Tag: PREMIER PENSION SOLUTIONS

  • RESPONSE TO GOVERNMENT CONSULTATION ON PENSION SCAMS AND COLD CALLING

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    RESPONSE TO GOVERNMENT CONSULTATION ON PENSION SCAMS AND COLD CALLING BY ANGIE BROOKS OF PENSION LIFE 13.2.2017

    The Government consultation has been copied below,with my comments and answers in bold.

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    Because of the size of individual pension pots, and because people do not have to engage with their savings until much later in life, pension savings are an attractive target for fraudsters. Pension scams can cost people their life savings, and leave people facing retirement with limited income, and little or no opportunity to build their pension savings back up.

    Yes – and the government, HMRC, the Pensions Regulator and the FCA have known this for more than fifteen years but have done little to attempt to combat this scourge effectively.

    The government takes the threat of pension scams very seriously. Rubbish.  The government has done nothing to help combat the problem and indeed George Osborne’s Pensions “Freedoms” made the problem worse. 

    The government is committed to protecting people by helping them to avoid putting their money into scams (including through risk warnings, high profile media campaigns, and free and impartial guidance from Pension Wise and the Pensions Advisory Service; and by pursuing fraudsters wherever possible. A statement that the government is “committed” is very different to evidence that the government has actually been committed and has done something effective.  Evidence shows that the government has done absolutely nothing.  Furthermore, the government has refused to engage for more than three years and has referred to the victims of pension scams as “fools”.  Indeed, it has recently come to my attention that even the Pensions Regulator has claimed that “pensioners had “taken advantage” of the pensions system by accessing money which is not their money.”

    1.1 Evidence of problem

    The models used by pension fraudsters often span departmental and agency boundaries and can be complex and multifaceted. In order to tackle pension scams, the government established Project Bloom, a cross-government taskforce led by the Pensions Regulator (TPR) and comprising of government, regulators and law enforcement agencies; to monitor trends, share intelligence on emerging threats, and help co-ordinate action to tackle pension scams.  Project Bloom should be re-named Project Wilt.  It achieved nothing.  The scammers are still out there, scamming away quite happily.  There is no evidence that Project Bloom ever did anything effective to stop or prevent scams and scammers.

    Project Bloom has been acting to raise awareness of pension scams, in particular through TPR’s “Scorpion”Scorpion achieved very little and the Financial Conduct Authority’s “Scam smart” campaigns. Scam Smart achieved nothing.  However, it has become increasingly clear that more direct intervention is necessary to curb the threat of pension scams in the UK:

    • research by the Money Advice Service 1 suggests that there could be as many as 8 scam calls every second – the equivalent of 250 million calls per year. Citizens Advice have calculated that 10.9 million consumers have received unsolicited contact about their pension since April 2015 2 This doesn’t make sense.  Have there been 250 million or 10.9 million scam calls.  Get the facts and figures right please.
    • there were 30,000 ‘Defined Contribution’ scheme transfers in 2015/16, representing £1 billion of assets. Industry estimates suggest that fraudsters could be behind as many as one in 10 pension transfer requests 3 And the State has done nothing about it.  This is a disgrace.
    • individuals reported nearly £19 million in suspected pension liberation fraud between April 2015 and March 2016 – twice as much as for the same period in 2014-15 Obviously.  Pensions “Freedoms” helped the scammers enormously.  Did nobody ever think to question George Osborne’s pension “wisdom”?

    Pension investments are long-term, so many individuals may not recognise that they have been the victim of a pension scam until they seek to access their savings. There are also concerns that some suspected scams are under-reported to the police, or other law enforcement agencies. Victims of pension scams do report many cases to the police and other law enforcement agencies, but the police do absolutely nothing as it is “too difficult”.

    People may also be dissuaded from reporting pension scams, because they don’t want to acknowledge that an investment may be a scam, because they are embarrassed, or because they are worried about facing a tax charge for unauthorised pension access. And rightly so.  HMRC pursues the victims rather than the perpetrators.

    The government is working with HMRC, no it isn’t – the government has refused to engage despite many urgent requests

    Action Fraud which doesn’t exist and takes no action and the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau which isn’t interested through Project Bloom which achieves nothing, to encourage and enable the consistent reporting of pension scams data from firms, individuals, law enforcement agencies and regulators.  Ask the victims what they think about making reports: even a serving police officer has been begging the police for several years to take action over the loss of his police pension at the hands of a well-known serial scammer and they won’t (or can’t be bothered to) take any action.

    2.1 Definition of a pension scam

    The government previously considered pension scams to be broadly “attempts to release funds from HMRC registered pension schemes in an unauthorised way”. However, in light of the pension freedoms, the government believes that fraudsters’ focus may shift to a wider category of activities, through which to perpetuate scams involving pension savings. Project Bloom has therefore developed a definition that focuses on a wider set of activity that it believes should be considered as pension scams, namely:

    “The marketing of products and arrangements and successful or unsuccessful attempts by a party (the “scammer”) to:

    • release funds from an HMRC registered pension scheme, often resulting in a tax charge that is normally not anticipated by the member
    • persuade individuals over the age of 55 to flexibly access their pension savings in order to invest in inappropriate investments
    • persuade individuals under 55 to transfer their pension savings in order to invest in inappropriate investments

    where the scammer has misled the individual in relation to the nature of, or risks attached to, the purported investment(s), or their appropriateness for that individual investor.”

    The techniques used to perpetuate pension scams include:

    • high pressure sales tactics, including cold calling
    • attempts to discredit the individual’s existing arrangement
    • ignoring or claiming to have dealt with the tax consequences
    • promises of ‘guaranteed’ high returns
    • descriptions that do not properly portray the risks of the investments
    • overseas investments that lack local regulation or compensation if things go wrong

    Question 2.1

    Does the definition in 2.1 above capture the key areas of consumer detriment caused by pension scam activity?

    Answer 2.1

    This answer is “not too badly” and shows that the parties who comprise Project Bloom have done at least some homework – but it does leave out some key issues.  The players and “controlling minds” in the scams fall broadly into two categories: introducers and advisers. 

    The ordinary man in the street does not understand that an introducer is not a professionally-qualified or regulated individual or firm – but a sales agent who has half learned some of the jargon and who has an impressive leather-bound folder with glossy brochures and forms.

    The adviser – or the individual or firm which purports to be an adviser – often works in the background to sign off “advice” but is rarely (if ever) properly regulated to provide advice. 

    Sometimes the introducer and adviser are separate entities, and sometimes they are actually the same but appear to be separate.  They usually have agreed terms with high-risk funds which pay handsome investment introduction commissions and sometimes they even have their own funds.

    There are many lies told about the real nature of the transfer – and, of course, these lies are only discovered after it is too late.  Ordinary people don’t understand what questions they ought to be asking and even if they did, they probably wouldn’t understand the answers.

    Question 2.2

    Are there any other factors that should be considered as signs of a scam?

    Answer 2.2

    Very often, the individuals involved in the scam have previous history.  If the intended victim knew where to look or who to ask/consult then he or she might find out that the charming, plausible and credible person posing as a respectable pension adviser is actually a serial scammer.

    Scammers never seem to turn over a new leaf, but just devise new and more innovative ways of scamming.  However, if a scamming dictionary were to be produced, there are some key phrases which the scammers use habitually:

    ·         Your pension is frozen

    ·         A QROPS will be more tax efficient

    ·         You can have greater investment flexibility and gain higher returns

    ·         Our firm is fully regulated

    ·         I am fully qualified

    ·         We are going to put your pension into an award-winning fund

    ·         HMRC approved

    ·         tPR approved

    ·         Approved

     

    3. Banning cold calling in relation to pensions

    3.1 The issue

    Cold calling is the most common method used to initiate pension fraud. In 2013, 97% of cases brought to Citizen’s Advice involving pensions liberation scams stemmed from cold calling 5. Age UK found that 53% of people age 65+ believe they have been contacted by fraudsters. Additionally, the 87% of unsolicited contact reported to the Financial Conduct Authority was via telephone 6. As discussed in Chapter 1, the scale of the problem is not reflected in current statistics due to under reporting.

    Fraudsters often call individuals posing as legitimate businesses and can be very convincing, even offering false FCA registration numbers (which itself amounts to a criminal offence) and professional looking marketing materials. Additionally, consumers are highly likely to miss the signs of a scam; a Citizens Advice poll found that 9 in 10 people would miss the common warning signs of a scam such as unrealistically high or guaranteed investment returns, or offers of a free pension review. These factors combined mean that engaging in conversation with a cold caller about pensions can pose a significant risk to consumers.

    The government has chosen to consult on a ban on cold calling in relation to pensions as a priority as, for many people, their pension is their single biggest asset (aside from their property), on which they will depend throughout their retirement. Pension scams can have devastating consequences such as the loss of an entire pension fund, and the chances of recovering these losses are very low, leaving victims without the means to fund their retirement. Banning cold calling in relation to pensions will cut off scams at the source, encouraging consumers to put the phone down immediately.

    Question 3.1

    In your experience, how are consumers affected by cold calling about pensions? Do any consumers benefit from cold calling about pensions?

    Answer 3.1

    People who know about the dangers of cold calls are usually those who have already been scammed or know of someone who has been scammed.  Therefore, they know how to deal with the cold call. But the vast majority of the rest of the cold-call recipients, don’t know about the dangers of pension scammers because there has been no effective public warning and information campaign.  Few people are aware of the Pensions Regulator’s Scorpion campaign – or have even heard of the Pensions Regulator.

    3.2 The current rules on cold calling

    Currently, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) and Ofcom have powers to regulate cold calls to an extent, but they do not have the powers to introduce a full ban.

    The FCA does ban some types of cold calls, and applies restrictions to others. The restrictions only apply to FCA authorised firms, so many cold calls will be outside of the scope of these rules. In relation to pension reviews, calls can be made if the recipient is an existing client who expects to receive such calls, or a prospective client in certain circumstances, for example if they have opted into calls.

    The ICO is responsible for the regulation of the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) 2003, and regulates unsolicited direct marketing calls which originate from the UK or are made from abroad on behalf of UK companies. The ICO can take enforcement action against organisations that, without consent, make automated and direct marketing calls to numbers registered with the Telephone Preference Service. Consent must be clear and informed. Consent can also be given to allow contact by third parties.

    Ofcom also has powers under sections 128 to 130 of the Communications Act 2003 to enforce against “persistent misuse” of electronic communications networks or services. Ofcom can exercise its powers to investigate silent or abandoned calls (which may have been intended to be direct marketing calls). If during the course of its investigations, Ofcom finds that the caller’s conduct could amount to persistent misuse (for example, by making silent and abandoned calls in accordance with section 128 of the Communications Act 2003), Ofcom have the power to issue a Civil Monetary Penalty of up to £2 million under the persistent misuse provisions.

    The government has taken a number of recent actions to tackle nuisance calls more widely, including

    • introducing a measure in the Digital Economy Bill, making it a requirement for the Information Commissioner to issue a statutory code of practice on direct marketing
    • amending the Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations (2003) (PECR) to require all direct marketing callers to provide Caller Line Identification
    • lowering the legal threshold at which the ICO may impose a monetary penalty on organisations breaching PECR
    • making it easier for the ICO to more effectively share information with Ofcom in relation to nuisance calls through an amendment to the Communications Act 2003

    Answer 3.2

    In other words, there is no current effective protection or sanction against cold callers.  And despite the scammers having used this tool in their arsenal of scamming weapons for well over six years, the government has done nothing about it.  The scammers know this and vast empires have evolved based on the widespread practice of harvesting databases and setting up cold-calling boiler rooms. 

    The same individuals and firms who were aggressively cold calling back in 2012 are still doing it very effectively today.  Meanwhile, the government sits back and does nothing.

    3.3 Banning cold calling in relation to pensions

    The government proposes to ban all cold calls in relation to pensions. This will be achieved through primary legislation.

    The proposed ban will send a clear message to consumers that no legitimate firm will ever cold call them regarding their pension, encouraging consumers to put the phone down on cold callers immediately. This will cut off the main mechanism used to persuade people that they are offering legitimate pension investments and services, and reduce the number of consumer requests to transfer to illegitimate schemes.

    The government will also give the ICO the ability to use their existing enforcement powers to impose civil sanctions on firms located or operating in the United Kingdom who breach the ban, including the power to issue fines of up to £500,000.

    Other agencies, including the police and the FCA already have wide ranging powers to tackle fraudulent activity. These agencies will continue to work to address the problem of pension scams.

    Answer 3.3

    This is, of course, very admirable and the sound of the slamming of the stable door will no doubt be welcomed by those who know about it – i.e. the victims for whom this ban is years too late.

    The “clear message” must, however, be broadcast widely and loudly.  It is no use passing a law if nobody knows about it – just as it was no use putting together the Scorpion Campaign when nobody had ever heard of the Pensions Regulator.

    The fines are a great idea, but none will ever be collected since the scammers’ cold-calling operations will simply move offshore.  But it will give the horse a good laugh.

    To state that the police and the FCA “have wide ranging powers to tackle fraudulent activity” is, however, pure nonsense.  The government should know better than to make a statement which is, effectively, a lie.  The FCA have repeatedly failed to take action against UK-based scammers – despite many reports and even several visits to their offices in the past couple of years.  Many police forces have received detailed reports of scams but there has only been one reported conviction and to my knowledge only one police officer is currently actively investigating a scammer.  Even a serving police officer who lost his police pension to one of the well-known serial scammers has spent several years desperately trying to get the police to take action against the scammers.  The police just can’t be bothered and they find pension scams just too difficult and complex to deal with.  It is much easier to chase after burglars who pinch a few hundred pounds’ worth of household contents than the scammers who get away with hundreds of millions of pounds of victims’ pension funds.

     

    3.4 The scope of the ban

    The government is proposing a ban with a wide scope to prevent it being circumvented by firms adapting their business models to avoid the ban. It is seeking views on the scope of the ban.

    Answer 3.4

    What the government must do is something which not only seeks to prevent future scams, but also secure convictions for ALL the previous scammers to send out the clear message that there is a ZERO TOLERANCE policy to scammers.

    As the cold calling outfits will move offshore to Gibraltar, the Isle of Man, Malta, Cyprus etc., the law must encompass all individuals and firms in the chain of which the cold calling operation is an integral part.  Let me explain what I mean: a UK-based, FCA-registered firm called Gerard Associates cold called a victim last year.  The victim’s pension was then transferred into a Maltese QROPS and invested in The Resort Group Cape Verde property.  Along the way, the victim received “advice” from Strategic Wealth/Gibro Wealth which is a firm regulated by the FCA for insurance mediation only – certainly not pension or investment advice.

    So the UK authorities have to work with the offshore authorities to bring all the people and firms in the chain to justice – including the pension trustees.  Just taking action against the cold callers is like just replacing one tyre on a car with four bald tyres.

    3.5 The scope of ‘in relation to pensions’

    The proposed ban is intended to catch various types of pension scams, including ‘free pension reviews’ and misleading offers of high return pension funds. The government has outlined below the sorts of phone conversations that it intends to fall within the scope of the ban:

    • offers of a ‘free pension review’, or other free financial advice or guidance
    • assessments of the performance of the individual’s current pension funds
    • inducements to hold certain investments within a pensions tax wrapper including overseas investments
    • promotions of retirement income products such as drawdown and annuity products
    • inducements to release pension funds early
    • inducements to release funds from a pension and transfer them into a bank account
    • inducement to transfer a pension fund
    • introductions to a firm dealing in pensions investments
    • offers to assess charges on the pension

    The conversations that the government intends to be within the scope of the ban include both inducements to transfer funds directly from a pension scheme to a scam vehicle, and to move the funds into a bank account. They also include calls that result in ‘hand-offs’ to other organisations involved in fraudulent behaviour. The government believes that this will ensure that the majority of pension scam models are within scope.

