Tag: LONDON QUANTUM

  • AWT’S NEXT CHALLENGE: NEGLIGENT CEDING PROVIDERS – STARTING WITH LGPS

    AWT’S NEXT CHALLENGE: NEGLIGENT CEDING PROVIDERS – STARTING WITH LGPS

    Shedding a tear or two at the departure of tPR’s Head of Willy Waggling

    Bye bye Tinky Winky.  Good luck and have fun at LGPS!

    His next challenge will be to lead by example and ensure negligent ceding providers compensate their victims whose pensions were transferred into scams.  And he can start with LGPS as a shining example so the rest can follow.

    As Tinky Winky sails off into the sunset and leaves his regulatory willy waggling duties behind, his first mission is to understand the other side of the coin: the transfer of £millions from secure pensions into the trousers of the scammers.  He will now see with a fresh pair of eyes how ineffective tPR has been – and how negligent the ceding providers were.

    Winky is going to have quite a mess to clean up when he gets to LGPS – so he had better make sure he takes Noo Noo with him.

    Will probably need more than 1 Noo Noo – in different sizes for all the mess at LGPS

    And I am sure he is going to be cheerfully looking forward to working even more closely with me from now on.

    On June 19th, the Secretary of the Ark Class Action – Mrs. G – will be in the High Court as the Representative Beneficiary for the Ark victims challenging Dalriada Trustees’ Beddoe application.  Dalriada, appointed by tPR in May 2011, have already spent around 15% of the £30 million Ark fund.  They are now seeking the court’s permission and directions to use even more of the victims’ funds to take legal action against them to recover £11 million worth of liberation loans. This will result in financial ruin for most of the victims – many of whom will lose their homes.  HMRC say the loans will remain taxable even if they are repaid so there is the real possibility that members will face two sets of crippling proceedings.

    Mrs. G and the other Ark victims – originally 487 of them but now significantly fewer as some have died (some as a result of taking their own lives) – became victims because HMRC and tPR took way too long to take action to suspend the schemes.  Also, the schemes were registered negligently in the first place – tPR allowed fourteen occupational Ark schemes to be registered by the same person without there being evidence of any intention or chance of the sponsoring employer being a bona fide employer.

    Between August 2010 and August 2011, dozens of personal and occupational pension providers cheerfully handed over £30 million to the scammers with utter incompetence, no due diligence and complete disregard for all the dozens of warnings which had been put out by HMRC and tPR for many years.

    In particular, these negligent ceding providers ignored this one issued by tPR Chair David Norgrove on 13.7.2010 just before Ark was launched:  “Any administrator who simply ticks a box and allows the transfer, post July 2010, is failing in their duty as a trustee and as such are liable to compensate the beneficiary.”

    I shall be looking forward to my next meeting with Tinky Winky because he will be able to bring a wealth of first-hand knowledge and experience to the table.  I will probably be bringing Mrs. G to the meeting with me.  Because guess who her negligent ceding provider was?  Yep, you guessed – LGPS.

    BACKGROUND TO THE NEGLIGENCE OF CEDING PROVIDERS SUCH AS LGPS:

    The Ark schemes were launched in 2010 by – among others – Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions S.L. and Premier Pension Transfers Ltd.  The six Ark schemes had been registered by HMRC and the Pensions Regulator with no due diligence by either to establish whether the schemes had been set up with the specific purpose of operating pension liberation; whether they were bona fide occupational pension schemes set up by a sponsoring employer which intended to trade and provide employment; whether there was a competent trustee and board of trustees in place; whether there was a clear Statement of Investment Principles or whether there was ever any realistic prospect of the schemes providing member benefits.

    At around the same time, a multi-million pound occupational pension scam was being vigorously promoted by James Lau of Wightman Fletcher McCabe while the administrators/trustees of the scheme, Andrew Meeson and Peter Bradley, were under criminal investigation for cheating the Public Revenue (and were subsequently jailed).  Also, former barrister, solicitor and porn star Paul Baxendale-Walker was promoting a whole series of liberation scams unhindered by the authorities – despite having been firmly in the spotlight since 2007 as a passionate advocate of liberation.  And KJK Investments/G Loans was a further liberation scheme flourishing at around the same time, having been started in 2009.

    By the time Ark was getting well underway, tPR (formerly OPRA) was fully aware that liberation scams were proliferating and that the feeble warnings they had made back in 2002 about scams which had been operating as far back as 1997 had reached neither the public nor the industry effectively.  In 1999, tPR had been investigating two scammers – Stephen Russell and William Ferguson – for a £6m pension fraud.  The pair were jailed for five years in 2003.

