Carvier Ltd – Shut down in Carbon Credits scam!

Carvier Ltd – a third Nwikpo scam – shut down

More grief for the Nwikpo brothers. The trio made ­thousands from a landbanking scam that traded as Tullett Brown, flogging plots of fields as development opportunities when in reality they were worthless.

It was shut down in the public interest by the High Court last June after Daniel Nwikpo, 33, of North London, and brothers John and Barinua raked in £668,000.

A second investment sham, Foxstone Carr Ltd, was shut down in November and now firm number three has gone the same way.

Carvier Ltd sold so-called green ­investments known as carbon credits.

Barinua Nwikpo, better known as Barry, was a director, though the High Court heard that he “sought to hide his involvement in the company by using a Mr Hall as ‘the acceptable face’ of the company”.

The scale of the scam is unknown because the firm refused to co-operate with the Insolvency Service.

Source DAILY MIRROR – June 6, 2013

Club Class Members – Beware!

Rest Assured Property Services preys on Club Class victims

Hundreds of victims of the Club Class holiday club scam – a regular in this column – have been hit a second time.

They’ve been coldcalled by Rest Assured Property Services, which claimed to have buyers lined up for unwanted Class Class membership.

But it didn’t sell a single membership despite demanding fees of up to £1,460.

Run on paper from Crawley, West Sussex, by 48-year-old Alan Keene and Rosemay Nye, 52, the company raked in £226,000 which was squandered on designer goods and holidays. The Insolvency Service has now had it shut down in the High Court.

All the known victims of Rest Assured were also all members of the Club Class holiday group, seven connected companies which were wound up in the public interest by the High Court in London on 3 October 2012.

David Hill of The Insolvency Service said: “This company cynically targeted people who had been victims of a previous scam, using slick patter and preying on their desperation to rid themselves of the worthless products they had already been mis-sold.

“Putting a stop to these companies protects the public from being ripped off and defends legitimate, decent businesses from being undercut by those not playing by the rules.”

Source  DAILY MIRROR  January 30, 2013

 

Viva Connect – No Answer!

No answers from Viva Connect

Put “Viva Connect” into Google and the first hit you get comes under the heading Timeshare Scams, the second is Beware Viva Connect, and only then do you get Viva Connect’s own website.

“The customer is always paramount,” boasts the site, which offers to sell unwanted timeshare and holiday club membership.

“They promised to sell my holiday package last May, they said they already had a buyer,” we were told by Frank Harvey of Aylesbury, Bucks.

He paid the firm £1,500 but has since been told that the buyer has pulled out.

“I’ve tried to get my money back but without luck,” he said.

We’ve had not joy either, Viva Connect of Benalmedena near Malaga, hasn’t even replied to us.

SOURCE – DAILY MIRROR – October 17, 2012

 

Jailed for a total of 39 years.

Peter Bibby on the run while other boiler room crooks get jailed

Seven crooks who ran an £8million boiler room scam flogging worthless shares in a supposedly successful bio-diesel enterprise have been jailed for a total of 39 years.

Worldwide Bio Refineries was portrayed by coldcallers as a fantastic investment, turning vegetable waste into fuel, but it was a dormant company with just £20 in its bank account.

The Serious Fraud Office says: “The share-selling was undertaken by salesmen working from a number of boiler rooms in Marbella and Barcelona although many of them used false names and claimed to be calling from offices Frankfurt, Stockholm or Amsterdam.
“The business prospects of the company and the bio-diesel market were inflated by WBR’s directors and the salesmen, who claimed that substantial international business was being done and that the business’s shares were valued at £110 million.

“Investors believed that their investment in a successful bio-diesel enterprise would net them significant short term returns, bolstered by claims that WBR was to be floated on the stock market which would result in a significant increase in share value. These claims were bogus.

“The reality was that the UK bio-diesel plant produced no output and, with only limited imports coming from a Singapore plant, WBR was not being managed with any intention of it becoming a growing commercial success generating profits from sales of bio-diesel. WBR was simply a vehicle for fraud.”

At Ipswich Crown Court, Dennis Potter of Singapore, born April 1939, was jailed for seven years. Redmond “Ray” Charles Johnson of Tyne and Wear, born September 1944, got three years.

From Marbella, Steven John Murphy, born in February 1976 and Greg Pearson, born August 1973, both got six years inside.

From Hertfordshire, Paul Daniel Murphy, born in September 1973 got six years and Lee Eliot Homan, born in July 1972, got five years and six months.

Peter Bibby from south London, born in September 1967 is on the run. He was sentenced in absentia to six years.

Serious Fraud Office director Director Richard Alderman said, “I am very pleased with the sentences in this case which reflect the callous way the criminals preyed on their victims.”

Potter and Johnson were associates of Alternative Diesel Investments, run by Robert Alan Scott and an earlier “completely fraudulent” operation.