    The government does not have powers to take action against firms making calls from overseas, if the company is not registered in the UK. However, the strong message that a ban sends to consumers will prevent them from engaging with cold callers from overseas, protecting them indirectly.

    Question 3.2

    Do you agree that the scope of the ban should include the actions set out in paragraph 3.5 above? Are there any other activities that should fall within the scope of the proposed ban on pensions cold calling?

    Answer 3.2

    The government has completely missed the point.  There is a much wider picture:

    a.     UK regulators have not only got to start doing some actual regulating, but they have got to work with regulators in all QROPS jurisdictions

    b.      FCA-registered advisers with insurance mediation licenses who provide pension and investment advice must be sanctioned

    c.       FCA-registered firms who have been caught being involved at any level with a chain that involves cold calling must not only be sanctioned but struck off and prevented from operating. 

    d.      Individuals who have worked for or controlled firms mentioned in b and c above must be prevented from working in financial services at any level

    e.       Offshore firms and trustees involved in any scams – whether cold calling is involved or not – should be reported to their respective regulators

    f.       All those who have been involved in pension scams and/or cold calling must be prosecuted to send out a clear message that this is a crime which will not be tolerated

    g.      Individuals and firms promoting UCIS funds to UK retail investors must be prosecuted

    h.      The government and the police have got to understand that most – if not all – the currently operating scammers are the same people who have already scammed thousands of victims out of hundreds of millions of pounds.  And they have got away with it.  And they will continue to get away with it if the government and the police continue to do nothing.

    i.        HMRC are still registering scam schemes.  They failed to de-register schemes back in 2010 when they realised they were being used for nefarious purposes and they continue today to fail to de-register them.  As soon as a QROPS is found to be used for scamming purposes, it should be removed from the list and a serious question mark over the jurisdiction should be raised.

    j.        Ceding providers, who have got away with negligent and sloppy conduct for years, must be sanctioned for allowing transfers into obvious scam schemes.  The Pensions Regulator warned these trustees they should be liable to compensate their members for any damage suffered as a result of such failings, but failed to ensure this was a legally-enforceable obligation.

     

    3.6 Excluding legitimate interactions

    The proposal is not intended to apply to legitimate interactions, including where consumers have expressly requested information from a firm, or where an existing client relationship exists.

    In this context it is proposed that the meaning of a legitimate existing relationship would be similar to the concept of an ‘established existing client relationship’ as set out in FCA rules. FCA rules say that an established existing client relationship with a firm exists only where the consumer envisages receiving calls from them. If this approach was adopted, examples of callers who would not be in scope of the ban would be:

    • an individual’s current pension provider
    • pension providers holding funds from an individual’s previous employments
    • a financial adviser the individual has previously had appointments with

    If a consumer has not previously engaged directly with a firm, they reasonably would not expect to receive calls from them. Therefore, examples of callers who would not fall within the definition of an ‘existing client relationship’ and would be covered by the proposed ban would be:

    • a firm who has been passed a consumer’s details by a third party
    • a pension provider offering a deal on their products if the individual switches provider
    • a pensions adviser who has acquired the individual’s details from a public directory

    The government does not intend to change existing provisions which make it illegal to imitate an individual’s pension provider or an authorised firm.

    The proposed ban is also intended to prevent consumers who inadvertently ‘opt-in’ to receiving third party communications being targeted. While responses to express requests for a call from the consumer are not within scope of the proposal, the government will make it clear that failing to opt out of calls from third parties, or agreeing to standard terms that include provision for calls without separately expressing willingness to receive them, does not constitute an express request.

    Examples of calls that would be in response to an ‘express request’ could be:

    • a provider returning a call to a consumer who has left a voicemail, asking for further information on their products, after seeing an advert in the paper
    • a financial adviser calling a prospective client who has sent them an email enquiry through an adviser database

    Examples of calls that would not be in a response to an ‘express request’ could be:

    • calling a customer of an online shopping website who has opted to receive third party marketing calls
    • a call that follows a marketing letter in the post, which says that the individual will receive a call about their pension if they don’t opt out via text
    • a call to a consumer who has just purchased a financial product, where the terms and conditions for that product contained a clause stating that the firm can pass their details to other providers of financial products

    Question 3.3

    Do you agree that existing client relationships and express requests should be excluded from the proposed ban?

     

    Answer 3.3

    I think the above potentially opens the door to further abuse.  How would one prove that a person did or did not chose the opt out option?  It would be the victim’s word against the scammer’s.  The government has to remember that independent financial advisers are supposed to behave like solicitors and accountants – they wait for a client to come to them and instruct them.  The above is giving individuals and firms license to behave like snake oil salesmen.

    3.7 Electronic communications

    The government believes that phone calls are the form of communication that present the greatest risk to consumers. This is because pension scammers are able to draw consumers in and persuade them that they are legitimate more effectively over the phone, compared to via other forms of communication such as e-mails, which consumers can more easily disregard.

    However, the government appreciates that there may be a case for extending the proposal to all electronic communications, for example e-mail and text messages.

    Question 3.4

    What would the costs and benefits be of extending the proposed ban to include all electronic communications?

    Answer 3.4

    The Spanish Regulator – the CNMV – has gone to extraordinary lengths to detail all the different methods of communication used by the scammers (called “chiringuitos” in Spanish).  The UK should broaden the scope of the cold calling ban to include all of these (full translation of the CNMV Chiringuitos warning attached to the email sending this response):

    How CHIRINGUITOS work

    The channels used by scammers and boiler rooms to contact potential victims are no different from those that can be used legally by legitimate entities i.e. telephone, letters, e-mail, web pages etc.  The difference lies in the way the scammers use these channels, the type of messages they convey and the general approach to achieving their goals.

    The CHIRINGUITOS use databases (often obtained fraudulently) of people who, for example, have purchased a particular financial product, publication – or on occasion answered a survey about their tastes, interests and financial situation.

    Phone calls

    Cold calling is one of the CHIRINGUITOS’ favourite contact methods.  It allows them to directly exercise psychological pressure techniques.  Cold calling is by definition unexpected but is legal, and in fact authorized entities often use it as part of their promotional campaigns.  However, in the case of authorized entities, it is normal practice to call existing customers, so people know their data has been obtained legitimately.  If the answer to what is being offered is “no” this is accepted politely. By contrast, the CHIRINGUITOS do not usually settle for a NO.

     

    Mail

    High-quality leaflets which are sophisticated, inviting and promising.  These often request the recipients to contact them by filling out a form, calling by phone or by visiting their website.

    Internet, e-mail


    The great success of the Internet as a direct marketing tool allows advertisers to access a wide mass of recipients more cheaply than traditional media (phone, mail). This fact, coupled with the possibility of anonymity, has led to abuse of the medium, such as spam or indiscriminate emailing of unsolicited products bordering on illegality.  Recipient lists are often obtained unlawfully, in breach of data protection rules. Also, the address of origin of the messages are usually false, and also the subject headings are deliberately misleading.  Spanish law decrees that commercial communications should be identified as such and prohibits sending emails unless they have previously been requested or expressly authorized by the recipient. No serious company would ever spam the public, as that would be invading consumer privacy.
    When it comes to financial products and services, we must be very cautious about offers and information received, even if they have been requested or consented to. Financial fraud on the Internet can be carried out by more sophisticated means. Spam is just one of the possible mechanisms, because the Internet offers various tools to disseminate potentially fraudulent or questionable deals: boards, newsgroups, chats, or even sophisticated web pages.

    Phishing

     Another danger is “phishing”: emails that appear to come from legitimate financial institutions, which request personal passwords. These messages often lead to a website that imitates an authentic entity (although it may have spelling mistakes), which fools people into entering their personal data or passwords.


    Pharming

    Even more sophisticated is “pharming”: people who visit fraudulently-cloned websites can have their personal, confidential data collected by criminals.  Never surrender personal or confidential business information to unknown persons. If a request for personal data appears legitimate, use an established phone number to double check. Also, don’t access websites via links, but type in the full URL and, if possible, install antiphishing and antipharming tools.


    Adverts

    CHIRINGUITOS also advertise in newspapers, magazines or other media (such as television teletext) to offer opportunities which are much more attractive than traditional investments and promising to provide attractive opportunities (which, of course, are not so in reality).

    Personal referrals

    It is common for people to make their investment decisions based on recommendations from acquaintances or relatives whom they trust. Knowing this, sometimes the CHIRINGUITOS pay great benefits to the first customers, using their own money or from other investors; this is what is called a Ponzi scheme. In fact, those investors who unwittingly act as bait are only going to get limited performance at first and successive investments begin to generate losses. Then, the company will not respond to requests for repayment of capital and finally disappear with all the money invested.

    Personalized investment recommendations should always be made by a professional entity authorized to do so, because what is good for one investor may not be for another, depending on their different personal and financial circumstances.


    Persuasion techniques

    The list of boiler-room persuasion techniques cannot be exhaustive, since the arguments and methods are increasingly sophisticated. Therefore it is important to stay alert to any financial offer that is not from a known, registered party.


    Accurate predictions

    A simple but very effective technique – using a large number of calls to impress potential victims with their knowledge of financial markets – half of which confidently predict the rise of a certain investment value and the other half predicting decrease of the same value. In the following days this exercise is repeated several time.  Those targets who were given a series of successful predictions are contacted again.  Now convinced of the infallibility of a company that has hit all its forecasts for several consecutive days, these people are willing to surrender their savings to the CHIRINGUITOS.


    Appearance of respectability and success

    CHIRINGUITOS know it is essential to look respectable and seem like financial market experts. So they dress smartly and elegantly and rent luxury offices. Sometimes it is difficult to get an appointment to meet them because they want to give the impression of being busy and in high demand.


    Incomprehensible explanations and use of technical jargon

    CHIRINGUITOS promoting fraudulent investments talk with confidence and mastery of technicalities that make them look like experts on the subject. In fact, the aim is that the potential victim does not understand anything and chooses to trust those who seem to be experts who know what they are talking about.


    Offering large profits with little risk

    CHIRINGUITOS promise much higher returns than can be obtained from a conventional investment with minimal risk. A basic principle that all investors should bear in mind is that profitability and risk go together inseparably. The possibility of obtaining high yields always involves taking high risks. Be wary of any offer that ensures high returns without risk.

    Insistence on an immediate decision

    Urgency is a major factor, not only because they want to get their hands on your money asap and with the least possible effort, but because they know that if the investor has time to think properly about the offer, or seeks professional and reliable advice, he will probably reject the offer. So, CHIRINGUITOS use tricks aimed at achieving an immediate decision to try to convince the victim that they are offering a unique opportunity that will expire soon. Investors should be aware that this is not true: there is always time to assess the characteristics of a financial offer and to make sure it is suitable.


    Psychological pressure

    The conversation, either by phone or by any other means, usually begins in a cordial fashion, but if the targeted victim shows some potential resistance the scammer can become more aggressive. This constitutes a fundamental difference between the CHIRINGUITOS and the authorized entities, who always respect a prospect’s right to not be interested. 

     

    3.8 Interaction with the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR)

    The proposals outlined in this consultation are only intended to apply in relation to cold calls regarding pensions. Direct marketing calls that comply with PECR regulations will still be permitted for calls in relation to other products and industries.

    PECR contains its own concepts of live and automated marketing calls and prior existing relationships. These concepts will continue to apply to other types of direct marketing call, and the interpretation of these definitions within PECR will not change as a result of the ban on cold calling in relation to pensions.

    Question 3.5

    How can the government best maintain the clarity of existing PECR concepts in light of the proposed ban on pensions cold calling?

    Answer 3.5

    See the Spanish Regulator’s Chiringuitos warning since this is dealt with very effectively.

    3.9 Raising awareness

    For the proposal to achieve its intended outcome of reducing the number of consumers who fall victim to pensions scams, it is essential that consumers are aware that all cold calls they receive in relation to pensions are illegitimate.

    The government proposes using a number of channels to publicise the ban to as many consumers as possible.

    These include:

    • pension providers
    • government-backed guidance providers, including the Money Advice Service and Pension Wise
    • the FCA’s ‘Scam smart’ campaign
    • the Pensions Regulator and the Pensions Ombudsman
    • the Financial Ombudsman
    • publications issued by Action Fraud
    • well known consumer publications such as Money Saving Expert and Which? Magazine
    • ICO Campaign

    The government welcomes input on other ways to publicise the ban.

    Question 3.6

    How else can the government best ensure consumers are aware of the ban?

    Answer 3.6

    This must be done in exactly the same way as road safety/seat belts/drinking and driving campaigns are done.  There must be television, magazine and newspaper advertising campaigns; billboards, train and airport adverts – and news/documentary channels must be encouraged to give this subject maximum coverage.

     

     3.10 Enforcement

    Banning cold calling in relation to pensions is an effective way of enabling enforcement action against the perpetrators of pension scams. This is because it is simpler for an enforcement body to show that an individual has been cold called, than to prove that the firm involved has engaged in a fraudulent activity. This would require thorough investigation into the investments being offered, and the details of their business model.

    The proposal will be enforced by ICO who currently regulate firms making unsolicited direct marketing calls. The ICO has a number of enforcement powers that it can use to tackle firms in breach of the PECR. These powers include:

    • serving enforcement notices and ‘stop now’ orders
    • issuing monetary penalties, requiring organisations to pay up to £500,000 for serious breaches

    To date, the ICO has issued fines totalling almost £3.7 million to companies behind nuisance marketing. This year alone, ICO has fined firms responsible for more than 70 million calls and nearly 8 million spam text messages.

    The government proposes giving ICO the power to use its existing enforcement toolkit to enforce the proposal to ban cold calling in relation to pensions. It believes that the ICO is well placed to enforce the ban due to its expertise in this area and broad range of enforcement options.

    Like many regulators, the ICO takes a risk based approach to enforcement action. The ICO will be able to take action against those who breach the ban, targeting their enforcement action at the most serious cases. The threat of enforcement action creates a deterrent and makes operating a pensions scam higher risk and therefore less appealing.

    The government has also made it easier for the ICO to take action against rogue companies by lowering the legal threshold at which enforcement action can be taken. This means that the ICO does not have to prove substantial damage or substantial distress by a company before action can be taken.

    The government has already introduced secondary legislation amending the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations 2003 to require all direct marketing callers to provide their Calling Line Identification (CLI), so that consumers can determine who is calling them and therefore allow any unwanted calls to be more easily identified and reported to the regulator.

    In addition, enforcement could be strengthened by other measures such as encouraging consumers to report cold calls about pensions and looking for opportunities to increase data sharing between relevant partner agencies.

    Question 3.7

    Do you have any views on enforcement mechanism set out in paragraphs 3.10 above?

    Answer 3.7

    Paragraph 3.10 is a joke – and not a particularly funny one.  “Banning cold calling in relation to pensions is an effective way of enabling enforcement action against the perpetrators of pension scams.”  There has been minimal enforcement action against the perpetrators of pension scams.  The perps are still out there, scamming away.  Laughing like drains at the government, regulators and police. 

    The Pensions Regulator and the Insolvency Service have detailed the crimes of the scammers but no enforcement action has taken place.  A very few of the scammers have been disqualified from acting as company directors or trustees, and one was given a stern “dressing down”.  But these were just slaps on the wrist with a wet winkle.  The scammers need to be named, shamed and jailed.

    3.11 Impacts on firms

    The government is seeking information on any potential impacts on firms as a result of this change.