    In fact, tPR were fully aware that since 1999 pension scams were on the increase, and yet did not make it clear to ceding pension trustees what their statutory obligations were in respect of transferring victims into scams. On 13.7.2010, tPR Chair David Norgrove stated that: “Any administrator who simply ticks a box and allows the transfer, post July 2010, is failing in their duty as a trustee and as such are liable to compensate the beneficiary.”  But pension trustees claim they never read that message (let alone heeded it) and that it was neither publicised nor distributed.  Further, in the same year Tony King, the Pensions Ombudsman, reported that he had “found that pension trustees failed in carrying out serious fiduciary responsibilities to others in circumstances in which the law specifically states that they should not be protected from liability.”  And still tPR did nothing.  And the Pension Schemes Act 1993 was not amended to reflect the urgent need to protect the public.

    The Scorpion Campaign was launched by tPR in 2013 after fifteen years of failing to warn the public sufficiently, and omitting to make it clear to trustees what their statutory obligations were to pension scheme members.  During this period, the pension scam industry matured into a deadly serious and well organised large-scale operation in the UK, with many new “players” coming into the arena having been trained by Stephen Ward and other founders and pioneers of early scams.

    It was – by the time Scorpion dribbled weakly and ineffectually into the arena – well known to tPR what the typical characteristics of pension scams were and what phrases and claims were habitually being made by the scammers to dupe their victims into signing over their gold-plated pensions into worthless, toxic schemes and being financial ruined.  Among the many key phrases (such as “your pension is frozen”; “tax-free loan”; “guaranteed 8% returns” etc.), was the most powerful of all: “the scheme is HMRC approved”.  There was, of course, no such thing as HMRC were as guilty of lazy, box-ticking negligence as the culpable ceding provider trustees.  But to this day, tPR has done nothing to dispel this myth, and in fact even continues to help the scammers by using the same incorrect phrase on its own website: If you are required to register a scheme with TPR that does not require HMRC approval, please contact us.”

    Even by the time tPR had published the feeble Scorpion campaign in February 2013, the scammers acknowledged this was having a negligible effect on their various scams, and merely moved the goalposts a little to avoid detection.  Capita Oak, Henley and Westminster continued to operate successfully beyond February 2013, but only a few ceding pension trustees either noticed Scorpion at all or took any steps to put into practice the minimal due diligence suggested by Scorpion.

    In the full knowledge that Stephen Ward was one of the most prolific pension liberation scammers, tPR took no action to suspend any schemes in which he was involved.  As a consequence, in August 2014, a Police officer was scammed out of his Police Pension by Ward’s Dorrixo Alliance and into the toxic London Quantum scheme.  In fact, far from having any widespread effect, the multitude of scams continue to this day unaffected by tPR’s dismal attempts to protect and inform the public.

    PENSIONS REGULATOR’S OBLIGATIONS AND OBJECTIVES:

    According to their own website, tPR’s statutory objectives are set out in legislation and include promoting and improving understanding of the good administration of work-based pensions to protect member benefits.  These objectives are detailed below with notes in bold.

    • to protect the benefits of members of occupational pension schemes tPR has failed to do this and as a result of repeated failures over a period of more than fifteen years has facilitated the scamming of thousands of victims out of millions of pounds’ worth of occupational pensions and into millions of pounds’ worth of tax liabilities
    • to promote, and to improve understanding of the good administration of work-based pension schemes tPR made no effort to work with administrators and trustees of schemes such as Royal Mail; local authorities; the NHS, the Police etc., to help them improve their understanding of how to avoid transferring victims into scams
    • to reduce the risk of situations arising which may lead to compensation being payable from the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) Through multiple failings over a period of more than fifteen years, tPR has exposed the PPF to huge amounts of compensation claims. This is paid for by the ethical, compliant sector of the financial services industry who are understandably deeply unhappy that they have to bear the cost of tPR’s negligence and omissions
    • to maximise employer compliance with employer duties and the employment safeguards introduced by the Pensions Act 2008 tPR has done nothing to ensure that occupational pension schemes have a bona fide employer that either trades or employs anybody – or even exists at all

    One thing which tPR omits to state as being one of its obligations or objectives, is to take action to prevent pension scams in the first place by carrying out due diligence on the trustees, administrators or sponsors of a scam before registering it.  In fact, it is clear from evidenced facts, that what should have been simple common sense in terms of basic, obvious vigilance and diligence, was not done.  No questions were asked; no checks were made; no basic suspicions were raised.  There is no evidence that anybody at tPR ever had the intelligence to ask questions such as whether schemes repeatedly administered by Stephen Ward or his accomplice Anthony Salih and registered to 31 Memorial Road posed any risks to the public.