SOURCE – DAILY MIRROR – October 5th 2011

 

British expats beat Spanish bank

British expats beat Spanish bank in six-year property feud

By Sean O’Hare |

 Telegraph – Thu, Jul 11, 2013 0

A Spanish bank that refused to return off-plan deposits belonging to 47 British expats who invested in a failed Spanish property development has been ordered to repay €1.5million, following a six-year legal battle.

Known collectively as the Finca Parcs Action Group , the expats each paid between €10,000-70-000 in deposits for off-plan homes on a ‘luxury development’ near Murcia, only for the developer to disappear and Spain’s fourth biggest savings bank, Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo (CAM), to withold their down payments.

Keith Rule who has headed the action group and fought for the return of his €53,000, said: “For far too long Spain has alienated the very people who once helped the country prosper.

“Now the Spanish Government must learn important lessons from this case.

“If these types of cases are dealt with in a fair and speedy manner then maybe some of those people who have been the victims of negligence and malpractice may once again have the confidence to invest in Spanish property.

“After all that is what Spain wants and more importantly, desperately needs.”

CAM bank was the sole financial entity in the project, responsible for financing the development, accepting the off-plan deposits and issuing the corresponding, legally required, bank guarantee certificates to buyers.

In 2009, four years after the first deposits were handed over, the developer abandoned the development and disappeared, having built only a fraction of the homes, while the expats were still without the required bank guarantees, despite repeated requests.

“We did everything by the book before buying into these properties so felt particularly let down when the bank pulled the rug from under our feet, said Mr Rule.

“The development was advertised in Easy Jet magazine, the sales agent was British, the developer even stated on the reservation forms that it was represented by a UK lawyer, the project was launched with a champagne reception at Chelsea Football Club surrounded by sporting celebrities – we didn’t think for a minute it would all go so disastrously wrong”, said Keith.

When investors realised their holiday homes would never be built, Cam bank replied that it was not obliged to return their money because they were not in receipt of the very certificates it was supposed to issue.

At the court hearing in Hellín, Spain, the judge ruled against developer Cleyton GES SL and CAM bank, referring to ‘serious breaches’ on behalf of the developer and an ‘absolute disregard by CAM bank to the obligations imposed on financial institutions by Spanish law.’

CAM bank was nationalised by the Spanish government in 2011 and then sold to Banco Sabadell for the sum of 1€, with all future losses underwritten by the government for the following five years.

Banco Sabadell declined to comment on the ruling.

The ruling gives hope to other expats, believed to run into the thousands, who have suffered at the hands of unscrupulous Spanish banks and developers after investing in Spanish property.

There are estimated to be 700,000 unsold holiday homes in Spain, the majority of which are located along the southern coastlines, where property prices have dropped by as much as 60 per cent in certain regions.

A spokesman for the British Embassy in Spain said: “The government and British Embassy in Madrid continue to urge the Spanish authorities to seek solutions to the problems facing property owners”.

 

British Expats beat Spanish Bank!!

British expats beat Spanish bank in six-year property feud

By Sean O’Hare |

 Telegraph – Thu, Jul 11, 2013 0

A Spanish bank that refused to return off-plan deposits belonging to 47 British expats who invested in a failed Spanish property development has been ordered to repay €1.5million, following a six-year legal battle.

Known collectively as the Finca Parcs Action Group , the expats each paid between €10,000-70-000 in deposits for off-plan homes on a ‘luxury development’ near Murcia, only for the developer to disappear and Spain’s fourth biggest savings bank, Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo (CAM), to withold their down payments.

Keith Rule who has headed the action group and fought for the return of his €53,000, said: “For far too long Spain has alienated the very people who once helped the country prosper.

“Now the Spanish Government must learn important lessons from this case.

“If these types of cases are dealt with in a fair and speedy manner then maybe some of those people who have been the victims of negligence and malpractice may once again have the confidence to invest in Spanish property.

“After all that is what Spain wants and more importantly, desperately needs.”

CAM bank was the sole financial entity in the project, responsible for financing the development, accepting the off-plan deposits and issuing the corresponding, legally required, bank guarantee certificates to buyers.

In 2009, four years after the first deposits were handed over, the developer abandoned the development and disappeared, having built only a fraction of the homes, while the expats were still without the required bank guarantees, despite repeated requests.

“We did everything by the book before buying into these properties so felt particularly let down when the bank pulled the rug from under our feet, said Mr Rule.

“The development was advertised in Easy Jet magazine, the sales agent was British, the developer even stated on the reservation forms that it was represented by a UK lawyer, the project was launched with a champagne reception at Chelsea Football Club surrounded by sporting celebrities – we didn’t think for a minute it would all go so disastrously wrong”, said Keith.