    The government anticipates that banning cold calling in relation to pensions will result in a number of benefits for businesses:

    • increasing consumer confidence in the financial services sector: sending a clear message to consumers that no legitimate firm will ever cold call a person about their pension will enable consumers to distinguish between legitimate firms and pension scams more easily. This will give consumers greater confidence that their pension funds are secure when engaging with financial services firms
    • increasing trust in the financial advice sector: financial advisers have expressed concerns that calls from rogue pension introducers posing as financial advisers, and offering free pension reviews, damages the sector’s credibility. The government anticipates that taking a hard line on pensions cold calls will prevent consumers from being deceived by pension scammers posing as financial advisers, increasing trust in the sector
    • keeping money within the regulated system: the government anticipates that banning cold calling in relation to pensions will result in fewer transfers to fraudulent pension schemes. This will result in pension funds being retained within the regulated system, benefitting pension providers who will retain more customers *fewer transfer requests: fewer requests to transfer to suspect pension schemes mean that providers will need to spend less time conducting lengthy due diligence processes to attempt to prove that the scheme is fraudulent. This may result in both a time and monetary benefit

    The proposed approach, which allows calls where an existing relationship exists or at the express request of the recipient, is intended to allow legitimate firms to continue to operate without issue. The government is seeking evidence on whether there is any legitimate cold calling in relation to pensions occurring where an existing relationship does not exist.

    Question 3.8

    Is there any reason why legitimate firms’ business models should be affected as a result of the ban?

    Answer 3.8

    I suggest that the ethical, legitimate firms will not only welcome the cleaning up of the system to help restore faith in the credibility of the profession, but would also like a break from the punitive levies they have to pay.

    Question 3.9

    Do you have any other views or information the government should consider in relation to the proposed ban on cold calling in relation to pensions?

    Answer 3.9

    The government and the regulators should talk to the victims.  It is clear from the wording of this consultation document that there are still gaping holes in the understanding of how scams work and how they have evolved over the past few years.  Since 2013, the government has refused to engage with the victims and this has to stop.  The victims’ voices have to be heard since they, above everybody else, are the experts and the government should learn from them.

    4. Limiting the statutory right to transfer

    4.1 The issue

    Pension scams activity is particularly focused around transfers to apparently legitimate pension schemes. These schemes are established or operated by fraudsters for the purpose of encouraging people to invest in unregulated investments such as exotic or ‘too good to be true’ opportunities which collapse, taking the investments with them, or exposing the member to a high risk of capital loss.

    The government has received representations from the pensions industry and regulators to tighten up the transfer process in order to protect individuals’ savings. Under current law 7, trustees or managers of schemes can find themselves in a difficult position when faced with a suspicious transfer. To refuse a transfer, trustees and managers must be able to show the transfer falls outside of the existing legislation and that there is no statutory right to transfer. Often it can be difficult to prove that the receiving scheme is not a legitimate pension scheme or that the transfer will not be used to provide transfer credits under the rules of that scheme.

    On receipt of a transfer request, trustees or managers are required to exercise due diligence, for example, by examining the status of the receiving scheme. Suspicion is generally aroused through the behaviour of the scheme member, for example, if they appear desperate, or if the receiving scheme is unknown. Trustees or managers can sometimes find themselves in difficult positions where they have serious concerns that the receiving scheme is not legitimate and may be a scam.

    Earlier this year, the legal position of trustees’ and managers’ ability to block transfers was explored in a High Court ruling 8. The case was heard on appeal from a decision of the Ombudsman, who had supported the decision of a personal pension manager which had used due diligence to block a transfer to a scheme about which there were concerns. The Ombudsman’s determination was that there was no statutory right to transfer as there was no earnings link with the sponsoring employer of the receiving scheme (i.e. the individual was not being paid by the sponsoring employer). It is the government’s view that there is no explicit rule in the relevant pensions legislation which expressly states that there must be such an earnings link to facilitate a transfer.

    This view was confirmed when the Ombudsman’s determination was subsequently over-turned by the High Court which said that there was no requirement to consider whether the person seeking to transfer has any earnings from the receiving scheme employer. The law requires the individual to be an earner, but the source of the earnings is not specified. The broader impact of this ruling means that, under current legislation, trustees and managers who, through due diligence, discover that a person seeking to transfer is not receiving earnings from a receiving scheme employer, cannot rely solely on the absence of such earnings to refuse the transfer. It has been argued, for example, by the pensions industry and regulators, that the absence of such an earnings link is a factor which may indicate a fraudulent scheme.

    While the government recognises that many statutory transfer requests will be in relation to a legitimate receiving scheme, the government is also aware, through the work of Project Bloom 9 and other stakeholder engagement, that some are not. The government is regularly informed by firms and schemes that they are frustrated and concerned because they feel current legislation gives them little scope to refuse a transfer to a scheme which displays the characteristics of a scam, despite their legitimate concerns as to the safety of members’ savings.

    4.2 The proposal

    With the pension freedoms approaching their second anniversary in April 2017, and in light of the clarity given by the High Court on the current legal position in relation to the earnings situation of persons seeking a transfer, the government believes that now is the right time to consider whether it is necessary and proportionate to create new legislative restrictions to limit the statutory right to transfer to another occupational pension scheme.

    4.3 Statutory transfers

    The government believes it is right that members of pension schemes should continue to have the right to transfer, but that it may be necessary to limit that right in certain circumstances in order to protect individuals’ savings.

    Under this proposal, a statutory right to a transfer would exist only where:

    • the receiving scheme is a personal pension scheme operated by an FCA authorised firm or entity
    • a genuine employment link to the receiving occupational pension scheme could be demonstrated, with evidence of regular earnings from that employment and confirmation that the employer has agreed to participate in the receiving scheme; or
    • the receiving occupational pension scheme was an authorised master trust

    This approach would mean that the vast majority of transfer requests would continue to be agreed by trustees or managers. It would also allow transfers into authorised master trusts.

    The statutory right to transfer to a personal pension scheme including a Group Personal Pension or SIPP (i.e. an FCA regulated firm) from an occupational pension scheme or other personal pension scheme governed by s.95(2)(b), s.95(2A)(b) or s.95(3)(b) of the Pension Schemes Act 1993 would be retained and would reflect any new restrictions.

    In summary, subject to the above conditions, it will still be possible to transfer from an occupational pension scheme or personal pension scheme to a different occupational pension or personal pension scheme.

    Question 4.1

    Do you agree with the proposal to limit the statutory right to transfer in this way, or should this be further limited? If so, in what way and why?

    Answer 4.1

    It is interesting that almost a year after the Justice Morgan ruling was published in the Hughes v Royal London case, the government have still not sorted this out and brought in effective legislation to clarify and strengthen the situation.  And it is clear that the government has failed to understand the problem.  Having a statutory right to a transfer is not the issue.  The issue lies with the failings of multiple parties who encourage and facilitate – or fail to stop (which is the same thing) – transfers to scams.  The various parties’ actions include inter alia:

    ·         HMRC registering schemes to known scammers

    ·         tPR registering schemes to known scammers

    ·         HMRC and tPR failing to suspend schemes when it is clear a scam is being operated (often by known scammers)

    ·         tPR warning trustees of their obligations but then failing to insist the government makes these obligations legal rather than wet winkles (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.” )

    ·         Ceding trustees failing to spot obvious warning signs

    One of the worst examples of the combination of all of the above was in 2011 when a ceding trustee was processing a transfer request into the Salmon Enterprises scam – whose trustees were Tudor Capital Management.  The ceding provider, Nationwide, asked HMRC for confirmation that Salmon Enterprises was an HMRC-registered scheme.  HMRC replied that it was indeed a properly registered scheme.  But they failed to mention that the directors of Tudor Capital Management had been arrested on suspicion of cheating the Public Revenue and money laundering. 

    Nationwide then mentioned they had seen a report that the directors of Tudor Capital Management had been arrested as above.  And HMRC refused to comment.  So, without further ado, Nationwide proceeded with the transfer.  The government has used the words: “trustees are required to exercise due diligence, for example, by examining the status of the receiving scheme”.  But what does this mean?  If they don’t exercise due diligence do they get the wet winkle treatment? 

    I have seen hundreds of cases where ceding trustees transferred pensions to blindingly obvious scams run by well-known, serial scammers.  In the case of Capita Oak, for example, the trust deed was a forgery and the sponsoring employer was a company in Cyprus which didn’t exist.  Not a single ceding provider noticed.  Or cared.

    These negligent ceding providers have to be brought to justice for their lack of due diligence and the damage they have caused to thousands of victims over the years. 

    Question 4.2

    Would a requirement to evidence a regular earnings link act as a major deterrent to prevent fraud? How could the requirements be circumvented?

    Answer 4.2

    No.  Stupid question.  Most of the victims are earners – very few are retired or out of work in my experience.  The requirement would be easily circumvented by the scammers.

    Question 4.3

    How might an earnings and employment link be implemented? Should the onus be on the scheme member to provide proof of earnings?

    Answer 4.3

    This would depend on the circumstances of each member.  But, again, this is a stupid question because there would be quite a few members who are not working but whose interests would be compromised by this requirement.  What needs to happen is that there needs to be a requirement that the member is in the genuine employment of the sponsor of the occupational scheme.

    Question 4.4

    What would be the impact and cost to trustees / managers / firms?

    Answer 4.4

    Another very stupid question.  The government is asking what the impact and cost to trustees would be to carry out the very due diligence they were supposed to have been doing for years but have been failing to do.  A better question to ask would be what is the cost to the state of supporting all the victims who have lost their pensions to the scammers?  That is going to be an eye-watering number.

    4.4 Non-statutory transfers

    If changes to limit individuals’ statutory right to transfer were to be introduced, a member would no longer have the right to transfer in all circumstances. Transfers would, however, still be permitted at the trustees’ or managers’ discretion (in accordance with the scheme rules). The government would expect trustees or managers to make all reasonable efforts to agree a transfer request if there was no reason not to do so (i.e. if the receiving scheme did not appear to be a scam).

    Question 4.5

    Under the proposals, how would the process for ‘non-statutory’ transfers change for trustees or managers? What would they need to do differently from the current situation?

    Answer 4.5

    The answer depends what the government means by “expect trustees to make all reasonable efforts…”.  Ceding trustees have shown mind-boggling degrees of negligence and lack of care/due diligence for years.  What they would need to do differently from the current situation would be to carry out some basic, common-sense and intelligent screening. 

    If the government can ensure that the negligent trustees are brought to justice and made an example of, then “reasonable efforts” will follow naturally.

    4.5 Alternative approaches

    The government recognises that providing trustees and managers with the greater scope to block transfers, even if they believe it is a fraudulent scheme, is a challenging proposition.

    An alternative to limiting individuals’ statutory right to transfer could be to require ‘insistent’ scheme members (who wish to continue with the transfer, despite being warned of the risks) to sign a declaration similar to the example “discharge letter” in the Industry code of practice on combating pension scams. This letter could confirm that the member had understood the scam warnings given to them, and the nature of the risks that they may be exposed to. This letter could also be used to limit any recourse the individual has to the ceding scheme, in the event that the receiving scheme is a scam. The government would welcome views on whether this is a suitable alternative to limiting individuals’ statutory right to transfer, and in particular if it could be implemented in a way that would not reduce the requirement on trustees to undertake due diligence on receiving schemes.

    Such an approach could be coupled with a statutory cooling off period, whereby the ceding scheme would delay all transfers, for example by 14 days, to allow the member to reconsider their decision to transfer. The government would welcome views and evidence on the effectiveness of cooling-off periods as a means of combating scams.

    Question 4.6

    What are the pros and cons of introducing a statutory discharge form for insistent clients? How effective would this be as a means of combating scams?

    Answer 4.6

    This could only be answered after implementation.  But the government needs to examine its statement: “This letter could also be used to limit any recourse the individual has to the ceding scheme, in the event that the receiving scheme is a scam.”  The government needs to ensure there is a clear pathway to recovery from the ceding scheme and that this is backdated to the start of the pension scam epidemic and all limitation issues are removed.

     Question 4.7

    How could it be ensured that a statutory discharge of responsibility did not reduce the requirement on firms and trustees to undertake due diligence?

    Answer 4.7

    As 4.6

    Question 4.8

    What are your views on a ‘cooling-off period’ for pension transfers? Do you have any evidence of how this could help to combat pension scams?

    Answer 4.8

    It might make some difference, but only if combined with some clear information and advice about scams.

    4.6 Implementation

    The government recognises that these proposals come with implementation challenges. For example, a regular earnings link could prove difficult to demonstrate in some legitimate circumstances, such as:

    • self-employed individuals who were previously employed and who may wish to consolidate their previous pots by transferring into another scheme; for example, a decumulation only occupational pension scheme
    • zero-hours contract workers who may not receive and demonstrate regular earnings

    The proposal to demonstrate a scheme member’s regular earnings may also place additional burden on the participating employer if they are required to evidence this, rather than the onus being on the scheme member. However, this has to be balanced with the need to prevent fraudulent activity.

    The government recognises that these proposals would need to be carefully balanced with ensuring that trustees or managers are not refusing transfers in order to retain pension pots, to the benefit of the scheme and to the detriment of members; and will consider whether it might be appropriate to provide some form of statutory discharge for trustees in such circumstances.

    Question 4.9

    What additional measures or safeguards could be put in place to ensure that trustees or managers appropriately handle transfers that do not meet the new proposed statutory requirements?

    Answer 4.9

    Trustees must ensure that some basic conditions are met:

    ·         If an occupational scheme, there must be a genuine sponsoring employer that exists and trades and employs people

    ·         There must be an employment relationship between the member and the sponsoring employer

    ·         There must be a trust deed which outlines a clear statement of investment principles and have genuine trustees – not stooges

    ·         The trustees and administrators must not be known scammers or have been arrested on suspicion of fraud

    ·         If a QROPS, members should only be transferred if they are resident overseas

    ·         The member understands the risks inherent in the receiving scheme

    Question 4.10

    Are there other potential risks that this proposal might present? Do you have any suggestions as to how these risks might be mitigated?

    Answer 4.10

    The public must be educated to all past scams and told the whole story of how the scams evolved over the past seven or eight years and how the FCA, tPR, HMRC and the government contributed to this widespread organised financial crime.  This way, any risks can be mitigated because the public will be able to clearly understand how the government has failed in the past and is making an effort to put things right.

    5. Making it harder to open fraudulent schemes

    5.1 The issue

    Pension schemes wanting to benefit from the generous tax reliefs available must register with HMRC for tax purposes. Registration with HMRC is only relevant for tax purposes and does not imply that a tax-registered scheme is in any way regulated. However, evidence from correspondence and media stories suggest that individuals see registration as implying that a scheme is somehow ‘approved’ and is evidence therefore that the investments made by that scheme will be appropriately regulated. Many scams will also prominently display that they are ‘HMRC registered’ in order to give them an air of legitimacy.

    This is particularly an issue in relation to Small Self-Administered Schemes (SSASs). There is a widespread perception in the pensions industry that the removal of the requirement for a professional trustee, known as a pensioner trustee, led to a significant increase in pension scams using such vehicles. This is because there is no requirement for single-member occupational pension schemes to be registered with the Pensions Regulator (TPR), and such schemes can be used even when there appears to be no business activity by the employer setting up the scheme.

    At present there are around 800,000 registered pension schemes in the UK, the vast majority of which are single member schemes. TPR’s view is that SSASs are increasingly marketed as ‘products’ offering exotic investments and unrealistic returns, and there is evidence that some consumers have lost their pension savings as a result.

    Although a number of changes have been made to the tax registration process to tackle the threat of pension liberation (including moving away from automatic acceptance of an application to register to a risk based approach which includes more up front checks), the government wants to explore whether there is more that could be done to make it harder for schemes to be opened for fraudulent purposes.

