in the lucrative business of commissions. This in itself is a dishonest and toxic practice since it is deliberately hidden from the investors – who have no idea that large portions of their hard-earned life savings are being handed over to the scammers.
    • Over a period of more than two years, Nunn McCreesh provided around 5,000 “leads” to the other firm of scammers involved: Jackson Francis. These leads would, inevitably, have been obtained illegally. As a result of this industrial-scale scamming, Nunn McCreesh gave potential victims’ contact details to Jackson Francis. It is known that at least 1,200 of these resulted in the contacts losing their entire pensions.

    During this two-year period, Nunn and McCreesh obviously learned a great deal from the other scammers. They also saw XXXX XXXX making a fortune out of this particular scam – and then watched him go on to make an even bigger fortune out of the Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund scam. Seeing XXXX XXXX boasting a magnificent country house, Ferrari and champagne lifestyle, they obviously realised they were only in the “little league” and needed to move up a gear. And thus Blackmore was born.

    Nunn and McCreesh then teamed up with the scammers behind Aspinall Chase and Aktiva Wealth Management, later renamed Square Mile International, then Michalska Holding and now called Planet Pensions. The firm has just been wound up.

    These scammers – Gus Ferguson, David Vilka and Charlie Goldsmith – then proceeded to scam many hundreds of victims into the Blackmore Global Fund. They duped UK residents into transferring their pensions into QROPS in the IoM, Malta and Hong Kong: Kreston, Optimus, Harbour and GFS. After all the scammers shared out the huge commissions, there would have been very little actual cash left – and what there was would have been invested in worthless rubbish which paid more commissions. These sub funds would have included Swan and GRRE – also run by known scammers.

    Nunn and McCreesh claim on their website that they invest part of the Blackmore Global fund in commercial property. My worry is that some of this may be the same or similar commercial property to the worthless rubbish held in the Blackmore Bond. Of course, there have never been any audited accounts – despite many repeated assurances for the past four years they they are “working on it”.

    My biggest worry is: why was this allowed to happen? Why weren’t Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh prosecuted back in the days when they were under investigation by both the Insolvency Service and the Serious Fraud Office? Why weren’t they put safely behind bars so they couldn’t scam any more victims? And where was the FCA? Nunn and McCreesh were clearly running an unregulated collective investment scheme without permission. We know the FCA has the power to take action against firms they suspect of running such schemes because they’ve done so with Park First doggedly for the past three years.

    The Blackmore Group website claims to be: “a Real Estate Investment House, built to be an institutional yet dynamic company capable of maximising market opportunities by combining a blend of investment management experience and real estate expertise”. Yet Nunn and McCreesh only have a track record of miserable failure and scams. Their company, Nunn McCreesh, only operated for one year from 2012 to 2013. During this twelve month period it somehow managed to chalk up £351,000 worth of debts and loans. Neither Nunn nor McCreesh has ever demonstrated any investment management experience – other than what they may have gleaned about investment scams from XXXX XXXX. The Companies House accounts paint a bleak picture. The last published accounts – 2017 – show the company being barely solvent and with debts of over one million pounds. And no sign of the 2018 accounts.

    The Blackmore Global website spouts similar disingenuous nonsense claiming: “expertise of specialists and regulated Investment Managers, along with a robust due diligence process”. This is clearly downright lies. The Blackmore Global brochure claimed that a company in Barcelona – Meridan Capital – was the Investment Manager. And yet, when I spoke to Meridan Capital they said they most certainly were not. Had there been any due diligence done, the underlying assets would most certainly not have been accepted into the fund. These included Swan and GRRE – run by known scammers.

    The Blackmore Bond website is full of similar lies and rubbish. It claims Blackmore is a property development company. It isn’t. It claims to have: “a wealth of property insight and a proven track record in delivering quality developments”. But according to the published accounts for 2017, it has £1.1 million worth of assets and £1.1 million worth of debts. And to have made £6,000 profit. I would say that is anything but a proven track record – and in fact shows that they have no experience or success in property development since they set the company up in 2016.

    This whole episode shows the dangers of known scammers such as Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh being left free to set up unregulated investment companies, bonds and funds with no professional qualifications or expertise. The only track record this pair has is a well-documented track record of success in selling illegally-obtained contact databases and of promoting bogus pension schemes which are under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.

  • Meghan and Harry’s New Challenge: Pension Scams

    Meghan and Harry’s New Challenge: Pension Scams

    Meghan and Harry – the Duke and Duchess of Sussex – are having a tough time (and are running away from home). Their sadness and confusion is because they have no purpose or passion in life. So I am offering them an interesting and satisfying challenge: taking on and championing the cause of pension scam victims. Harry’s Mum knew a thing or too about adopting worthy causes and had no problem jumping on a plane to far away, war-torn places full of the most appalling human suffering and landmines. Meghan and Harry don’t even have to travel as far as the airport to find victims whose cause desperately needs championing.