    Over the past couple of years, numerous “whistle blowing” reports have been made to tPR by members of the Class Action but they have been studiously ignored.  At a meeting in April 2015, tPR were invited to work with (rather than against) the Class Action, but this too was ignored.  Also at this meeting, the Capita Oak case was discussed.  The Insolvency Service subsequently wound up the trustee of Capita Oak, Imperial, but tPR has taken no action to protect the members’ interests and has left 300 victims facing the loss of £10.8 million worth of pension transfers which were 100% invested in Store First store pods (now arguably worthless).  The Henley and Westminster victims are facing a similar fate with zero intervention by tPR.

    In 2014, evidence of Stephen Ward’s pension scam portfolio was handed to HMRC – including numerous occupational schemes and a pension trustee company: Dorrixo Alliance (registered at 31 Memorial Road, Worsley).  However, neither HMRC nor tPR carried out any due diligence to see how many scams were under the trusteeship of Dorrixo and the toxic London Quantum scheme slipped through yet another gaping hole in the net, leading to dozens of victims losing £ millions of pension funds (including final salary ones).

    Reverting back to 2010 when the most damning of tPR’s multiple failings started, hundreds of people were left to be scammed into the Salmon Enterprises scheme with no warnings by tPR that the administrators were under investigation for fraud, and thousands of people were left to be scammed into the various Baxendale-Walker and KJK Investments schemes.  Along with Ark, 2010/11 alone accounted for well over a quarter of a billion pounds’ worth of pension fund losses and crippling tax liabilities.  And this excludes the dozens of scams still being run by Stephen Ward to this day and which tPR continues to ignore.  In fact, it has recently been reported that pension scams are by now accounting for over £10 billion worth of losses so the 2010/11 figure may well be substantially higher in reality.

  • SCAMMERS ARE CRIMINALS – AND MUST BE PROSECUTED

    The Pensions Regulator’s Lesley Titcomb has now officially and publicly declared that

    scammers are criminals.

    This begs the urgent question: why have so few – if any – of them been prosecuted?  What we need now is all of the scammers behind bars and the keys thrown away.  The purpose of the recently-published ebook “Anatomy of a Pension Scam”

    is to get the message out there and warn the public; the financial services industry in the UK and offshore; governments; regulators; ombudsmen; crime agencies, HMRC; and the scammers that this huge financial crime will NO LONGER BE TOLERATED.  The authorities who have stood by and allowed this to happen have to snap out of their complacency, laziness and incompetence, and actually take some action to bring these criminals to justice.

    £11,000,000,000.  That is an awfully big number.  But this is what financial fraud cost thousands of victims in 2016 according to reported statistics.  How much of this is down to pension and investment scams is anybody’s guess; or whether that is an entirely separate and equally horrifying number is another possibility.  Either way, this does nobody any good and harms innocent, hard-working people on a huge scale.  It also compromises the very principle of saving for retirement and shakes confidence in the pensions and investment industry as a whole.

    Evidence suggests that in the past seven years, there have been many £ billions lost to pension and investment scams – there are no precise “official” figures.  But the dreadful fact is that the scammers who were targeting victims back in 2010, continued doing it in 2011; and 2012; and 2013; and 2014; and 2015, and 2016.  And they are still doing it today.  Happily and profitably.  And nobody has stopped them or brought them to account for the horrific financial damage and distress they have caused.

    It is hard to decide which is worse: the vicious, greedy, cold-hearted scammers or the feeble authorities who let them get away with it.  Repeatedly.  But it has to stop.  A military-style, zero tolerance campaign has to be waged against all the guilty parties until every last one of them is brought to justice.

    The tragic thing about these scams and the misery and financial ruin caused to so many thousands of victims is that this disaster was preventable.  HMRC were warned by the industry about the potential for scams if the role of compulsory professional trustee was removed pre 2006. In a letter of March 2004, Nick White, specialist pension solicitor warned:

    “It is essential that schemes offering self-administration and wide investment choice should have in place an independent person who has sufficient control of scheme assets to prevent abuse and sufficient knowledge and experience to know abuse when he sees it.