    More widely, the lack of regulation around SSASs, and more recent market changes have led some commentators to question whether the government should consider reintroducing pensioneer trustees for SSASs; or their continued usefulness as a pension savings vehicle. This is in the context of more recent developments in the market such as master trusts (including National Employment Savings Trust (NEST) which reduces the need for small employers to set up their own schemes; and the ability for individuals (including the self-employed) to direct investments through self-invested personal pensions (SIPPs).

    This chapter considers immediate changes to make it harder to open fraudulent pension schemes, and longer term options that could make it harder to abuse small schemes as a means of committing pension fraud.

     

    5.2 The proposal

    One way to make it harder for pension schemes to be registered with HMRC for fraudulent purposes, would be to ensure that only active (i.e. non-dormant) companies can be used for scheme registrations.

    A dormant company is one that has been registered with Companies House but is not carrying on any kind of business activity or receiving any form of income, such that HMRC considers it dormant (or inactive) for corporation tax purposes. It can be dormant from the date of its incorporation, or it can become dormant after a period of inactivity. There are many reasons why a company may be dormant, such as:

    • to reserve a company name whilst preparing to launch the business
    • restructuring a previously active business, or
    • where an owner requires an extended period of time off due to illness, maternity leave, travel, a sabbatical, or any other reason

    However, there appear to be few legitimate circumstances in which a dormant company might wish to register a new pension scheme. It is difficult to envisage a scenario where that company carries out no trading activity, yet still wishes to open a new pension scheme for legitimate purposes. The government therefore proposes to change the law to require all new pension scheme registrations to be made through an active company.

    Question 5.1

    Do you agree that new pension scheme registrations should be required to be made through an active company? If no, what are the legitimate circumstances in which a dormant company might want to register a new pension scheme?

    Answer 5.1

    I agree entirely and can think of no legitimate circumstances when a dormant company should be allowed to register a new pension scheme.  The answer is in the question: “sponsoring employer”.  If a company doesn’t employ anybody, how or why should it want or be allowed to register a pension scheme?  The answer is, of course, that with less than 100 members, an occupational scheme comes under the radar of tPR and has habitually been used for large numbers of pension scams.

    5.3 Enforcement

    Enforcement of this measure could take place through HMRC’s scheme registration process, by not allowing dormant companies to register for occupational pension schemes.

    5.4 Wider action to limit pension scams through small self-administered schemes

    SSASs exist in order to give small businesses a way to provide cost-effective pensions for their employees. However, very small schemes – particularly those with single members – can be open to abuse because the only person party to all the decisions is the person being scammed. These scams work by convincing people to set up a SSAS in order to allow a member to “access investments they couldn’t get otherwise” or to “take a personal loan from their pension”. They often include charging extortionate fees – as high as 20%, and often not disclosed initially – and unregulated investments such as overseas property or natural resources. They can also lead to tax charges of up to 55% on the individual concerned.

    The government would welcome views on whether additional steps should be taken to regulate such schemes or what further restrictions could be placed on the opening of new small schemes, in order to limit pension scams.

     

    Question 5.2

    Are there any further actions that the government should consider to prevent SSASs being used as vehicles for pension scams?

    Answer 5.2

    Lock all the existing and past scammers up.  That will prevent them from abusing SSASs and discourage new scammers from doing the same.

    My position is that neither the government, nor HMRC, nor tPR, nor the police, nor the SFO, nor the ombudsmen, nor the ceding providers in the UK really understand or are prepared to take responsibility for their failings which have led to this untreated scamming epidemic.

  • COMPLAINT AGAINST PENSIONS REGULATOR

    chocolate-teapot

    COMPLAINT AGAINST THE PENSIONS REGULATOR

    RE THE ARK (AND OTHER) PENSION SCHEMES

    30.12.2016

    From ANGELA BROOKS OF PENSION LIFE

     

    1. BACKGROUND:
    2. PENSIONS REGULATOR’S OBLIGATIONS AND OBJECTIVES:
    3. ARK VICTIMS’ CIRCUMSTANCES:

     

    1. BACKGROUND:

    This official complaint is against the Pensions Regulator and other public bodies who were, or should have been, responsible for preventing pension scams and protecting the public.  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 trustees and the public, 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, Paul Baxendale-Walker 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 (see separate complaint against HMRC).  But to this day, tPR has done nothing to dispel this myth, and in fact even continues to help the scammers to this day 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.”

    http://www.thepensionsregulator.gov.uk/trustees/registering-new-schemes.aspx

    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.

    1. 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.

    1. ARK VICTIMS’ CIRCUMSTANCES:

    HMRC’s and tPR’s investigations into the Ark schemes commenced in the third quarter of 2010 and continued sporadically until tPR placed them in the hands of Dalriada Trustees on 31.5.2011.  Had tPR taken action months earlier, hundreds of victims could have been spared the appalling ordeal they have endured for the past five and a half years and also avoided risking losing their pensions and gaining crippling tax liabilities.  Also, several suicides could have been avoided.

    Since 2010, tPR has appointed Dalriada Trustees to 24 schemes in total and by mid 2015, Dalriada had charged a total of £4,465,426.66 in trustees’ fees and £5,760,562.16 in adviser fees – total £10,225,988.82.  £3,355,385 of this was in respect of the Ark schemes – i.e. a third overall.

    It should most certainly have been within the remit of tPR to ensure that criminal proceedings were taken against the various scammers responsible for Ark and dozens of other scams.  From 2010 until the present day, the teams of scammers who have earned many £ millions from their various scams have been left free to enjoy their proceeds of crime and set up further scam after scam without hindrance or intervention from tPR.

    Apart from the known prosecution and jailing of Bradley and Meeson in 2013, and Russell and Ferguson in 2003, there is no information available as to what actions – if any – tPR has taken (or ensured Dalriada took) to bring large numbers of scammers to justice.  Since 2013, out of 2,008 reports made to Action Fraud, seven suspects have been charged or summonsed in relation to pension scams.  That is a success rate of 0.35% and means that at least 2,001 scammers are still out there today, scamming away merrily and profitably.

    It has been reported that “Project Bloom” was set up in 2013 to tackle pension liberation and other related scams.  This was allegedly a joint venture between regulators, government departments, the National Crime Agency, police forces and Pension Wise.  This has been a clear and dismal failure (including the fact that the Police themselves handed a Police pension over to Stephen Ward’s London Quantum scam in 2014).  The Pensions Regulator has failed to mount an effective warning campaign and has allowed thousands of victims to face financial ruin and poverty in retirement.  In fact, it is reported that pension fraud has increased by 150% since the introduction of Pensions “Freedoms” in 2015 – with no credible plan by tPR for prevention.

    There are a number of ways in which tPR must now begin to make up for these serious failures over such a long period of time:

    1. It must make it clear what ceding pension trustees’ duties were in relation to transfer due diligence for the past fifteen years – so that these negligent ceding providers can be brought to justice for their failures and pay due compensation to their victims whose pensions were handed over so casually to the scammers. This is in accordance with tPR Chair David Norgrove’s announcement in January 2010 that negligent box-ticking trustees are “liable to compensate the beneficiary” and that this is a statutory obligation – although the Pension Schemes Act 1993 was never amended to reflect this
    2. Publish a comprehensive list of all pension scam warnings and announcements made by both HMRC and tPR (and any other parties) in the past fifteen years – so that negligent ceding providers can no longer claim they had never heard of pension liberation scams prior to the 2013 Scorpion campaign
    3. Appoint some competent and appropriately-qualified executives to take on tPR’s responsibility for mounting an effective public information campaign against pension scams
    4. Appoint a dedicated team to work with law-enforcement agencies to ensure ALL scammers are brought to justice – not just 0.35% of them.

    The pension scam industry must finally be brought down.  No ifs, no buts.  A zero tolerance policy must be adopted.

    store-first

     

  • Justice Morgan’s Mad Mistake: Donna-Marie Hughes and Royal London Mutual Insurance Society

    Justice Morgan’s Mad Mistake: Donna-Marie Hughes and Royal London Mutual Insurance Society

    JUSTICE MORGAN’S MAD MISTAKE

    (IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, CHANCERY DIVISION)

    The law is an ass – especially when it fails to protect pension scam victims

    This judgement makes the law not just an ass, but a whole herd of donkeys.

    Dear Justice Morgan

    I refer to your judgment in the matter of Donna-Marie Hughes and Royal London Mutual Insurance Society Case Number CH/2015/0377 on 19th February 2016.  

     

     

    With absolutely no apology whatsoever, I must point out that your judgment – overturning the Pensions Ombudsman’s Determination in this matter – is so stark staring, raving mad that it verges on utterly bonkers.

    In a number of complaints, the Ombudsman has found that although the legislation is missing a few key words, it is clear that a person should only transfer into an occupational scheme if they are genuinely employed by the sponsor of the scheme.  The Ombudsman drew attention to the fact that the words “employed by the sponsor of the scheme” are, curiously, missing (obviously, whoever wrote that passage nipped out for a liquid lunch at the crucial moment).  But he used his common sense and pointed out that it would be a “very strange result” if a person wanted to transfer into an occupational scheme without any employment relationship or arrangement with the sponsor.

     

    It is my obligation to refer you to the fact that the industry, regulators, law enforcement agencies, courts, ombudsmen and victims (existing and future) desperately need the legislation to be tightened – not relaxed (or, as in this case, made completely impotent).  This judgment has effectively given the green light for hundreds of scammers to scam innocent victims out of their hard-earned pensions.

     

    History, since 2011, shows that various pension liberation scams including Ark (Lancaster, Portman, Cranbourne, Woodcroft, Tallton, Grosvenor) Capita Oak, Westminster, Evergreen, Salmon Enterprises, Eric’s Yard, Pennines, London Quantum, Headforte, Southlands etc., all share a collection of common traits:

     

    1. They were set up, administered and promoted by unregulated firms
    2. These firms obscure the identity of the team
    3. The address of the firm is a virtual office
    4. The assets of the scams being peddled include high risk, illiquid, speculative investments entirely unsuitable for pensions
    5. Bogus “occupational” schemes are registered with HMRC and tPR (who do nothing to check that the sponsoring employers actually trade or employ anybody – or indeed even exist at all)
    6. Pensions are liberated using a variety of “loan” structures which victims are assured are legitimate “loopholes”
    7. Transfer and loan fees are extortionately high
    8. Victims are promised unrealistic gains such as “guaranteed 8% return per annum”
    9. Assets are entirely unsuitable for pension schemes and often include huge “kickbacks” for the introducers

     

    The firms and individuals offering these schemes have included:

    • Premier Pension Solutions in Spain (run by Tolleys Pensions Taxation author Stephen Ward – available on Amazon if you need a copy: http://www.amazon.com/Tolleys-Pensions-Taxation-2014-2015-Stephen/dp/0754549356)
    • Gerard Associates http://www.gerardassociates.co.uk/
    • Frost Financial
    • Continental Wealth Management
    • J. P. Sterling
    • Viva Costa International
    • Windsor Pensions
    • Blu Debt Management
    • Wealth Masters
    • Paul Baxendale-Walker
    • James Lau

    Thousands of victims have lost £ billions and gained £ millions in tax liabilities.  The assets of these schemes have included offshore property, store pods, car parking spaces, unregulated collective investments, eucalyptus forests, hedge funds, forex, Cape Verde etc.

    Now, I am not saying that Bespoke Pension Services are scammers.  http://bit.ly/1VGeSPn but on the back of their victory in the case of Ms. Hughes, there are a further 160 blocked pension transfers sitting with the Pensions Ombudsman.  We have no way of knowing whether they will all be pension transfers invested in Cape Verde, but we do know the Hughes case must have been very important to Bespoke Pension Services’ business.  After all, they must have invested a considerable amount in legal fees to take an £8,000 transfer attempt to the High Court.

    Interestingly, Bespoke Pension Services are unregulated and their address is a virtual office.  According to their latest published accounts the firm is insolvent.  The two directors/shareholders – Mark Anthony Miserotti and Clive John Howells – have between them an impressive portfolio of investment, consultancy, property development, investment and financial planning companies – one of which is called “Fortaleza Investments” which suggests something Brazilian.

    On the back of your judgment in respect of Royal London, there will be a serious problem for all the pension providers who performed so appallingly in Ark, Capita Oak, Westminster, Evergreen et al: the worst of which being Standard Life, Prudential, Scottish Widows, Aviva and Legal and General.  Having handed over £ millions worth of pension funds since 2010 – in a lazy, negligent, box-ticking fashion – there is evidence that they are trying to mend their ways.  Or there had been, until your judgment in the Hughes/Royal London/Bespoke Pension Services case.

    I would draw your attention to Clause 53 in Justice Bean’s Ark ruling where he makes it clear that legislation wording must be interpreted intelligently – and not blindly.

    Justice Bean ruled on the ARK Pension Scam case

    He is obviously trying to make the point that it is essential to avoid an anomalous or unjust result from failing to look behind the intended meaning of wording.  Indeed, the Pensions Ombudsman had already done that when looking at the wording when he said that he found that a transferee did need to be employed by the sponsor of an occupational scheme in order to avoid a “strange result”.

    Your judgment has put at risk thousands of victims’ pensions.  There have already been suicides, nervous breakdowns, life-threatening illnesses, broken marriages and families.  There will be widespread poverty in retirement and many people will lose their homes.  A strange result indeed – which does rather beg the question of how victims will get any protection or justice now?

    This judgment makes the law not just an ass, but a whole herd of donkeys.

    Regards, Angie Brooks

     

  • Evergreen QROPS Pension Scam and Marazion Loans

    Evergreen QROPS Pension Scam and Marazion Loans

    EVERGREEN RETIREMENT TRUST QROPS PENSION SCAM AND MARAZION LOANS

    THE WAY THE SCAM WORKED

    When Ark got shut down in June 2011, Stephen Ward flew to New Zealand and set up the Evergreen NZ QROPS liberation scam with Simon Swallow of Charter Square.  Ward also set up a “loan” company in Cyprus called Marazion.  He also did a deal with two investment funds: Penrich and Spectrum.  Expats would transfer their UK pensions to Evergreen and pay a 10% transfer fee.  As soon as the transfer was complete, a loan – funded by either

    Expat victims (mostly) would transfer their UK pensions to Evergreen and pay a 10% transfer fee.  As soon as the transfer was complete, a loan – funded by either Penrich or Spectrum (to whom the loans were assigned) was arranged between Marazion and the member.  The loan was for a fixed five-year term, and the member was made to sign a “lock in” agreement with Evergreen.

    The loan interest was 8.5% compound (quarterly) and would mean that the original loan amount would increase by 50% by the end of the five years.  Ergo, the maths worked like this at the outset: £100k transfer; £10k fees; £90k Evergreen fund; £50k loan.  At the end of the five-year term, the Evergreen fund would either have increased, decreased or remained the same (in fact, it has decreased) and the loan would have increased to £75k.  The member was offered the option to renew the loan for a further five-year term at a higher rate of interest.

    For three years, Evergreen managed to avoid disclosing what the assets of the scheme actually were, but in 2015 they had no choice other than to disclose that 41% of the scheme’s assets consisted of Penrich and Spectrum.  After a lengthy and detailed complaint to the NZ Ombudsman, the complaint against Evergreen was not upheld and the victims were originally left “locked in” until 2017.  However, Evergreen has now moved the goal posts and the victims are locked in until they reach the age of 55.  Evergreen was removed from the QROPS list by HMRC in November 2012.