    Megan and Harry - in search of a purpose in life - need to look at the human misery caused by pension and investment scammers: Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions; Paul Clarke of Roebuck Wealth; Dennis Radford of Spectrum IFA Group; Darren Kirby of CWM; Gus Ferguson and David Vilka of Square Mile; James Hadley of Nationwide Benefit Consultants; Patrick McCreesh of Blackmore Group; Phill Pennick of Pennick Blackwell; Peter and Sara Moat of Fast Pensions; Paul Baxendale-Walker and Phillip Nunn of Blackmore Group

    Poor Duke and Duchess of Sussex – what an awful time they’re having: posh clothes; flash cars; sumptuous “cottage” in Windsor Park. They needn’t be bored and aimless any longer. They can become patrons of the plight of the thousands of British citizens who have lost £ billions to pension and investment scams.

    Just as the Late Princess Diana confronted the horrific dangers of land mines, Meghan and Harry can confront the huge tide of appalling human misery caused by scammers Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions; Paul Clarke of Roebuck Wealth; Dennis Radford of Spectrum IFA Group; Darren Kirby of CWM; Gus Ferguson and David Vilka of Square Mile; XXXX XXXX of Nationwide Benefit Consultants; Phill Pennick of Pennick Blackwell; Peter and Sara Moat of Fast Pensions; Paul Baxendale-Walker; Patrick McCreesh and Phillip Nunn of Blackmore Group; Paul Careless of Surge Group.

    This is now becoming a very high-profile topic – especially in the light of the multiple, dismal failings of the FCA and a recent series of hard-hitting articles published by Tom Kelly of the Daily Mail. Kelly, an engaging and open-minded young man (who I am sure the Sussexes will like) has written about a wide array of pension and investment disasters which have befallen thousands of victims since 2010.  I would urge Meghan and Harry to contact him: Tom’s email address is:  Tom.Kelly@dailymail.co.uk and his editor’s address is: Geordie.greg@dailymail.co.uk

    As the disillusioned Royals are bound to ask whether pension scam victims have anything to do with them (or whether they should even care about people who have lost their life savings or pensions), they might like to consider the following:

    • If Frogmore Cottage catches fire, Meghan and Harry will have to call the Fire Brigade. The sumptuous property cost £2.4 million to refurbish to the highest possible standard, but even the best sparks do sometimes make the odd mistake. The Royals’ home – and even their lives – will be in the hands of the firemen. These brave firefighters will risk their own lives running into the burning building; then will rescue the people and (hopefully) save the building.
    • If Meghan and Harry’s baby son Archie is unwell after inhaling smoke, they will rush him to hospital – where he will be tended to by nurses and doctors.
    • If a therapeutic trip to Canada is required (to get over the upset of their home being damaged by fire), the plane will be flown by two pilots.

    Pension and investment scammers target people from all works of life – including firemen, doctors, nurses and airline pilots. Next time the Sussexes place their hands into the lives of any of these professionals, they might like to consider whether these people are victims of scams and are worried sick about their financial losses.

    Scammers don’t care what their victims do for a living: sparks, chippies, builders, gardeners, taxi and bus drivers, soldiers, care workers, architects, scientists, accountants, artists, police officers…the list is endless – and includes airline pilots.

    Meghan and Harry need not think that going to Canada will get them far away from the world of pension and investment scams. These criminals have long arms and can easily reach as far as North America – and well beyond. The long list of highly-organised scams includes schemes in the UK and all expat jurisdictions across the globe – including Canada.

    Coming from a privileged background where Harry’s Mum gets paid more than £8 million a year (and Meghan and Harry are reportedly worth around £30 million), it is going to be hard to get their heads round the poverty thousands of victims are facing. Perhaps cutting the purse and apron strings will teach Meghan and Harry just how hard it is to earn a crust – and save for a retirement that isn’t handed to them on a plate.