    That does not necessarily mean that the system of pensioneer trustees should be retained in its current form but, if it is abolished without an effective replacement, we envisage that within the next 5 years the degree of abuse of such schemes by both incompetent and dishonest individuals will:

    • further stain the reputation of pensions generally; and
    • severely embarrass the government responsible for letting it happen.

    Reputable professionals in the industry and the Government share a common aim of building a system of tax rules that is simple but is robust enough to last for a working lifetime without major overhaul. Such a system needs to contain adequate protections against abuse.”

    The warning was ignored.  And precisely what Nick White predicted would happen, happened.  And it will go on happening until and unless government, HMRC, regulators and police take responsibility for their failings and put in place robust measures to clean up the mess of the past and prevent future disasters.

    Nick White’s warning was brought to my attention by Martin Tilley who is director of technical services at Dentons Pension Management.  Martin has written some excellent blogs and articles on the subject of pension scams and my favourite has to be this one:

    http://www.retirement-planner.co.uk/9344/cleaning-up-pension-scams-with-soap-operas

    I am currently in the process of preparing a documentary series about pension and investment scams and I intend to incorporate Martin’s inspired suggestion that a scam can be acted out on screen to show the public exactly how it works.  I had in mind Greg Davies to play the role of the scammer:

    There are many victims who would be only too happy to help recreate the exact wording – both written and verbal – of the scammers’ pitch.  In fact, the ideal case to reconstruct would be the police officer who was scammed out of his police pension and into Stephen Ward’s London Quantum scheme by FCA-registered Gerard Associates (456234) and introducer Viva Costa International.  (London Quantum is now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees).

    Ward has helpfully recorded his enthusiasm for Osborne’s disastrous pensions “freedoms” in a filmed interview.  When asked who was better off as a result, he replied: “Everyone is better off, I certainly mean in relation to UK residents, and that’s because they are going to have greater freedom of choice in terms of how they provide their benefits in retirement age, if anyone is worse off its potentially members of defined benefit schemes, who it is likely, will not have this flexibility.”  The police officer who lost his police defined benefit pension to Ward’s scam could play himself and comment on what Ward (who was definitely better off) meant by “flexibility”.

  • Life at Pension Life Fighting Scams – Behind the Scenes

    nikki-behind-the-scenes

     

    My name is Nikki Mitchell.  Lets peep behind the scenes at life at Pension Life, fighting pension scams.  I’m the newest member of the team. I started in June 2016 – there was a lot to learn in six months.  I am PA to Angie, but most importantly I handle a wide variety of tasks.

    Angie has been defending people scammed out of their pensions since 2013.  My colleague Sue Halfyard’s role is member administration.  She completes all the essential documentation that we, HMRC, Dalriada Trustees and the solicitors need.  Sue also liaises with HMRC on the unauthorised payment tax appeals and helps Angie prepare for the Tax Tribunals. Elizabeth is our website and blog-writer and is currently on maternity leave.

    Our website is not only a place to inform people of the work we do, and how we can help people who have fallen foul of pension scammers, but it also serves as a platform to warn others about scammers, so that hopefully we can stop them losing their life savings.

    We are currently dealing with over 30 different schemes:

    Ark; Axiom UP; Barret and Dalton; Baxendale Walker; Capita Oak; Confiance; Continental Wealth Management; EEA/Concept Trustees; Elysian Fuels/SIPPS; Evergreen QROPS; Headforte; Henley; Holborn Assets/Gower Pensions; Holbrook Capital; KJK Investments; Ledger and Simmons; London Quantum; Malvern; Mendip; RL360; Hansard/Trafalgar; LM; Optimus Retirement Benefit Scheme No 1; Peak Performance; Pennines; Salmon Enterprises; Store First SIPPS; Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund/STM Fidecs; Tudor Capital Management; Westminster; Windsor Pensions.

    Sadly, most months we hear about new ones.

    Day to day work in the office consists of managing Angie’s crowded diary, keeping the accounts, liaising with members to keep them abreast of new developments, preparing scheme and member files for the legal teams, responding to the demands of HMRC and various trustees. I also work on campaigns to raise awareness of pension scams, or to campaign for changes in the law to protect pension investments.

    My first few weeks passed in a whirl of new jargon and abbreviations – UTR, Q10, MPVA EIS, PCLS, etc. Some days I spend the day designing and completing databases with members’ information for the solicitors.  Other days I’m number crunching the transfer and loan amounts for an individual scheme.  Some days we all have to change direction as there has been an urgent development. A recent example of this was the Standstill Agreements sent out by Dalriada – the trustees of the Ark Pension schemes. Our first member received an agreement in August 2016.  We have warned all the members that they will be receiving one, and worked with our solicitors to redraft the agreement to protect the members’ interests.