    THE IDENTITY OF THE MAIN PLAYERS

    Stephen Ward of PPS/Marazion

    Continental Wealth Management SL who acted as introducers

    Simon Swallow of Charter Square

    HOW THE MAIN PLAYERS WERE INVOLVED

    Continental Wealth acted as introducers – and referred to the firm as the “sister” company to Ward’s company Premier Pension Solutions; PPS processed the transfers and loans; Swallow of Charter Square managed the scheme.

     

  • Edward Troup HMRC’S Role in Six-Year Pension Liberation Fraud

    Edward Troup HMRC’S Role in Six-Year Pension Liberation Fraud

    Edward Troup                                                                                                                                                                    11th March 2016

    Chief Executive’s Office

    HM Revenue & Customs

    100 Parliament Street

    London SW1A 2BQ

     

    Dear Mr. Troup

    HMRC’S ROLE IN SIX-YEAR PENSION LIBERATION FRAUD

    Congratulations on your appointment as head of HMRC.  I am sure you will have a great deal of work on your plate cleaning up the many problems left behind by your predecessor Lin Homer, but I must ask you to address the issue of HMRC’s involvement in pension liberation fraud/unauthorised payment tax as a matter of priority.EDWARD TROUP HMRC PENSIONS LIBERATION ACCOMPLIACE

    I have asked HMRC and government ministers on numerous occasions to address the question of a tax amnesty for victims of pension liberation fraud.  The answer has always come back that this would not be considered as it would “send out the wrong message”.

    I must point out that HMRC and the government have already sent out a very clear message to the British public that Homer’s long series of professional disasters and incompetence have been rewarded with her being made a Dame; avoiding being sacked; receiving a handsome pension of £2.2 million.  This was not just a “wrong” message, but a disgraceful one.

    Further, the recent scandal of major corporations such as J. P. Morgan, Amazon, Google, Starbucks and Netflix being let off £ billions in tax has not only undermined the principles of national fiscal responsibility, but it has also sickened the public and brought disgrace on both HMRC and the government.  Another “wrong” message which harks back to Homer’s equally inept predecessor, Dave Hartnet, who was caught doing cosy “sweetheart” deals over lunches with tax dodging corporations.

    The catalogue of HMRC’s numerous blunders and failures is too long to go into here, and of course the message for many years has been that HMRC have forgotten that they are public servants, and have ignored their own taxpayers charter: “We want to give you a service that is fair, accurate and based on mutual trust and respect. We also want to make it as easy as we can for you to get things right.”  That would be the right message if it were true.  But, sadly, it isn’t.

    Turning to the question of the tax amnesty for victims of pension liberation fraud, HMRC’s role in facilitating this massive, international financial crime has been significant and culpable.  HMRC registered all the scams in the first place, deploying zero due diligence, responsibility or common sense.  Then, when HMRC realised that they had been responsible for greasing the scammers’ wheels, they did nothing to de-register the schemes and prevent victims from being scammed.  There is substantial irrefutable evidence that HMRC was repeatedly registering occupational schemes to known scammers – without any regard whatsoever to the obvious fact that the scammers habitually used the term “HMRC approved” to dupe the victims into believing that the schemes were legitimate.  The message that this has sent out to the British public is that HMRC has not only been profoundly inept and irresponsible, but has also fuelled the suspicion that HMRC may even have been deliberately complicit in the scams since they have potentially raised many £ millions in tax revenues.  This sends out the message that in fact HMRC is no better and no less culpable than the scammers themselves.

    On 21 February 2014, Lin Homer emailed me to assure me she would be investigating HMRC’s failings and promised she would be taking the matter very seriously.  She undertook to get back to me the following week.  That was the last I heard from her – despite me emailing her many times in the past two years.LIN HOMER PENSION LIBERATION

     

    I trust you will ensure that appropriate sanctions are imposed on Homer for her abject failures and a full investigation undertaken to establish whether she has in fact been in league with the scammers.  This would, of course, explain why so many schemes were repeatedly registered to the same, habitual scammers.

    It would also explain another mystery.  In June 2014, I handed evidence of a large number of pension liberation schemes being run by Stephen Ward – including the pension trustee firm Dorrixo Alliance which had registered many schemes with HMRC over a long period of time.  One of the occupational pension schemes registered by Dorrixo Alliance was London Quantum.  But neither HMRC nor tPR did anything about London Quantum and it was not de-registered – as it clearly should have been immediately.

    In August 2014, a serving Police officer lost his Police pension fund to London Quantum.  But it was not for a further year that tPR placed the scheme in the hands of Dalriada Trustees.  The scheme was filled with the usual toxic, illiquid assets which would have earned handsome investment introduction commissions for the trustees, administrators and promoters.

    In the case of the Store First store pod pension investment scandal, well over a thousand victims lost their pensions totalling over £100 million to a number of pension scams – including Capita Oak which was administered by Stephen Ward.  Approximately half of this was paid out in commissions.  But, instead of hounding the scammers who received these commissions, or Store First’s owner Toby Whittaker who paid them, HMRC will be pursuing the victims who liberated part of their pensions in the form of “loans”.  Not only does this send out the wrong message, but it also raises the question as to what extent HMRC were indeed complicit in all of this financial crime.

    I have sent out a questionnaire to hundreds of pension liberation scam victims asking them why they believed their pension loans were legal and tax compliant.  The answers were pretty much all identical (and I will be sending you a summary separately): they were told there was no connection between the pension transfer and the loan and that the transaction would not trigger an unauthorised payment charge as it used a legitimate tax “loophole”.  Many were told that the scheme was approved by HMRC and of course the HMRC registration certificate gave credence to that claim.  The parties who “advised” the victims to enter into these scams included regulated and unregulated IFA’s; practising solicitors and accountants; various introducers and promoters; debt management consultants; mortgage and insurance brokers; and Stephen Ward – government consultant, former pensions examiner and author of Tolleys Pensions Taxation.

    The claim by the government and HMRC that a tax amnesty for victims “would send out the wrong message” is absolute nonsense and an insult to all those who are existing victims of scams and all those who will now become victims as a result of Justice Morgan’s recent ruling.  I know of not a single person who deliberately and consciously set out to liberate their pension in the full knowledge that it was not a tax-compliant transaction.  Furthermore, ruining thousands of fraud victims with crippling tax liabilities will force many into bankruptcy and they will lose their homes.  These people will then become dependent on State benefits for the rest of their lives – and the unauthorised payment tax collected will last a mere couple of years before the Treasury is out of pocket.  On top of this, there will be the vast cost to the NHS of the long-term health problems these victims will inevitably suffer.

    Please let me know what date will be convenient for an urgent meeting to discuss this and agree a solution.  Just to be clear, the agenda will be to agree a tax amnesty for victims of financial crime facilitated by HMRC and to seek compensation for the damage that HMRC’s negligence has caused.  At this meeting we will need to examine in depth the various issues surrounding HMRC’s role in pension liberation fraud during the past six years and explore some appropriate remedies.

    For the avoidance of doubt, I set out below the key items:

    • Since 2010, HMRC have been registering schemes without checking the credentials of the trustees, the sponsoring employer or the purpose behind the scheme (i.e. to provide income in retirement, to operate pension liberation or to earn huge commissions on investment introductions).
    • Why did HMRC fail to de-register schemes as soon as there were concerns in order to prevent victims from losing their pensions and gaining crippling tax liabilities? If you remember, HMRC had a meeting with Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions to discuss the Ark schemes in February 2011. At this time, there was about £7m in Ark, but HMRC did not suspend the registration and nothing was done to close the scheme down until three months later by which time there was £30 million in Ark.  Hence, HMRC was directly responsible for hundreds of victims’ financial ruin and is currently pursuing these people for tax which was entirely preventable had HMRC suspended the schemes.
    • Subsequently, having known that Stephen Ward was heavily involved in pension liberation, HMRC then went on to accept numerous pension scheme registrations from him and his company Dorrixo Alliance at 31 Memorial Road, Worsley. These included Southlands, Headforte and London Quantum – among many others.
    • HMRC was handed evidence of these various schemes in May 2014, and yet took no action to suspend any of the schemes. Then in August 2014 a serving police officer lost his police pension to London Quantum.
    • In 2010/2011, HMRC, the Crown Prosecution Service and the Pensions Regulator were all investigating the fraud being perpetrated by pension trustees Tudor Capital Management. But although there were a total of 25 different schemes involved – one of which was Salmon Enterprises (yet another bogus “occupational” scheme) – HMRC did nothing to suspend the schemes and prevent victims from losing their pensions and being exposed to tax liabilities.
    • HMRC is currently pursuing thousands of pension scam victims for tax on transactions which could – and should – have been prevented had HMRC acted diligently. HMRC’s negligence must be acknowledged and this anomalous, unjust situation must be put right in accordance with HMRC’s own charter.

    Yours sincerely

     

     

     

    Angela Brooks – Chairman, Pension Life

     

    c.c. Justice Morgan (Chancery Division); Steve Webb (Royal London); Ros Altmann (Pensions Minister); Andrew Warwick-Thompson (the Pensions Regulator); Boris Johnson (Mayor of London); David Gauke (Treasury Secretary); George Osborne (Chancellor)

     

  • Pension Liberation “Loans”

    Email to Michael Bridges, Compliance, HMRC from Angie Brooks, ARK Class Action – re pension liberation loans.

     

    11 November 2015

    Dear Mr. Bridges,

    Re: Pension Liberation “Loans”

    Thank you for calling me yesterday and for discussing the various aspects of the pension transfers and “loans”.  Some important points arose from our discussion, and I feel it would be valuable to get these recorded and addressed.
    The first issue was whether any of the members/victims ever asked their existing/ceding providers if they could provide a loan.  It has never occurred to me to ask this question so – by copying in a number of members to this email – I am reaching out to ask them this specific question:
    “Did you ever ask or consider asking your original pension provider – e.g. Standard Life, Aviva, Royal Mail, NHS etc. – whether they could provide a loan?”
    If I get any replies I will let you know.  I suggest the answer will be a resounding “no” – but rather than assume the response I will leave it to the experts, i.e. the victims themselves, to answer this question.  (I think you will find the answer in the Q10’s anyway.)

    How do Pension Liberation “Loans” work?

     Victims of different scams were told different things, and the “loans” were structured in different ways.  Some were told the loans were repayable; some that they were not repayable; some received elaborate loan documentation; some received nothing.  However, the common fact is that they were all told in no uncertain terms that the “loans” were not taxable.  Many of the scammers went to great lengths to try to create the illusion that there was no connection between the loans and the transfers and that it was entirely a coincidence that they both happened at the same time.

    Elysian Fuels

    In fact, in a recently-published case: Elysian Fuels (£240 million now valued at £zero) the participants were told by financial advisers that the 84% “loans” were not taxable and that regulated SIPP providers James Hay and Suffolk Life were fully aware of and “happy” with the “loan” structure.  I have copied and pasted the emails outlining this scheme below for your information.

    Tax Compliance

    The point I am trying to make is that if an “ordinary man in the street” is assured by an IFA, a solicitor and a SIPP provider that a transaction is tax compliant, there is no reason for him to question that assurance.  What makes matters worse for the victims (and better for the scammers) is that the vehicles for the scams – whether an occupational scheme, QROPS or SIPP,- are registered by HMRC in the first place.  This gives the illusion that there is something “safe” or “approved” about the entire structure and indeed the scammers often use the term “HMRC approved” to dupe the victims.
    I have copied James Hay into this email and hopefully – as a regulated SIPP provider – they will come back with some further professional and regulated views on how and why pension liberations/loans/maximising arrangements (or whatever “label” is used to describe the liberation mechanism) are so easy to sell as “tax free” transactions.  Hopefully someone at James Hay will be able to provide some enlightening “inside” information and views on the subject.
    I could tell that you felt impatient with the fact that so many people believed these various liberation scams were legitimate and tax compliant.  With the greatest of respect, I would point out that as you work for HMRC in Compliance, it is your job to be an expert on pensions taxation.  But the victims don’t tend to have that knowledge or education and won’t have read Tolley’s Pensions Taxation (420 pages) http://www.amazon.com/Tolleys-Pensions-Taxation-2014-2015-Stephen/dp/0754549356.
    You also pointed out that if there was no loan agreement or contract, then there was no loan.  Each scam worked differently, and as far as I can see the only one with a proper, enforceable loan contract was the Evergreen QROPS/Marazion loan scheme run by Stephen Ward from Spain.  The word “loan” was merely a four-letter word – sometimes accompanied by the term “non recourse” as in the James Hay/Elysian example below.  We could debate “when is a loan not a loan?” all day long, but the bottom line is that the victims were misled and defrauded.  In some cases by a government consultant on pensions; and in some cases an added layer of apparent respectability enhanced the illusion that the transaction was safe and compliant by involving FCA-regulated IFAs and SIPP providers.
    Another scheme for pension liberation was Salmon Enterprises which worked with the trustees Tudor Capital Management.
    All in all, it is a disgraceful state of affairs, and I am afraid HMRC themselves have played their own part in helping facilitate these scams for the past five years – resulting in ruin for many thousands of victims while lining the pockets of the scammers.
    Regards, Angie

    From: Alan Fowler <fowlerpts@gmail.com>
    Date: 17 October 2013 21:28:21 BST
    To: William Perkins <billperkins62@gmail.com>
    Subject: Fwd: a solution for you !

    Interesting….but I’m amazed that reputable SIPP providers will countenance this.   Who’s making the loans?  I’m not sure I see how the SIPP pays the member (or anyone for that matter) £100k – with what/who’s money?  And won’t the SIPP need to verify that the shares in Xco are actually worth £100k.   That said, if the IFA is doing these, it seems the process works………..

    Regards,  Alan
    ==============
    Begin forwarded message:
    From: Stephen Ward <SWard@ppsespana.com>
    Subject: Re: a solution for you !
    Date: 17 October 2013 20:58:15 BST
    To: billperkins <billperkins62@gmail.com>
    Cc: Alan Fowler <fowlerpts@gmail.com>
    The arrangement I heard about today works like this as an example ( ignoring fees) and this is the simplistic version …
    1.  Client borrows 16k or thereabouts (this is available in the package)
    2.  He gets a non recourse loan (which will not be repaid) of £84k
    3.  He buys shares in Xco for £100k.   These are listed on the CISX ( name is Elysium)
    4.   Transfers £100k to James Hay SIPP
    5.   SIPP pays member £100k for the shares .,,,
    6.   Member repays the 16k and trousers £84k
    My IFA connection has done 40 of them so far
    Advice to transfer to the SIPP is from an FCA regulated IFA
    James Hay and Suffolk Life know the full structure and are happy with it ….
    Fees ….. On transfer to SIPP ( need to agree the commercials with the IFA)
    Regards
    Stephen
    Sent from my iPad
  • Pension Liberation Costs

    Pension liberation fraud costs victims £millions every year.  It ruins lives and causes desperate poverty in retirement.  But the situation is made far worse because the State has badly miscalculated how much it will cost to support these victims for the rest of their lives.  The amount of tax actually collected will be far outstripped by the cost of support and healthcare.

  • CAPITA OAK PENSION SCAM

    Capita Oak pension scam: Imperial accounts 23.1.15

    Ark Class Action

    24 Calle Cuatro Esquinas, Lanjaron 18420, Granada, Spain

    angiebrooks@pension-life.com angiebrooks99@gmail.com

    0034674746663 (mobile) 0034858995645 (landline) www.pension-life.com

     

    Roger Chant, Director – Imperial Trustee Services Ltd.                                                                              28th January 2015

    Brian Downs, Downs & Co Accountants

    Imperial House

    21-15, North Street

    Bromley BR1 1SD

     

    Copies to:

    Pensions Ombudsman; Pensions Regulator; D.S. Rob Harvey, Economics Crime Unit; Dalriada Trustees; FCA; TPAS; HMRC; SRA; ACCA; Iain Duncan Smith (Minister for Work and Pensions); Steve Webb (Minister for Pensions); BBC; ITN; Daily Mail; The Times; Insolvency Service; members of Capita Oak and Westminster pension schemes.