    While the Duke and Duchess of Sussex fly backwards and forwards between the UK and Canada, perhaps they might like to ponder a few things:

    1. How to keep the plight of pension and investment scam victims in the headlines
    2. How to encourage the government to make financial regulation effective
    3. How to provide a law-enforcement system that ensures all scammers are jailed
    4. How to get the law changed to ensure HMRC pursues the perps rather than the victims
    5. Whether the pilot of their plane has lost his pension and hasn’t got his mind entirely on the job

    If Meghan and Harry do accept this challenge, they will have to accept that it won’t be easy. The scammers are determined, hard-nosed and hard-hearted criminals; the regulators are lazy and mostly asleep at the wheel; the police are over-stretched and under-resourced; the government hasn’t got a Scooby – and anyway can’t think beyond Brexit. This is evidenced by the fact that the moronic Chancellor Sajid Javid appointed arch FCA failure Andrew Bailey to govern the Bank of England. Boris Johnson was just as bonkers to endorse this ridiculous decision. When he told the Queen of the appointment, she should have given him a good slap round the earhole. (Mind you – she was probably a bit preoccupied about the company Uncle Andrew was keeping at the time, and she probably thought “oh well, at least Bailey isn’t a paedophile”).

    The biggest challenge in fighting pension and investment scams is how to help prevent further victims. The best way to do this is to keep the topic firmly in the public eye – and that means encouraging the press to keep the subject in the headlines (and not let it get shoved out of sight by trivia). The other important role that Meghan and Harry could play would be to ensure that politicians keep their promises. A couple of years ago Boris Johnson promised a group of his constituents that he would tackle pension scams. But nothing happened and now he is ignoring them. We all know he’s been a little busy recently, but leaving his own constituents hanging after promising he would help them is not acceptable.


    https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/pensions/article-7862039/Time-pensions-promise-Boris-PM-pledged-help-victims.html?ito=amp_twitter_share-related

    I remember being with two Ark victims at least five years ago and begging journalists at The Sunday Times and The Sun to run an article on the Ark scam.  They all said it wasn’t “sexy enough”.  Mark Atherton of The Times wrote a very good piece in The Times in 2014, but he was severely threatened and never wrote about pension scams again.  
    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/pension-scam-leaves-victims-in-debt-k33rlcs25wc

    Just think how many victims could have been prevented had the media done their duty and fully exposed the parties who caused and facilitated these scams since 2010.  Then think how many suicides and stress-related deaths could have been prevented.  Consider how much money could have been saved from destruction – and how many people could have been looking forward to a well-earned and comfortable retirement rather than abject poverty and misery. 

    In October 2019, The Mail’s Tom Kelly came to my office in Spain and spent several days with me.  I went through the whole history of Stephen Ward and Ark (followed by Capita Oak and more than a dozen others), as well as James Lau and Salmon Enterprises, Paul Baxendale-Walker, Peter Moat and Darren Kirby’s Continental Wealth Management.  I explained to Tom in detail how the flow of money works from the ceding pension providers: Aviva, Standard Life, Prudential, NHS, Police and Local Authorities etc., to the receiving schemes; what the difference between personal and DB pensions is and how the whole bogus occupational scheme fraud worked.  Most important, we went through how hidden commissions and high-risk, toxic investments often destroy victims’ funds – as well as the life bonds such as OMI, SEB, Generali, Friends Provident, RL360 which lock investors in to entirely unnecessary, inflexible and expensive offshore bonds – AND PAY FAT COMMISSIONS TO THE UNQUALIFIED, UNREGULATED SCAMMERS.

    In case Meghan and Harry are still unsure whether patronage of an initiative to outlaw pension and investment scams is their cup of tea, I will share, yet again, the video which features the death of CWM victim Mark Davison:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYlxu8YOaAM

    Fleeced by Darren and Jody Kirby of his pension and house, CWM victim died alone in abject poverty.

    Laura Shannon of The Mail On Sunday attended Mark’s memorial service and interviewed dozens of further CWM victims in September 2019.  While five months pregnant, Laura made the journey to Denia, Alicante, in fierce heat – putting all other so-called investigative journalists who write about financial services (or not, as the case may be) to shame.  Not even stopping to recover from an arduous bus journey from the airport, she got stuck straight in and wrote an excellent piece:  https://pension-life.com/continental-wealth-management-plunder-in-paradise/

    Responsibility for reforming financial services and bringing culpable parties to justice may lie with governments, regulators, police and HMRC. But Royals could do their part too. Meghan and Harry: get stuck in to a worthy cause. Find out what the real world is really like for ordinary, decent, hard-working victims of pension and investment scams.


    Finally, I am enormously grateful to Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell for calling out our idiot Chancellor Sajid Javid over the appalling appointment of Andrew Bailey as Governor of the Bank of England.  Anyone who fancies dropping him a line can reach him here: mcdonnellj@parliament.uk or here: lowderh@parliament.uk

  • Blackmore Bond – yet another failed investment?

    Blackmore Bond – yet another failed investment?

    Blackmore Bond – yet another reason why only regulated advisers should be used for investment advice.