    Being a small, busy team in a hectic office, there is never a dull moment.  Aside from the daily nitty-gritty of the work, there are also the heart-breaking accounts of the members who have been scammed out of their pensions. Consequently, I have felt disbelief at the cruel contempt of the scammers. Reading members’ stories of how they were conned into investing their entire pensions or life savings into dodgy, illiquid schemes is utterly heart-breaking. Speaking to people who have lost everything – their homes, their marriages and their health – through the actions of these arrogant, greedy con-men fills me with horror.

    The greatest shock to me since joining Pension Life has been how the scammers have continually got away with fraud and theft for years.  Also, how ceding providers routinely transfer pensions with hardly even the most rudimentary checks. It has amazed me how so many different types of pension scams are allowed to be set up time and time again, with no thorough controls by HMRC or the regulators.  Moreover, I can’t understand why it takes so long for the scams to be shut down – long after they have been identified.

    We may be a small team here at Pension Life, but with the government’s recent realisation that cold calling needs to be outlawed and the consultation on pension scams:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/pension-scams

    we are hopeful that there may finally be light at the end of the tunnel for existing victims and jail for the scammers.

  • Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund

    TRAFALGAR MULTI ASSET FUND (SUSPENDED)

    After the disasters of failed pension schemes Capita Oak, Henley and Westminster (aggregate of £20 million lost to over 500 victims through investments in Store First store pods – wound up by the Insolvency Service), there are now concerns about the suspended Trafalgar Multi Asset Fund of £20 million.  The board of directors have published the below report and are investigating how this fund came to be mostly invested in one asset: Dolphin property development loans.

    In fact, Dolphin was one of the assets of Stephen Ward’s London Quantum scam which is now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees (appointed by the Pensions Regulator).  Dalriada stated a year ago that Dolphin was not a suitable investment for a pension scheme and yet the investment manager of Trafalgar has invested most of the fund in Dolphin.

    The unlicensed adviser to the victims was also the investment manager of the Trafalgar fund.  The advisory firm, Global Partners Limited – which then changed its name to The Pension Reporter – was an agent of a firm called Joseph Oliver and was not licensed to give pension or investment advice.

    Trafalgar Multi-Asset Fund (Suspended) shareholders report (excerpts):

    Board’s significant concerns with respect to the conduct of the Investment Manager:

    • Repeated and consistent failure to carry out and maintain records of proper due diligence with respect to investments
    • Making investments which involve inappropriate or unjustified risk, particularly in allowing the over-exposure to two counterparties and allowing loans to suspected related parties without any disclosure of interests to the Board
    • Repeated and consistent failure to ensure that the position of the Fund is properly protected by having appropriate, properly executed legal documentation in place
    • Repeated failure to provide the Board with relevant information with respect to investment activity e.g. variations to the arrangements with investments in Dolphin and Quantum
    • Inability to answer straightforward questions put forward by the Auditors
    • Providing misleading and even dishonest information to the Board
    • Transacting business on behalf of the Fund knowing that the Board had suspended subscriptions and redemptions
    • Failure to make investments which are appropriate for the Fund

    The question must also be asked of STM Group WHY DID THEY ACCEPT BUSINESS FROM AN UNLICENSED ADVISER AND ALLOW THEIR VICTIMS TO HAVE 100% OF THEIR PENSIONS INVESTED IN A FUND WHICH WAS A SCAM?  THE TRAFALGAR MULTI ASSET FUND WAS A UCIS WHICH IS ILLEGAL TO BE PROMOTED TO UK RESIDENTS.  STM ARE ENTIRELY NEGLIGENT AND CULPABLE FOR ALLOWING THIS SCAM TO HAPPEN AT ALL.

  • London Quantum Pension Scam: How it worked

    London Quantum Pension Scam: How it worked

    HOW THE LONDON QUANTUM PENSION SCAM  WORKED

    The London Quantum pension scam was the brainchild of Stephen Ward.  Ward’s firm Dorrixo Alliance was the trustee and administrator of the scheme.  Dorrixo was also trustee for a number of other pension liberation scams such as Headforte and Southlands which were used for “loans” when Evergreen got removed from the HMRC QROPS list.