     

    Dear Sirs

     

    CAPITA OAK AND WESTMINSTER PENSION SCAMS

     

    The responses below (in bold) to the “announcement” and “financial report” purportedly from Roger Chant of Imperial Trustee Services Ltd. (ITSL) must be taken into context with the Westminster pension liberation scam operated by those who set up, promoted and administered Capita Oak.

     

    “In the second member announcement, I indicated that I had authorised the preparation of a financial report, to be prepared by an independent registered firm of accountants, Downs & Co.”

     

    First of all, ITSL has no authority to issue financial reports or announcements. ITSL was apparently appointed as administrator in the invalid and possibly forged “trust deed” dated July 2012 and apparently signed by Alan Fowler and Karen Burton (although not in her handwriting but with a signature that looks suspiciously like the handwriting of Anthony Salih of Premier Pension Transfers. Downs & Co is not an independent firm of accountants. Brian Downs was brought on board on board by Christopher Payne (sole shareholder and at the time director of ITSL – but also owner/director of TKE Admin to whom the scheme fees were paid) in October 2014 to try to deflect the questions by Sean Hughes of the BBC X-Ray programme. Roger Chant was also already a client of Downs before he was appointed a director of ITSL. This could hardly be called an independent firm as Downs has admitted he is a “close friend” of Bill Perkins who acted as a shadow director of ITSL. A truly independent accountant and auditor need to be appointed in full consultation with the board of trustees and a proper forensic analysis done on all financial transactions carried out by ITSL, TKE Admin, Premier Pension Transfers and Metis Law, and reported properly to the members. Robert Stell is still happy to carry this out.

     

    “I have now authorised that a copy of the financial summary prepared by the accountants and certified by them should be distributed to all members. A copy of the certified financial statement is attached. Disclosure of the certified financial statement provides transparency to Scheme members.”

    The financial statement issued is far from complete, only covers the period to September 2013, and raises many questions. My specific queries on the accounts are set out below.

     

    “As stated in the second member announcement, it can be seen, quite clearly, that (other than the amount deducted for administration) the totality of the funds received into Imperial’s bank account were transferred, on the instructions of the directors at the time, to the account of a UK registered law firm, Metis Law, who are based in Leeds. This is evidenced by the bank accounts reviewed by the independent accountants.”

     

    Not evidenced at all because not reviewed by independent accountant/auditor – and the missing £1.22 million/47 transfers is still not explained. I have provided a complete schedule of all the transfers processed to Downs via Paul Thomas showing the transfers which were included in the £10,810,301.57 originally disclosed and the extra transactions which were not transferred to Metis Law to purchase store pods, but Downs has refused to acknowledge these missing transfers and provided no explanation. He has also refused to explain a number of suspicious entries on both the bank statements for accounts 03841928 and 83365921 (sort code 20-25-42).

     

    “In summary, 95% of the funds received into Imperial’s bank account in respect of Scheme members was transferred to Metis Law. The 5% deduction for administration was made, which deduction was clearly specified in the Scheme membership documentation signed by each member.”

    The members were clearly given the impression that the 5% was for administration, although 5% was grossly over-priced for a simple transfer for which no competent or diligent administration was carried out. I submit that this should be refunded to the members immediately by TKE Admin. The subsequent investment of 100% of the funds in Store First was clearly negligent and irresponsible, with no regard to the obligations for prudent investment principles required by law for a pension scheme.

     

    “My enquiries suggest that of the 5%, some 3% was applied to TKE Admin Ltd., who arranged for the administration and other necessary services. In this regard, it should be noted that there is no annual administration charge applied to your funds within the Scheme. The remaining 2% was directed by the directors at the time to be paid to Mr. GS.”

     

    What “other necessary services”? The only necessary service was to ensure that the funds of the scheme were properly invested and the scheme run responsibly with a view to providing retirement income for the members, rather than just fees and commissions for the operators/promoters of the scheme. This requires further explanation and complete disclosure of exactly who was paid what and why. It was agreed between Perkins, Fowler and Mr. G.S. that 3% would go to towards “processing” with Stephen Ward of Premier Pension Solutions SL and Premier Pension Transfers Ltd receiving £250 per transfer. So where did the remaining 2% go and to whom was it paid? It is not accounted for. The statement that “no annual administration charge would be applied to the scheme” also needs explaining. How would the scheme be administered going forward for years to come? This suggests there never was any intention to manage the scheme properly in the long term and deal with members’ interests (such as retirement, transfers out, death of members and also diligent control of the assets and income). It is clear that the high level of up-front fees were intended as a quick way for the organisers of Capita Oak to earn a large amount of fees and then abandon the scheme altogether and ignore the many appeals by members for information, accounts, and data on the scheme and the investments. This includes Mr. X whose case was investigated by the Pensions Ombudsman who found ITSL guilty of mal-administration and referred to Capita Oak as being typical of a pension liberation scheme and organized crime.

     

    No mention has been made as to who has provided “services” to the scheme or in what capacity. Full disclosure and complete transparency is now formally requested as to who was behind these services and what services were provided. There has not been any evidence of any service to the members – other than complete silence and refusal to communicate. The people behind Capita Oak have provided no accounts, no reports, no transfers, no asset valuations and have ‘lost’ £1.6 million in “guaranteed” rental income: the main selling point that convinced members to transfer to Capita Oak.

     

    “There is a further purpose that is served by distribution of the certified financial report. I had hoped to avoid drawing these matters to your attention, preferring instead to focus on material and factual matters. In summary, I have been made aware of a number of comments and statements (many anonymous, others adopting obviously fictitious names) having been made on various social media or similar sites. Apart from being grossly misleading and wholly without foundation, some of the comments and statements are, frankly, shocking, containing as they do lurid and defamatory statements against a number of persons, including some who have provided services to the Scheme. In particular, some of the statements make allegations as to financial impropriety.”

    There is clear financial impropriety. To suggest otherwise is ridiculous. Not only has there clearly been obvious “financial impropriety” but also obvious fraud on the part of the operators and promoters of Capita Oak. The statements clearly and transparently made by me contained facts and hard evidence on the WhoCallsMe forum.

    http://whocallsme.com/Phone-Number.aspx/01516680386/120#p831709128742963577

    Various other contributors have posed as me and Downs using fictitious names, but although some have clearly sought to disrupt the flow of genuine information, there has been some valuable information provided about the activities of Perkins, Fowler and Downs. I stand by everything I have said on the forum and have always stated that if evidence can be provided that I have been mistaken I will gladly make a full retraction and apology. The only connected individuals I have ever communicated with have been Downs, the individual operating the Thurlstone loans and members of the Perkins/Fowler/Ward team who are disgusted at the wholesale defrauding of victims in Capita Oak, Westminster and other scams. I have also communicated extensively with Metis Law and JWK Solicitors acting for Toby Whittaker, but they have both now “pulled up the drawbridge” as they are now in contentious communication with each other.

     

    “As can be seen from the certified financial statement enclosed with this announcement, all monies transferred into the Scheme referable to members have been fully accounted for.”

    I refer to my previous comments about an independent auditor, only then will the members be satisfied that all monies have been accounted for. There is evidence that there is still 1.22 million missing and unaccounted for, with several members having confirmed that their funds are amongst the missing funds. In other words, members have transferred their pensions and yet these transfers are not on the list of transfers that went to Store First via Metis Law. The 100k paid to Thurlstone (which operated the pension liberation loans) remains unexplained, despite my asking about this repeatedly. Now, presumably, the 100k is hidden within the administration expenses. Further, my specific accounts queries below need to be addressed immediately.

     

    “It should further be noted that the certified financial statement was prepared with the independent accountant having been provided with copies of the bank statements for Imperial’s bank account. In view of this, I again ask that members rely solely on official announcements and information issued by Imperial and to ignore comments and statements issued by others, some of whom it must be assumed have ulterior motives.”

     

    The question remains: why did Downs refuse to provide the bank statements to the board of trustees? Further, I repeat, Downs is NOT independent. And this “financial statement” is far from complete and transparent as will be seen from my comments on the very incomplete “Analysis and Summary of Bank Account”. The question: why were the limited accounts only made up to September 2013? must also be answered. I would also like a proper explanation as to why the appointment of a truly independent (not previously connected with any of the parties who operated and/or promoted Capita Oak) accountant/auditor, Robert Stell, was rejected.

     

    “My enquiries, through my professional advisers, as to the investments made with the funds transferred to Metis Law are continuing.”

    I think at this point we have got to cut through all the obfuscation and ask who this communication is actually from? Imperial has had various directors since July 2012: Christopher Payne; Karen Burton; Karl Dunlop; Maria Orolfo (nominee in Dubai with false address in UK); me (immediately removed by Christopher Payne as I predicted); Christopher Payne (again); Roger Chant. Why so many directors? Why do they keep resigning? Why did Payne – the sole shareholder – resign from his own company? Then re-appoint himself and remove me? Why do the shadow directors Bill Perkins and Alan Fowler fail to appoint themselves as directors? Perkins, Fowler and Ward were clearly behind Capita Oak and Imperial Trustee Services. Ward had details not only of Capita Oak on his system but also of Westminster – which had the same sponsoring employer – RP Medplant in Cyprus (but whose assets have totally disappeared, totaling between 3m and 7m and clearly also run by Fowler and Salih). Although this letter appears to have been written by Roger Chant, why would a complete stranger, previously unconnected with ITSL and/or Capita Oak elect to be a director in the full knowledge that ITSL is in serious trouble over a fraudulently-operated pension scheme with compromised assets and stolen income? And why have neither Perkins nor Fowler appointed themselves as directors instead of Roger Chant?

     

    It must further be raised that Imperial (and the directors/shadow directors/shareholder) were entirely legally responsible for the set up, structure and operation of the scheme, as well as the illiquid investments in Store First. Christopher Payne – the founding director and sole shareholder of Imperial (as well as TKE Admin to whom the “administration” fees were paid) was clearly heavily involved from the start and is well known to Downs, so why does this letter seek to create the impression that investigations are required? Perkins, Ward and Fowler know everything about the Capita Oak scheme so why don’t they just come clean? 

     

    “I will authorise the preparation and distribution of a further announcement regarding the Scheme’s investments as soon as possible.”

     

    Further “announcements” will have much greater credibility if they are issued by the people who operated Capita Oak: Perkins, Ward and Fowler, rather than an un-connected person who has had no experience of the scheme and whose sudden, unexplained appointment as director appears to be a rather ham-fisted attempt to shield Perkins’, Ward’s and Fowler’s responsibilities and culpabilities.

     

    “I am also seeking information regarding the investment return that was due on the investments.”

     

    This statement unfortunately stretches credibility beyond the limit and is also insulting to the intelligence of the members. Perkins, Fowler and Ward devised and operated the scheme and Craig Hollingdrake of JWK Solicitors, acting for Toby Whittaker of Store First, confirmed to me that the 8% “guaranteed rental income” was paid to Transeuro Worldwide Holdings on the instructions “of the people operating Capita Oak”. According to the BBC, Toby Whittaker himself also confirmed this to the BBC investigating journalist. Let us be clear, the investments in Store First were done with the explicit intention of extracting the 30% introduction commission for those directly and indirectly connected with ITSL – not providing a secure retirement investment or income for the members. ITSL’s directors and shadow directors never intended running a long-term pension scheme for the benefit of the members: if they had, they would have invested the funds in diverse, prudent, liquid assets to provide for transfers, retirement and death. To claim to be “seeking information” is just nonsense. If the rental income of £1.6m has been stolen, then Chant and Downs have a duty to report the matter to the police and provide them with all the evidence. Have they done this?

     

    “Currently, and it must be stressed subject to confirmation, the position appears to be that the funds transferred to Metis Law (from which it can be expected that legal fees will have been deducted, but again that has still to be confirmed) were subsequently applied in the purchase of commercial property, principally storage pods with a company called Store First. These investments appear to have been made at the direction of the directors at the time. The former directors who were in office at the time that Scheme assets were transferred to Metis Law and/or were applied in the investment of those assets appear to be a Mr. Karl Dunlop and a Ms Maria Orolfo.”

     

    “These investments appear to have been made….” This is an unbelievable statement. A quick phone call to Metis Law would clear that up, though the fact that that current director of a pension scheme is not sure is damning in the extreme. The directors at the time were Christopher Payne, Karen Burton and Karl Dunlop – so what questions have been asked of them? And why did they resign? Metis Law confirmed that they were instructed by Karl Dunlop. Reverting to my previous comment above, the writer appears to express surprise at the position regarding the investments and the activities of Metis Law. ITSL was the “administrator” and instructed Metis Law. If (and it is a BIG if) Chant has no communication with Payne (who instructed Downs in the first place), Dunlop, Burton and the shadow directors Perkins, Ward and Fowler, why doesn’t he ask them? Why doesn’t he ask Ward whose 31 Memorial Road address was used as the Capita Oak address? Why doesn’t he ask Whittaker whose Goodlass Road address was subsequently used? Why is he purporting to “seek” information when the various parties who operated Imperial/Capita Oak are right under his nose?

     

    I have already sent in a much more complete set of accounts than the one submitted by “Chant” showing what was paid to Metis Law and TKE Admin but this was ignored by Downs and those instructing him. The investments were clearly made at the direction of those who set up, promoted and operated the scheme i.e. Perkins, Fowler and Ward. If another party had instructed the purchase of the pods or any other transaction connected with the scheme, this does not absolve the directors or shadow directors of legal responsibility and accountability.

     

    “Should any members have information as to how (and by whom) they were made aware of the Scheme, or if members have details of any promotional material or statements made (including, but not limited to, those regarding any investments and the expected return on investments) it would be appreciated if members could provide a copy or details to Imperial, either by post or by email. This information may assist in the enquiries being undertaken by my professional advisers.”

     

    This is an admission that the scheme has no idea how it was promoted to its members. I suspect that the director’s advisers are looking for evidence that the agents and promoters of the scheme are guilty of misleading statements to deflect the blame from those that set up the scheme itself. Many members have written and emailed “Imperial” and been denied any kind of response for many months. Indeed the Pensions Ombudsman has declared that this constitutes mal-administration over a prolonged period of time, and has described the scheme as typical of pension liberation and “organized crime”.

     

    “In response to the second member announcement, a very small number of members have enquired about, or have requested, a transfer payment to another scheme or arrangement. Until full details of the location, security, liquidity and value of the Scheme’s investments, and the investment return paid on those investments, is fully understood, in the short term it is not possible for transfer values to be quoted or transfers to be made. Naturally, as soon as it becomes possible, we will advise members as to next steps regarding the availability of transfers.”

     

    This statement really does again stretch credibility to the limit, and beyond. Could we have confirmation how many have enquired? It is surprising that only a very small number want to transfer out. The directors and shadow directors of ITSL clearly set up and ran this scam. They instructed Metis Law to effect the purchases of store pods using virtually 100% of the members’ funds, instructed Store First to pay the 8% 2-year guaranteed rent to Transeuro Worldwide Holdings Ltd., and operated the Thurlstone pension liberation scam. So how can they not know? It defies belief. The very fact that this letter appears to be trying to create the impression that ITSL was not responsible for everything that has gone wrong is damning in itself. Also, the fact there is no liquidity for transfers out, demonstrates again that this scheme has not been managed for the benefit of the members.