When investors realised their holiday homes would never be built, Cam bank replied that it was not obliged to return their money because they were not in receipt of the very certificates it was supposed to issue.

At the court hearing in Hellín, Spain, the judge ruled against developer Cleyton GES SL and CAM bank, referring to ‘serious breaches’ on behalf of the developer and an ‘absolute disregard by CAM bank to the obligations imposed on financial institutions by Spanish law.’

CAM bank was nationalised by the Spanish government in 2011 and then sold to Banco Sabadell for the sum of 1€, with all future losses underwritten by the government for the following five years.

Banco Sabadell declined to comment on the ruling.

The ruling gives hope to other expats, believed to run into the thousands, who have suffered at the hands of unscrupulous Spanish banks and developers after investing in Spanish property.

There are estimated to be 700,000 unsold holiday homes in Spain, the majority of which are located along the southern coastlines, where property prices have dropped by as much as 60 per cent in certain regions.

A spokesman for the British Embassy in Spain said: “The government and British Embassy in Madrid continue to urge the Spanish authorities to seek solutions to the problems facing property owners”.

 

MACANTHONY FRAUD INVESTIGATION BACK ON AFTER APPEAL PROSPERS

EDITION of July 26th to August 1st 2013 

MACANTHONY FRAUD INVESTIGATION BACK ON AFTER APPEAL PROSPERS

Malaga’s provincial court has overturned the dismissal last year of the case brought by around 50 victims of the alleged real estate fraud.

EUROPA PRESS

MÁLAGA The appeals court at the Andalucia Provincial has ordered the investigation into an alleged real estate scam on the part of the firm MacAnthony Realty International S.L. to be reopened.

The lawsuit was brought by around 50 claimants, most of them British and Irish citizens.  They accuse several directors of the real estate firm of fraud and misappropriation, among them Darragh MacAnthony, the current chairman of Peterborough Football Club, and Michael John Liggon.

Now the court will have to resume its investigation into claims that the clients handed over between 10,000 and 30,000 euro each for furniture packs for properties they had purchased in a number of countries, including Bulgaria, Turkey and Morocco.

The claimants ¨never received¨ these items, pointed out the law firm Lawbird Legal Services, adding that the dismissal of the case last December had come as a surprise.

A year after the investigation was initially opened, and when all the six accused had been questioned and each claimant had been called to confirm their statement in person at the court, the judge ruled that the case did not fall within the jurisdiction of the Spanish courts.

The judge argued in her ruling that the ¨offenses had been committed abroad, as the funds had been transferred from the accounts abroad, and because the alleged fraudsters were foreigners¨.

The legal representatives of the claimants appealed the decision, arguing that the company was based at the time in the former Club Financiero Inmobiliario in Marbella.

Now, explains the law firm, the appeals court has accepted that the offenses could have been committed in the legal jurisdiction of Marbella.

This week’s ruling establishes that it is irrelevant that the defendants are of foreign nationality (although some are Spanish in any case) and that he transfers were ordered from accounts abroad.

Luis González Ordóñez, a lawyer with Lawbird Legal Services, said: ¨The decision made by the Andalucia Provincial considers it logical to proceed with the criminal investigation into people who operated from this country, independent off their nationality.¨

 

 

Ten Britons arrested in Spain over ‘boiler room fraud’

Ten Britons arrested in Spain over ‘boiler room fraud’

The raids took place in Barcelona and the Catalonia area

Ten Britons are among 22 people arrested in Spain during an investigation into an alleged 8m euro (£6.5m) “boiler room fraud”.

More than 200 members of the UK public were persuaded to put their savings into non-existent shares, police said.

The arrests were carried out by the Spanish police, supported by the UK’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) and the City of London Police.

Four guns, ammunition and 367,000 euros were also seized, police said.

Boiler room scams are estimated to cost the UK about £200m a year.

The 22 people were arrested on 6 November but the news has only emerged now, after a Spanish judge lifted a blanket ban on publicity.

All 22 people – who have not been named by the Spanish police – have been charged with being part of an organised crime group, as well as with fraud offences. Five of the British nationals were remanded in custody and the others were released on bail.

Soca said several addresses in Barcelona and other parts of Catalonia were searched and police found seven false British passports and numerous computers, hard drives, USB sticks and mobile phones, all of which need to be scrutinised by detectives.

‘Sophisticated’

They also found lists of target clients and “manuals on how to get people to part with their money”.

Soca’s Head of Operations in Europe, Ian Milne, said: “We believe this organised crime group was running a sophisticated and complex boiler room fraud.

“Shutting it down has put a stop to more members of the public being duped into parting with their hard earned cash.”

Detective Superintendent Tony Crampton, from City of London Police, said: “Investment fraud is all too often a crime created abroad to target people back here in the UK, with the vulnerable members of society being most at risk.