    The clear link between the recently-failed LCF Bond and Blackmore Bond through Surge Group remind us how important regulated investment advisers are.

    IPension life - Blackmore Global - failed fundsn the news again is the troubled Blackmore Group. This time we read that they have ‘temporarily’ closed their bond – the Blackmore Bond – to new business.  Just a few weeks ago, Blackmore Bond changed the wording of the sales material on this product.

    This new transparency revealed costs of 20% and the high risks involved in the bond. Prior to this, these details were well hidden in the small print.

    The Blackmore Bond transparency was not due to Blackmore Group having a yearning desire to be honest with their victims. It was all down to new FCA rules for being “clear, fair and not misleading” whenever an investment is promoted.

    Recently, there has been a lot of media coverage on high-cost, high-risk bond investments failing. One of these is London Capital & Finance (LCF). This unregulated bond collapsed and went into administration earlier in 2019. £236 million had been invested into it.  But investors had not been warned of the costs and risks involved.  Of this £236 million, over £50 million was paid to Surge Group for promotional and marketing services.

    1,200 victims duped into investing in the LCF bond

    have lost at least 80% of their money

    Fortunately for investors in the Blackmore Bond, it is still active. However, with such high promotional and marketing costs, the bond needs to be very successful indeed to overcome the initial 20% charges – most of which were paid to Surge.

    In relation to the closure of their bond, Blackmore Group state on their website:

    We have achieved our fundraising goals for this tax year and are not currently taking in new investment.  We will be introducing our next offering in the following tax year, so please watch this space for future announcements.

    Pension life - Blackmore Global - failed fundsAnother questionable investment from the Blackmore Group is the Blackmore Global Fund.

    The Blackmore Global Fund has been heavily criticised and also featured on BBC 4 You and Yours. The fund saw 1,000 victims conned into this expensive, illiquid and high-risk UCIS. It is illegal to promote UCIS funds to retail investors in the UK. They are certainly not suitable investments for a pension fund.

    David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services was one of the promoters of the Blackmore Global Fund. Vilka invested many of his UK-resident clients into this unsuitable fund. Undoubtedly, he was paid fat commissions for these investments. Unregulated and unqualified, Vilka was no doubt lining his own pockets, instead of doing what was best for his clients.

    Vilka lied to his clients, claiming to be fully regulated.  He transferred his UK-based victims’ pensions into the Optimus Retirement Benefit Scheme No.1 QROPS.  Much of this money was invested into the Blackmore Global fund.

    The connection between Blackmore Group’s Bond and London Capital & Finance (LCF) is Surge – a marketing agent. The LCF bond was promoted by Surge until it collapsed in December 2018.

    After LCF collapsed, Surge went on to promote the Blackmore Bond.  This promotion was done using ISA-rating websites.

    London Capital & Finance is not the only failed investment in recent years. Other failures include Axiom with £120m worth of investors’ funds (£30m of which was with life offices FPI and OMI); LM £456m (£90m with FPI and OMI); and Premier New Earth (NERR) £207m (£62m with FPI and OMI).

    The new transparency demanded by the FCA is much needed.

    Unfortunately, it won’t change the fact that well over one billion pounds have been lost between LCF, Axiom, LM and NERR. We are still left wondering why the regulators have not taken a tougher stance on restricting the promotion of such UCIS funds. The FCA’s limp stance is especially worrying when the promoters of these high-risk bonds and funds are targeting UK retail investors.

    All these failures and losses should remind both regulators and consumers that only regulated firms should be used for investment advice.

  • 20% Black Hole in Blackmore Global

    20% Black Hole in Blackmore Global

    Much like a black hole in Space, the Blackmore Global Fund and Blackmore Bond will swallow up victims’ savings – and never spit them out again.

    20% Black Hole in Blackmore Global

    It is no secret that we have little confidence in the Blackmore Global Group run by Phillip Nunn and Patrick McCreesh – two of the scammers who promoted Capita Oak and earned nearly £1 million from providing “leads” for the cold callers.  Capita Oak is now under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office, and Nunn McCreesh’s nefarious activities were investigated and reported on by the Insolvency Service.

    To confirm our suspicions that Nunn and McCreesh’s Blackmore Global Fund and Bond are not just high-risk and illiquid crap (and – of course – totally unsuitable for pensions or anyone with less money than sense), they have announced that 20% of your money could go towards paying for the “costs of the investment”.  To put that into plain English, any of the unregulated scammers who promote and distribute the Blackmore investments are earning 20% in commission.

    This new-found “transparency” by Blackmore is neither a courtesy to their customers, nor evidence of voluntary honesty.  Rather, it is a reaction to the FCA´s new rules for being “clear, fair and not misleading” .