     

    “Please be assured that Imperial continued actively to pursue all matters relating to the Scheme, with the best interests of the members its paramount aim.”

     

    Am not sure any of the Capita Oak victims will believe this statement, having seen that they have been scammed out of £10.8 million (plus the £1.22 million missing transfers), as well as ITSL failing to account for the missing £1.6m rental income.

     

    “This is being done within the very limited funds available to Imperial.”

    Bearing in mind ITSL charged 541,775.51 by its own admission, according to the “financial analysis” reported by Chant, I would have thought Imperial had plenty of funds to “actively pursue” these matters. (Plus the 70,162.19 they are supposed to have as a “balance” which should be held in cash. Plus the 31k that Metis Law are sitting on.)

    If the funds are limited, how was the scheme ever going to be administered going forwards? Not only do we not have audited accounts, there are no individual statements for members. Why were the funds not segregated into individual accounts? It is not just a question of illiquid assets, the scheme cannot even tell an individual what the transfer value is in the first place. A shocking state of affairs that has not been addressed. Why not?

     

    “ITSL c/o Downs & Co

    Signed Roger Chant”

     

    PURPORTED “ANALYSIS AND SUMMARY OF BANK ACCOUNT” BY IMPERIAL

    Transfers Received: 10,835,510.21 (why is this 25,208.64 greater than stated in the original Imperial accounts and where is the missing 1.22 million made up from 47 transfers?)

    Interest Received: 832.11

    To open account: 75.00

    TOTAL: 10,836,417.32

    Pension cash lump sums: 82,911.31

    Bank charges: 812.33

    Administration fees: 541,775.51 (why did the original Imperial accounts state 441,751.85 and does this revised figure include the 10k paid to Christopher Payne when Barclays realised that ITSL was operating a scam? And further, does it include the 100,557.58 paid to Thurlstone by Metis Law?)

    Pensions Regulator: 157.71

    Metis Law re investment: 10,140,598.27

    Balance held by ITSL: 70,162.19 (does this include the 31k held by Metis Law which they are refusing to release?)

    Where are the following items in the financial statement?:

    9,828,750.00 paid to Store First – of which 30% was paid in introduction commission

    2,948,625 paid in commission (to whom?)

    647.00 in bank charges

    720.31 in courier services

    61,172.98 in fees to Metis Law

    3,990.00 to Harper McLeod

    1,696.00 in indemnity insurance

    12,370.00 in Land Registry fees

    5,194.20 to SDLT

    94,165.00 to Stamp Duty

    100,557.58 to Thurlstone

     

    It must be clearly declared that taking into consideration the 30% introduction commission and the 8% “guaranteed rental income” that in fact Imperial effected payment of 9,828,750 for property which was worth 46% less than the purchase price at the very least (and which may have a zero re-sale value). Furthermore, aside from the 5% “admin fee” paid to Imperial/TKE Admin, a further 179,955.29 in assorted costs added to the dilution of the value of the transfers.

     

    Finally, kindly respond to the following by return:

    1. Comments are sought on the invalid and forged “trust deed” which appointed ITSL as administrator but not as trustee. The signatures look like they could be Alan Fowler and Karen Burton (although it is not the same signature as Karen Burton used to sign letters to Capita Oak members and the handwriting is identical to that of Anthony Salih of Premier Pension Transfers at 31 Memorial Road, Worsley). Why were the signatures not identified, dated and witnessed? And why was no trustee appointed? Where is the original, witnessed trust deed?
    2. Who registered Capita Oak with tPR and HMRC?
    3. Why were the pods registered in the name of ITSL (as trustee of Capita Oak) when it was not the trustee? This means that the Capita Oak scheme is not the legal owner of the pods, but ITSL is. How will HMRC treat this?
    4. Why were the Barclays Bank accounts in the name of ITSL/Christopher Payne and not ITSL/Capita Oak?

     

    A full and prompt response to the above queries would be much appreciated. This letter is being copied to the Police Economics Crime Unit, the Pensions Regulator, the Pensions Ombudsman, the Insolvency Service, the members, the press as well as the SRA and Mr. Downs’ professional body.

     

    Angela Brooks

    Chairman – Ark Class Action

     

  • CAPITA OAK PENSION SCAM: BBC Radio 4 You and Yours.

    toCapita Oak pension scam: hundreds search for pensions they transferred after cold calls.

    In a special You and Yours, we investigate a web of companies that sold millions of pounds of pension investments to hundreds of people – and has left many of them desperately trying to find out where their money has gone.

    Click here to listen to the programme.

    Liberating Pension Pots:

    LIES, FRAUD AND FORGERY

    STORE FIRST/CAPITA OAK/IMPERIAL TRUSTEES AND VARIOUS SIPPS

    Shari Vahl – BBC Radio Four You And Yours 20.10.2014

    Transcribed by Angela Brooks, Chairman – Ark Class Action 20.10.2014

    (comments in bold by AB)

     

    Store First is doing really well.  Next year it is expected to open more of its self-storage warehouses.  It has celebrities such as Quentin Wilson recommending people invest in its storage units. Wilson claims: “I’ll be honest, I like it so much, I’ve got one myself.”  The BBC has spoken to some of the people who sold the Store First investments.  They told Shari how they lied, as well as forged documents and signatures to make sure that pension money was moved from secure schemes into Store First.  One salesman said: “I feel kind of sick to the stomach that I had transferred pensions from an elderly lady who completely trusted me.  I played with her dog.  She made me cups of tea.  She gave me biscuits.  I built trust with her.  And I don’t know if any of these people ever received any money.”

     

    The BBC’s You And Yours team devoted the entire programme to the thousands of people who invested millions of pounds in this one company: Store First.

     

    “I was asked by listeners to look into two Liverpool-based pension funds which had gone horribly wrong.  These were Capita Oak/Imperial Trustees (300+ members with total transfers of at least £10.8m) and Henley/Omni Trustees. £20 million of pension money had been invested in Store First but around 500 people hadn’t received the returns they were promised and now they can’t get their money.  The two pension funds were wound up in the High Court in 2015 and the judge described them as “dishonestly disadvantaging pensioners and sold on the basis of false representation”.  From the start, it was clear from the people who came to us that those two pension funds that the court wound up weren’t the only ones driving huge investments in Store First.  I’ve discovered another much bigger one marketed by the same Liverpool sales team, sending all the funds raised to Store First – a chain of storage warehouses.

    Alan: “I don’t suppose I’ll ever see that £140k again.  I don’t want other people to fall into the same trap.  Which they might do now with the new pension rules”.  Lolita: “This is the most appalling scheme I have ever heard of.  It is awful.  It is actually costing me money now.  I would never have agreed to this.”  David: “I’m annoyed with myself but I am even more annoyed with the people who took it off me.  £66k and I want it back”.

     

    “Those are three of the listeners that came to see us: Alan, David and Lolita.  They were promised big returns on their pension investments and access to a quarter of it, tax free when they reach 55.  They were told their money would go into Store First in 2012/2013.  He engaged a sales company in Liverpool to sell people the idea of investing their pensions into his company.  What the investors would get was a physical storage unit or pod and the money raised from renting out that pod (to people who wanted to store their stuff) is how they get the returns.  Or that was the promise.  The Capita Oak victims were also given non-repayable, interest free “loans” of 5% of the value of their pension transfers by a supposedly non-connected company registered in Gibraltar called Thurlstone.

     

    Quentin Wilson featured in the advert claiming a “guaranteed 8% for the first two years and up to 10% in years 3 and 4”.  This was due to rise to 12% by year 6.  So even people with secure, generous, final salary pension funds moved them into Store First.

     

    Alan, an ex postman, paid into the Royal Mail pension scheme: “I had about £144k.  These people came to me and said they could put it in a SIPP (Self Invested Personal Pension) and I’d get guaranteed returns on it”.  These people were the sales team based in Liverpool.  He believed the claims.  “I looked on the Store First website and they were predicting the same thing.  And then this guy Quentin Wilson doing a video about how it was the fastest growing market in the UK and predicted 85% profit in six years”.

     

    Alan and hundreds of others like him were really interested and excited by this offer.  Interest rates on savings were so low and they needed money.  The salesmen said they had “frozen” pensions from their old jobs just sitting there.  Lolita also took one of these cold calls from Jackson Francis – the Liverpool sales team.  We’ve obtained a copy of the script they used for the phone calls and it shows the cold callers described themselves as “pension specialists”.  Lolita was 36 when she signed up so she is much younger than Alan and she had £20k in a pension pot from her old job.  Jackson Francis asked if she would be interested in taking control of that fund and she said yes, she would be prepared to re-invest it somewhere so that it would be working for her and give her a good pension.  So she allowed Jackson Francis to transfer her old pension into a SIPP (really only suitable for people with lots of money to invest).

     

    David Griffiths did the same thing with his pension which had taken 20 years to build up working as a van driver for the Birmingham Post and Mail.  A salesman visited him and gave him a glossy booklet and told him it was a very good investment and many people had had their money back on it and the website looked kosher so he decided to go with it.

    For a lot of people the promise of a tax-free lump sum was a big part of it and they could have got that out of their old pension schemes, but they didn’t know that and Jackson Francis didn’t tell them that.  Other people just wanted to make their money work harder for them and get better returns.  This has been researched by BBC Radio 4 for more than a year after being contacted by desperate people who had not received their lump sums at 55, couldn’t contact the Liverpool sales team and were very worried.

     

    Several former Jackson Francis employees started to get in touch with the BBC and started to reveal what was really going on inside Jackson Francis.  They believe that Alan, Lolita and David and hundreds of others were lied to and defrauded.  One salesman said that the promise of getting 25% of the pension at age 55 was really the main bait.  “A lot of people, especially over 55, were struggling and that tax-free lump sum would have helped them out”.

    People who go into a SIPP are strongly advised to get independent financial advice.  The cold callers described themselves as “pension specialists” and offered a free pension review and Alan thought he was getting good advice.

     

    Under the rules, you can’t take out any part of a pension under the age of 55, and if you do move your pension pot, you should have a third party company regulated by the FCA in the middle to manage the pension pot for you.  So who managed the Store First investment?  A company in Leicester called Berkeley Burke (SIPP administration company) – unrelated to Store First and Jackson Francis and wasn’t paid by either of them but took on the majority of Jackson Francis clients – hundreds of them – and handled their investments into Store First.

     

    Berkeley Burke was happy to facilitate the transfers provided the clients signed to say they recognised the investment was high risk.  After a few months, Berkeley Burke wouldn’t take any more Jackson Francis clients unless those people had received independent financial advice.  Jackson Francis approached an IFA called Keith Popplewell, experienced in pensions, who was paid to help them.  They asked him to provide advice to their clients so he needed information from these clients but before he could give advice he needed Jackson Francis to do a questionnaire but he didn’t meet the people he was advising.  He didn’t speak to them on the phone either.  He just looked at the questionnaires returned by the salesmen and then wrote a financial report either recommending or not recommending they move their money into a SIPP.

     

    This is where the allegations of fraud and forgery really begin.  This is what one of the salesmen said about the so-called fact-finding questionnaires: “There was a series of boxes and you had to tick one.  It went from low to high risk and we were told by our bosses that people needed to be at the higher end or there wouldn’t be a transfer.  If the client didn’t want to be high risk, they were told they would have to leave the pension where it was.  Another salesman reported it was more than just scaring people “When I was training I went out with one of the field agents.  He filled in the form before he went into the client’s house and ticked the box to say the client did have an appetite for risk before meeting him.  Clients did not see a copy of their reports.  Keith Popplewell claims he never recommended anyone in a final salary scheme to transfer into a SIPP.  Even clients whose reports said the pensions should not be transferred were still transferred and did not even see the report from Popplewell.

     

    One salesman witnessed another salesman signing pensions transfer paperwork himself and filled in the fact-find questionnaire himself.  Another salesman reported that this was routine and that the salesmen would sign the forms rather than the client.  In other words, forging signatures.  You would see them practising on a piece of paper until they got it right.

     

    Jackson Francis was a “machine” that drove £100 million into Store First.  The salesmen did not know about the level of commission paid by Store First.  Over two years, Store First paid £33 million to a mysterious company called Transeuro Worldwide Holdings and it worked like this: every time an investment was received into Store First via the Liverpool sales team, Store First would pay Transeuro a commission of 30% or 46%.  So when Alan put his £141k pension from the Royal Mail into a SIPP and that went into Store First, Transeuro was paid nearly £65k – 46% commission.

     

    The government took Transeuro to the High Court to wind it up in the public interest after complaints from people who had been persuaded to move into two other pension funds also invested in Store First and millions of pounds are also missing from those pensions.  Up until that court hearing, it was really hard to see who really ran Transeuro.  It seemed to be based in Gibraltar and was shrouded in layers of nominee directors in the Caribbean and Central America and at the winding up hearing the court forced Transeuro’s solicitors to name the man in charge.  That man is Michael Talbot who all the Liverpool salesmen believed was their boss.  The man they described as having the big glass desk in the Speke office; the quiet man who hired and fired; the man with the chequebook.

     

    But in a letter to the BBC from Talbot’s lawyers, he denied he ran the Liverpool sales operation or Transeuro Worldwide Holdings.  He claimed his role was IT and databases and he told the BBC that at his garden gate in 2014.  Talbot is 42, from the North of England and he used to be a nightclub promoter, married with two children.

    Transeuro used £5m of the £33m they were paid to run the Jackson Francis operation and for buying in names of potential customers; they rented offices in Speke.  Mike and Stuart would often roll up to the office in Ferraris and Rolls Royces, a Porsche, all owned by Store First.  These offices were called Business First and Jackson Francis worked from there.  Store First owned all the cars that the salesmen used to drive to visit clients and provided all the glossy brochures, and the product knowledge training for the sales team.

    We can’t say that the investors have lost everything because they still are the legal owners of these storage pods.  Quentin Wilson promoted the “exit strategy” as being able to “bail out at any time without cost and can sell to Store First who have a guaranteed buy-back scheme or you sell to another investor”.  But Store First told one investor “on the fifth anniversary if you request for Store First to buy your pods back and if this is agreed then Store First have a further five years to complete the buy back”.  And over that time you have to pay another five years’ fees and management costs.  SF claimed it could organise an “in house” sale and sell the storage pods to someone else and make the original investor a profit of 25% but simultaneously offer a 25% discount on a new one.  Why would anyone buy a second-hand unit for 50% more than a new one?  It has been three years since Alan asked Store First to his sell his units and so far nobody wants them.  Nobody has bought David Griffiths’ pods either.

    BBC went to speak to Mike Burkey at Andrews Estate Agents in the Wirral and he said they had one on the market for £15k in February.  They dropped the price in June to £9k as interest was minimal.  The realistic price could be £5k and they charge a flat fee of £1k plus conveyancing fee of about £600.  So after total fees of around £1800 the seller might walk away with £3.5k.  Other estate agents tell the same story and one said they thought the investors had been “stung”.  A major auction house had 9 pods for sale from the Blackburn site.  The auctioneer started at £10k but there was not one single bid.  No-one out of the 400 people in the room showed even a flicker of interest.

    The original investors were shown a valuation by a chartered surveyor and the BBC asked him how he had calculated the market value and he said it was a sum based on how much rent the pod would generate.  He was then asked where he got the rental figures and he said “Store First”.  He was then asked whether he checked those figures to prove those rents were coming in and he said “no”.  When the Capita Oak store pods were purchased in 2012/13, the solicitors used for the conveyancing – Metis Law – were specifically instructed not to get valuations for the pods they bought using £10m of funds from the Capita Oak members.