    London Quantum victims were promised “healthy” returns and the scheme is now in the hands of Dalriada Trustees who were appointed by the Pensions Regulator in 2015.

    THE IDENTITY OF THE MAIN PLAYERS

     Stephen Ward of Dorrixo Alliance (trustee/administrator)

    Gerard Associates

    Viva Costa International

    HOW THE MAIN PLAYERS WERE INVOLVED

     Ward’s Dorrixo Alliance was the trustee/administrator.  Gerard Associates https://www.gerardassociates.co.uk/ (website undergoing “routine maintenance”) provided (or didn’t provide) advice.  VCI were the introducers.

    WHAT THE PENSIONS REGULATOR SAID ABOUT THE SCAM

    TPR gave Stephen Ward a stern “dressing down” over the London Quantum scam and warned all pension savers to be extra careful when considering transferring away from their existing pension, after publishing details of governance failings in the London Quantum Retirement Benefit Scheme.

    The London Quantum pension scam brought into sharp focus how people should remember that promises of high and/or guaranteed investment returns that sound too good to be true are often scams.

    While investigating this scam, the regulator discovered that more than £5.8 million worth of victims’ pension funds had been put at risk between August 2014 and May 2015.

    Nicola Parish, Director of Case Management at TPR, said: “The concerns we received about the scheme highlighted worrying factors regarding its governance.

    “This case should act as a reminder to all savers, pension scheme trustees and administrators to remain alert to the dangers of transferring pension savings in order to access unrealistically high returns often associated with exotic sounding investment opportunities.”

    TPR reported that, as trustee, Dorrixo – run by Stephen Ward and his sidekick Anthony Salih, had a “serious disregard to the obvious risks that members might be misled about the true nature of the investments held by the scheme”.  The regulator also exposed other aspects to Ward’s scam which included:

    • Risky and illiquid investments
    • Lack of documentation
    • Introducer fees – The scam was promoted to victims by introducers and cold callers, who were paid up to 30%.
    • Advisers – There was no auditor was appointed to the scheme and Stephen Ward did not take proper advice on the investments.

    Clearly, the London Quantum scam was never set up for the benefit and in the interests of the victims, but in the interests of Stephen Ward and his team of scammers to earn the maximum amount of commission out of the toxic, illiquid, high-risk investments.

     

  • London Quantum – Dorrixo Alliance Pension Trustee

    London Quantum – Dorrixo Alliance Pension Trustee

    Car Parking spaces are NOT suitable assets for a pension fund

    DORRIXO Alliance is a pension trustee firm (for London Quantum among various others) run by Stephen Ward and his sidekick Anthony Salih

    THE WAY THE SCAM WORKED

    Dorrixo was a pension scheme administration and trustee company set up by Stephen Ward.  It was the trustee for at least a couple of schemes – possibly dozens or more (including London Quantum placed in the hands of Dalriada by tPR in June 2015).

    THE IDENTITY OF THE MAIN PLAYERS

    Stephen Ward and Anthony Salih

    HOW THE MAIN PLAYERS WERE INVOLVED

    Trustees/administrators for a number of pension schemes operating either liberation or questionable investments or both.  The victims first started to be scammed into the London Quantum pension scam in August 2014.

    Dorrixo Alliance was the trustee/administrator for a number of pension liberation scams operated by Stephen Ward after Ark and Evergreen got shut down.  When Ward moved away from liberation scams he moved into toxic pension assets which paid handsome investment introduction commissions.

    Dorrixo Alliance was trustee for the London Quantum Occupational Pension Scheme – later London Quantum Retirement Benefit Scheme .  This scam was placed in the hands of Dalriada Trustees in 2015. London Quantum was a bogus occupational scheme and had 96 members with a total of £6.8 million.  The sponsoring employer was Quantum Investment Management Solutions LLP and the administrator was Stephen Ward’s Premier Pension Transfers Ltd.

    The advisory firm behind this scam was an associate of Stephen Ward’s – FCA-registered Gerard Associates, run by Gary Barlow.  A herd of “introducers” was responsible for scamming victims into London Quantum included Viva Costa International, Go BMV, Baird Dunbar, What Partnership.

    The assets of the scheme included Dolphin GmbH, Best International (ABC Corporate Bond and Dubai Car Parks), The Resort Group, Quantum PYX Managed FX Fund, Reforestation Group Ltd, Park First, Colonial Capital Group  plc.  None of these were suitable for a pension fund.

     

    The London Quantum scam was Suspended by tPR and placed in the custody of Dalriada Trustees in June 2015.