    Bond review reported on this and noted that prior to this forced change, Blackmore Global´s website could be read as:

    “Capital Protection” and “Income Certainty”. Immediately below these phrases, in letters half the size, were the words:

    “Capital at risk | Please read our risk section. Illiquid and non-transferable. Not FSCS

    This change is in connection with Nunn and McCreesh’s Blackmore Global Bond.  Their Blackmore Global Fund has already featured heavily in the press with criticisms about its costs and unsuitability for pensions. BBC 4 You and Yours did a feature on the fund back in January 2018, finding that an unregulated adviser – David Vilka of Square Mile International Financial Services – invested many of his QROPS clients into this unsuitable fund – which undoubtedly will have paid him fat commissions.

    THE BLACKMORE GLOBAL FUND IS A UCIS (UNREGULATED, COLLECTIVE, INVESTMENT SCHEME) WHICH IS ILLEGAL TO PROMOTE TO UK RESIDENTS. Yet, David Vilka – who had no investment license – promoted it and Nunn and  McCreesh accepted the many investments into it from him.

    What is similar in both the Blackmore Global Fund and Bond, is the lack of transparency from the start. With the fund, there was also a ten-year lock-in, which was in the small print and not mentioned to the pension investors at the time of signing over their pensions to the scammers. Some of the members were nearly 60, meaning that they were unable to access their money when they retired.

    The Bond, up until now, has had no transparency on its charges – and the risk factors were most definitely hidden.

    The confirmation of a 20% commission charge (to the scammers who promote and distribute this risky, expensive, opaque investment) comes as a welcome dribble of transparency.  However, it is still unclear as to how – after this huge payment – Blackmore investors will ever be able to recoup the initial costs and then start to make some headway on their investment.

    Bond Review explains this well:

    “In slightly simplified terms, if Blackmore raises £10,000 from an investor in its 3 year bonds paying 7.9% per year, and pays out 20% in commission, it now needs to turn £8,000 into £12,370 to repay the investor in full, representing a 55% return over 3 years – or 15.6% per year.

    For its 5 year bonds paying 9.9%, the return required to turn £8,000 into £14,950 is 87% over 5 years, or 13.3% a year.

    Any investment targeting a return of 15.6% or 13.3% a year will inevitably be extremely high risk – and while Blackmore can diversify over many such projects, some of its projects will fail, which will lower the overall return.”

    This is not an investment to enter into lightly (or at all).  Blackmore Global showed net liabilities of £7 million on assets of £18 million in its last accounts – December 2017. Finances and accounts can dramatically shift in the short space of one year: a well-run, professional and ethical company could turn things around.  But with Blackmore Global failing for three years to even produce audited accounts on their fund, and lying about who their Investment Manager is, this hardly inspires any confidence at all.

    Another worrying thing about Blackmore Global is that they use Surge Financial to promote their toxic wares – and has paid this firm £5.1 million in one year for “marketing services”.  Surge Financial is run by Paul Careless, and was promoting the failed London Capital & Finance fund, which paid out an eye-watering 25% to the scammers who promoted and distributed their toxic wares.  Having conned thousands of victims into investing £236,000,000 into London Capital and Finance, the whole lot is now probably lost as the company has gone into liquidation.  But Surge Financial pocketed £60,000,000 in marketing this toxic fund – and is still promoting Blackmore Global.  The FCA declared that the marketing blurb was misleading, unfair and unclear – and it is obvious that the lies told in the glossy brochures duped thousands of people into losing their life savings.

    So, with Blackmore Global also using Surge Financial to source victims, and succeeding at the rate of £1.5m a month, it is a serious worry that there will be thousands more victims when the Blackmore Global shit hits the fan.

    Bond Review is quoted as saying:

    “That Blackmore Bond paid out up to 20% in commission is already known from Blackmore’s December 2017 accounts, which disclosed that £25.4m had been raised in the period (July 2016 to December 2017) and that £5.1m had been paid to Surge Financial for “sourcing investors loans and front and back office operations”  (almost exactly 20%).

    Could Blackmore Global go the same way as London Capital Finance?  We already know that the Blackmore Global fund has been used to scam hundreds of UK-resident victims out of their pensions using QROPS.  We also know that few of these victims have had their money back – and that there is zero disclosure as to where the money has gone.

    Just remember: there are perfectly-good, regulated funds out there – with extremely low charges, zero commissions to scammers, and excellent performance history (openly reported in the public domain).  People don’t need to put their hard-earned savings in black holes such as Blackmore which don’t even disclose what the underlying assets are.