Morecambe Jack wrote:Interesting point for me is that the secured creditor brought bankruptcy proceedings against "one of the directors" due to a personal guarantee, which was settled, and subsequently the debt was reduced by circa £150k. £477k is still due to the secured creditor.
A report on the conduct of the directors has been submitted to the Department for Business Innovation and Skills.
I picked up this up as well. The only directors at the time of the administrators coming in were Peter McGuigan (who surely must be the one they brought proceedings against) and Diego Lemos (good luck finding him). There were various securities signed by directors https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/comp ... 44/charges, including some from when Rod Taylor and Graham Hodgson were Directors but I doubt they've been caught up in this. The most likely is from the later Barclays Bank charges.
If it is PMG, he may well be in trouble when BIS come to investigate the circumstances of the administration.
Morecambe Jack wrote:They are hoping to get £450k from the sale of the assets which will go to the secured creditor. This is noted with a point that this is an "estimate based on difficulties due to access issues" (which I see as a positive for us).
Richard Allan and I talked to the administrators around the time of establishing the Trust to get the full picture. They clearly weren't aware of the issues with the location of the land at the time but they do now.
I'm treading carefully here but my understanding of the situation is that Co-Op Bank were the secured creditor. Around the time of the crazy cocaine snorting vicar who was Co-Op Bank's Chairman and their near bankruptcy a big package of under-performing loans were sold off at a massive discount.
Basically, let's say that the portfolio owed Co-Op £100m but they took the view that it would take decades to get back £50m, it would make sense for them now to sell the loan book for £40m and give it to someone else to do the dirty work. The buyers are 'vulture funds' who have no qualms about getting every single penny back by whatever means necessary.
As this article shows one of the biggest players is an American firm called Cerberus after the "monstrous multi-headed dog that guards the gates of the Underworld to prevent the dead from leaving" - yes they don't hide it - and it is they who own the land and Community Block at the back of the Globe, previously controlled by PMG Leisure.
The administrators Moorlands work on pretty much all of Cerberus's UK projects. They force the company into administration and then ravage over the carcass through debt reclamation, bailiffs, the courts and bankruptcy hearings. I firmly believe that the administrators could have kept open the 3G pitches and block in return for a rent that would have given the owners a return. However, by closing it all it forces us down a path they want of some sort of settlement. Basically, bollocks to the land covenant that allow kids to use it for free on certain days and the soccer schools for young ones - pay us our money!
How do I know who owns it? In the documents, it says the owners are Promontoria (Ram 2) Ltd. You can't find this in the UK, because it is an Irish company based there for tax reasons https://companycheck.co.uk/company/IE58 ... house-data. They seriously avoid tax as well https://www.irishtimes.com/business/com ... -1.2889897. The directors include Geert Jan Schipper https://www.linkedin.com/in/geert-jan-s ... -70a16422/ and as you can see he works for Cerberus.
So what can we do? I seriously believe that if we could scrape together some money - no more than £100,000. We could then launch a media campaign along the lines of 'tax dodging vulture fund denies deprived children access to football' and it would go down really well with the national press and TV. They would then be pushed into selling up. We could even picket the administrators offices.
I seriously think the Shrimps Trust could do it but it would be really helped if the club itself was more secure.