     

    “As a matter of policy, Carey Pensions use a conservative valuation estimate for Store First storage units of 50% of the original purchase price in preparing annual SIPP reports”.  This was a letter sent in 2015 to some Store First investors telling them their investment is worth half what they paid.  When asked why the value of the investments had dropped so much they didn’t answer.

    Store First claims it has 5,000 investors who have put £250 million pounds into Store First.  Tom McPhail of Hargreaves Lansdown says the way these investments were sold was wrong because unregulated advisers were selling high risk investments with financial advisers signing off risk profiles that were inappropriate and then people buying into unregulated high risk investments and people who should never have been moved out of final salary schemes and unregulated investments shouldn’t be in the SIPPS at all in the first place.

    The BBC tried to get in touch with the SIPP administrators Berkeley Burke, regulated by the FCA, but they didn’t respond.  Carey Pensions did respond saying that they did do checks in line with FCA regulation and that they are happy.  The Self Storage Association says that the figures that Store First are putting out are not viable and they got an independent report from Deloittes who confirmed the initial suspicions that the promised returns are unviable from a self storage business and there were two similar operations in Australia that failed and the investors were left out of pocket.  There is very little, if any, market for re-sold units.  Tom McPhail says there is very little avenue for compensation for the investors.

    Quentin Wilson states he has asked Store First to remove the videos from their website and he has confirmed he has received no income from his pod.

     

  • CAPITA OAK UPDATE AND INFORMATION REQUIRED

    CAPITA OAK UPDATE AND INFORMATION REQUIRED

    Capita Oak Pension Scam

    For the benefit of all 300 odd members of Capita Oak, here is an email that was sent today to Downs & Co, the accountants acting on behalf of Christopher Payne, the director of the trustees Imperial. This email has been circulated to many Capita Oak members and other interested parties such as the police and the BBC who are preparing a documentary on the subject.

    Hopefully it will not be too late to blow the whistle on this situation and rescue the members’ funds: https://pension-life.com/#!whistle/c13e7

    Admittedly, the contents of this email raises more questions than it answers, but it does at least go some way to establishing how many members there are, how much in total was transferred and who the various parties were who received money from the transfers. What it does not yet establish is what the 10.14 million paid to Metis Law is now actually worth and how (or if) it can be recovered.
    Dear Mr. Downs (info@downsandco.co.uk)

    Referring to our earlier correspondence, will you kindly ask your client Mr. Christopher Payne the following questions:

    1. A total of 10,810,301.57 was transferred in to Capita Oak from approximately 300 members and a total of 10,666,066.14 was paid out. This should leave a balance of 144,235.43 and confirmation is required that this is indeed the amount remaining in cash.

    2. A total of 82,911.31 was paid out in “PCLS” payments and confirmation is required as to what these payments were and who authorised them.

    3. The following “PCLS” payments were made and confirmation is needed as to who these people were and why these payments were made, upon whose authority:

    -5,054.24 J Whyte
    -8,854.53 G Rose
    -21,875.72 W Daniels
    -5,758.99 Mr Clemson
    -5,286.32 Mr. Charlesworth
    -17,231.51 Pamela Holt
    -18,850.00 A Levitt

    4. A total of 441,751.85 was paid to TKE Admin (of which Mr. Payne was a director). This was paid to TKE on 27 different dates between 12.11.2012 and 5.7.2013. Please explain what these payments were for and who authorised them.

    5. Premier Pension Transfers were apparently handling the transfers but there is no record of any payment to them for their services. How were they remunerated and why were two administration companies involved and who appointed them?

    6. A total of 10,140,598.27 was remitted to Metis Law between 11.20.2012 and 7.5.2013. Confirmation is required that Capita Oak now holds 10,140,598.27 worth of assets and exactly what income these assets are supposed to generate and whether they are unencumbered. Further we need evidence of title to these assets and a full explanation as to who authorised 100% of Capita Oak’s assets to be placed in illiquid property with very little liquidity remaining for transfers out.
    7. An explanation as to how and by whom the Thurlestone “loans” were transacted, administered and recorded.

    There will of course be numerous further questions which your client Mr. Payne will be required to answer, including why he has not contacted me or answered my calls. As I am sure you appreciate, as former and current director of Imperial Trustees, Mr. Payne is liable for any risks to Capita Oak and responsible for the members’ interests, investments and any non-compliant transactions linked to the pension, such as the Thurlestone loans of 5% of the value of the transfers.
    In the case of Ark, professional independent trustees were appointed by the Pensions Regulator and the majority of the assets were eventually recovered. However, this is not the case for the Capita Oak victims – who are extremely distressed – and therefore we are all relying on the full cooperation and disclosure by you and your client Mr. Payne.

    Your early response will be much appreciated. As I am sure you will be fully aware, this situation is being closely monitored by the police and the BBC, as well as the members and if you or your client Mr. Payne are unable to answer any of the above questions you must refer me to any other connected party who is in a position to do so. You will see that this email is copied to the Police, Store First and Metis Law.

    Regards, Angela Brooks – Chairman, Ark Class Action

  • ARK PENSION DISASTER – THE TIMES ARTICLE

    The Times – good quality journalism reporting poor quality financial advice

    Ark Pension Disaster – The Times Article – Mark Atherton Uncovers Pension Liberation Scam

    Money

    Pension scam leaves victims in debt

    Angie Brooks is leading a campaign to secure justice for victims of a pensions “liberation” scam                                                  Pic: Richard Pohle

    Mark Atherton

    Last updated at 12:01 AM, September 13 2014

    Thousands of people have lost more than £500 million of their savings after being duped into taking part in unauthorised “pension liberation” scams. Experts say that the true figure runs into billions because many cases go unreported.

    They also warn that next year’s relaxation of the rules governing how you can take your pension cash will provide a fertile breeding ground for fresh scams as fraudsters queue up to exploit the uncertainty around the new pensions regime.

    Some of today’s victims fear they have lost their entire pension savings, while others say they have been driven to the brink of suicide.

    The lure of pensions “liberation”

    Savers were originally lured into transferring their pension pots by the promise of getting their hands on their retirement cash before the age of 55. However, many succeeded in “unlocking” only half of their pension pot, with the rest going partly into uncertain property investments, partly into cash and partly to the scheme’s promoters through hefty fees.

    Savers were told that these schemes were legitimate but that was not true. Now many of the victims are facing financial ruin as they are being told to hand back the money they “liberated”, while Revenue & Customs is poised to slap on a tax penalty of 55 percent of the “unlocked” cash. In many cases, they simply do not have the money to pay.

    The Ark schemes

    Among the biggest “liberation” schemes were those created by Ark, a pensions consultant. These were marketed by financial advisers and so-called “introducers” in the UK and Spain. One of the main players was Stephen Ward, of Premier Pension Solutions (PPS), a Spanish-based company.

    Angie Brooks, below, a former tax barrister, who is leading the class action on behalf of the Ark victims, says: “Mr Ward assured Ark applicants that it was lawful and tax-free and was approved by the Revenue and the pensions regulator. The Revenue registered the six Ark occupational pension schemes without checking for compliance. So did the pensions regulator. This understandably gave the Ark members the reasonable illusion that the schemes were lawful and approved by the UK government.”

    The registration procedures have now been changed. She says that between September 2010 and May 2011, £25 million was transferred from personal and occupational pension plans into Ark schemes, for fees of up to 10 percent of the value of the transferred pot. More was transferred after this, bringing the total to £27 million.

    PPS teamed up with AES International, a firm regulated in the UK, which gave PPS a tied agent agreement to operate in Spain under its regulation (though this did not authorise PPS to carry out pension transfers). PPS carried out at least 160 Ark pension transfers, totalling £10.7 million, with Ark taking a 5 percent cut of each transfer, PPS pocketing a further 3 per cent, as well as a slice of the Ark money, and AES receiving a 12.5 percent slice of PPS’s cut.

    The schemes “unlocked” money by arranging for members to make reciprocal loans, worth about half the value of their pension pot, to each other. Many believed they would not have to repay these loans, known as Maximising Pension Value Arrangements (MPVA). The remaining half of their pension pots, after deduction of hefty charges, was partly held in cash and partly used to buy plots of land or timeshares.

    Alarm bells started to ring in December 2010 when the Revenue expressed “concerns” over the lawfulness of the schemes, though it was not until May that they were suspended and a trustee — Dalriada — appointed. It embarked on litigation that resulted in the Ark schemes being declared invalid and the reciprocal loans judged to be “unauthorised payments” in the High Court in December 2011.

    The cost to Ark victims

    The judge’s ruling delivered a twofold blow to Ark members. First, Dalriada was enabled to demand back the money they had received as loans under the schemes. Second, since the loans were “unauthorised payments” the Revenue was entitled to levy a penalty charge of 55 per cent on these sums. The Revenue has not decided whether to tax the donors or recipients.

    Dalriada has managed to recover more than £6 million of the £7 million which Ark spent on property investments. Sean Browes, of Dalriada, adds that it also has £9 million of Ark money in a bank account and is seeking to unscramble the £10 million of reciprocal loans. However, this has come at the cost of £800,000 in Dalriada’s fees and £1.9 million in legal costs.

    According to Ms Brooks, Mr Ward has, since the suspension of Ark, been linked to pension liberation schemes which have attracted hundreds of fresh customers — something he denies.

    He says: “PPS provided information regarding the Ark schemes in good faith based on the information and opinions provided by Ark and our own independent research. We included statements that independent financial advice should be sought and a number of people who did take advice found the experts they consulted agreed with our understanding of the position. We believe the damage has been caused primarily by the Revenue’s failure to take action when it first became aware of the schemes and by Dalriada’s fees.”

    Sam Instone, the head of AES International, says: “We had nothing to do with the Ark scheme and we earned a negligible amount from our tied agency with PPS. We have no legal responsibility for what has occurred here.”

    Craig Tweedley, who created the Ark schemes, says: “We took extensive advice about the validity of these schemes before launch. We were concerned when we learned that some introducers were claiming that the MPVA loans did not have to be repaid when a key part of our scheme was that they should.”

    Dalriada says: “The Ark schemes were very unusual and have taken some time and, unfortunately, money to unravel. The members of these schemes have been scammed.”

    Anyone with information about these pensions “liberation” schemes is invited to contact mark.atherton@ thetimes.co.uk

    Be on your guard against scams

    • Ahead of next year’s changes to the rules, one aspect of which means those aged 55 or over can take money from their pension, the scammers are gearing up to part you from your cash. Be on your guard
    • If someone promises to help you take money from your pension pot before the age of 55 it is almost certainly a scam: you could lose the lot
    • Even if you are over 55, do not deal with anyone targeting you by phone, text message or approaching you in person. Beware the words: ‘free pension review’
    • Do not deal with anyone who is not registered with the Financial Conduct Authority for pension transfers
  • Ark, Evergreen Retirement Trust QROPS and Marazion Timeline

    Note similarity between the Marazion and Perpetual logos!

    ARK DISASTER – MARAZION/EVERGREEN PENSION LOAN SCHEMES:

    TIME-LINE

    ARK CLASS ACTION

    An Ark victim has suggested it would be a good idea to do a full update so everybody knows the entire story so far.  I agree that’s a good idea so here is a brief outline of where we are and how we got here.  If anyone has any questions or wants further information the Ark Class Action can be contacted on arkmarazion@gmail.com.

    2010: a group of investors got together and purchased a plot of land in Larnaca, Cyprus for 1 million pounds.  With the intention to try to turn it into a golf course.  Only they needed more land and more money.  So they consulted a group of “experts” who came up with the idea of attracting investment by starting a pension scheme.  Now, pensions are supposed to be LOW RISK. And diverse. Speculative land development projects are NOT a good idea for a pension (due to being high risk).  Financial advisers are supposed to know this and are not supposed to advise their clients to put their hard-earned pensions into a scheme based on a potentially worthless piece of land.

    OFFICIAL TIME-LINE 2010: Ark was formed by a group of “experts” and the worthless piece of land originally bought for 1 million was sold to Ark for 4 million.

    August 2010: Ark’s “Master Pension Schemes” (MPS’s) were aggressively promoted and sold by a clutch of financial advisers in Spain and the UK using pension liberation (also known as pension cracking or unlocking) in a scheme described by the promoters as “not traditionally available” (in other words unlawful). This “unique” process was called Maximising Pension Value Arrangements (MPVA) and facilitated a loan to the participant of up to 50% of the value of the transferred pension (after deduction of fees which ranged from between 5% and 15%).

    2010 to 2011: The Ark schemes began advertising and were sold through newspaper ads, websites, calls from financial advisers, seminars and advertisements posted on toilet doors.

    May 2011: The Pensions Regulator were actively shutting down pension liberation scams such as Ark and placed the six Ark schemes in the hands of Dalriada Trustees and the whole lot was suspended. The Regulator was actively promoting its “Scorpion” campaign to warn people about the dangers of pension liberation fraud. http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/pensionschemes/investments-tax.htm. HMRC also set up “Project Bloom” to help stop these scams due to the fact that the victims stood to lose their pensions AND get 55% plus tax bills on their pension loans. http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/pensionschemes/liberationud.pdf

    December 15th 2011: Justice Bean ruled in the High Court that the Ark schemes (MPS’s and MPVA’s i.e. pension transfers and reciprocal loans) were a “fraud on the power of investment” and that the loans constituted “unauthorised payments” (i.e. taxable at 55%). The ruling can be read here – note Clause 57: http://www.professionalpensions.com/digital_assets/3826/4568_001.pdf

    December 1st 2011: Evergreen Pension Scheme was established in New Zealand

    December 20th 2011: Marazion was incorporated in Nicosia, Cyprus.

    June 2012 Evergreen Pension Scheme commenced trading – making a loss in the first year and attracting 426 members

    August 2012 Marazion started selling five-year term loans and corresponding five-year “lock ins” to Evergreen pension transfers

    19th November 2012 HMRC suspended Evergreen from their QROPS list http://www.evergreentrust.co.nz/uk-pension-transfers/

    December 2012 Dalriada published the first year’s audited accounts (for the period May 2011 to May 2012) for the six MPS’s: Cranbourne Star, Tallton Place, Grosvenor, Lancaster, Portman and Woodcroft Dalriada’s audited accounts for the six Ark schemes for the first two years can be found here: http://dalriadatrustees.co.uk/ark/

    September 2013: The Ark Class Action was set up to help inform the Ark victims and negotiate and appeal their tax liabilities so that these (together with their pension losses) can be reclaimed from the negligent financial advisers who sold the Ark schemes to the victims .

    March 2014: HMRC finally agreed to confirm their full intentions regarding taxing the Ark loans.

    April 2014: HMRC finally confirmed their intention to try to tax the loans at both ends i.e. 55% at the receiving end AND 55% at the making end.  They also confirmed that Ark members who did not receive a loan would still be taxed at 55% for making a loan or intending to make a loan, and/or intending to receive a loan.

    Between 2012 and 2014 (to date), some Ark members have received demands by HMRC to complete Self Assessment returns declaring the Ark unauthorized payments for tax purposes; some members have received demands for the tax; some have received nothing at all, but HMRC have confirmed that the letters and demands are now on their way.  However, there really has been no consistency in their approach to the whole Ark matter, but they do now appear to be getting their act together.

    June 2014: Evidence regarding the Marazion/Evergreen pension liberation fraud was handed to the British authorities in London.

    June 2014: HMRC has issued a deadline of 30th of June for return of the 10 point questionnaire required in respect of the Ark loans.

    Any questions, just ask.  Angela Brooks

    [contact-form][contact-field label=’Name’ type=’name’ required=’1’/][contact-field label=’Email’ type=’email’ required=’1’/][contact-field label=’Website’ type=’url’/][contact-field label=’Comment’ type=’textarea’ required=’1’/][/contact-form]