“This successful operation in Spain provides further evidence of how these partnerships are now delivering the sort of results that should make organised crime gangs think twice before starting their criminal enterprise.”

‘Boiler room’ gang suspects arrested in Spain BBC NEWS 27 May 2011

‘Boiler room’ gang suspects arrested in Spain  BBC NEWS  27 May 2011

Raids took place across the city of Palma de Mallorca

Fifteen Britons suspected of running one of Europe’s biggest “boiler room” scams have been arrested in Spain.

Armed police carried out a raid in Mallorca as part of an investigation into a gang believed to have been cold-calling thousands of UK residents.

The arrested men, from Nottinghamshire, Essex, Luton and London, appeared briefly in a Spanish court yesterday but are yet to face trial.

Boiler room fraudsters use pressure sales tactics to sell worthless shares.

City of London Police, who worked with the Spanish authorities, said younger members of the alleged scam are thought to have been lured into the operation by crime bosses who targeted them in English-speaking bars.

‘Fake companies’

Dyno Medical, Inca Pacific Gold and Mining and Viking Gold Resources have been named as fake companies linked to the gang.

The 15 include Liam Rymell, 23; Dominic Jones, 24; Shafiq Dad, 41; Omar Rana, 27; and Rashid Shafayat, 30, all from Nottingham.

Also arrested were John Bartlett, 22; Tyrone Robinson, 23, and Lee Fisher, 24 – all from Mansfield – and Essex residents Danny Dilliway, 25, Chris Savva, 30, Mohamed Ghazalli, 26, and Neil Simpson, 27.

Farhan Khan, 24, from Hayes, west London; Anthony Baugh, 25, from Luton; and Fahim Khan, 36, from south London but residing in Spain, are the other British suspects.

Two German nationals also appeared in court.

Boiler room scams are estimated to cost the UK about £200m a year.

Boiler room scam three sentenced to jail in US 23 July 2013

Boiler room scam three sentenced to jail in US   23 July 2013

By Emma Simpson Business correspondent, BBC News

 

Richard Pope, Paul Gunter and Simon Odoni were found guilty of one of the UK’s biggest scams.  Three British men have been sentenced to a total of 43 years in prison in the United States for their part in one of the UK’s biggest investment frauds.

Richard Pope, Simon Odoni and Paul Gunter conned British investors out of £80m.  This was then funnelled off into US bank accounts for them to enjoy a lavish lifestyle. The men were the backbone of an international crime gang that swindled at least 2,300 UK citizens.  The City of London police believe it’s the UK’s biggest boiler room scam.

I’m never going to get my life back – the life I had with my husband, my chances of a happy married life with my daughter – we were trying for another child at the time, those hopes have been destroyed”  Andrea Goswami

“These men are amongst the most arrogant, ruthless and destructive criminals the City of London police have ever dealt with and deserve every day they will spend behind bars,” said Det Insp Kerrie Gower, who led the investigation.  ‘Sheer greed’

The men co-ordinated what police described as a network of Spanish boiler rooms, employing hundreds of people to cold call investors, using high-pressure and misleading sales tactics to con them into buying worthless shares.  Most of the victims were retired professionals whose losses ranged from a few hundred pounds to £1m.

Andrea Goswami, from Yorkshire, still can’t find the words to describe her loss. Her husband Mark killed himself after losing around £200,000.  “How could they be so arrogant to think they could get away with it, and have no conscience about it, and just to destroy people’s lives in this way, just for money and just for sheer greed, and is it greed that’s all that it’s about – they say money’s the root of all evil and they are evil for what they’ve done,” she said.

“I’m never going to get my life back – the life I had with my husband, my chances of a happy married life with my daughter – we were trying for another child at the time, those hopes have been destroyed. Financially it’s been devastating and it’s a struggle, it will continue to be a struggle because of what they did.”

Mark Goswami’s money, and all the other stolen savings, were used to expand the criminal network and pay for the gang’s extravagant purchases.

Fake stock   They included a £350,000 private plane, 26 properties and a number of luxury cars and speedboats.

The sentencing marks a major milestone in a seven-year transatlantic investigation involving an array of law enforcement agencies, from Spain to Florida.  John Joyce, special agent in charge in Tampa, Florida, said the case was a great example of how law enforcement partnerships worked on an international scale.

“The United States Attorney’s Office, HSI [Homeland Security Investigations] and the US Secret Service worked this case with their law enforcement partners from London to investigate, prosecute and convict Mr Gunter, Mr Odoni and Mr Pope.   “Their sentences should send a clear message to other fraudsters.”

 

The fraud began in 2004 when Pope, 55, Gunter, 64 and Odoni, 56 acquired the identity of several fraudulent US-based companies. Call centres based in Spain were then used to try to sell fake stock to unsuspecting investors.

Websites and glossy brochures were used to give credibility to the gang’s bogus investment opportunities.  The enormity of the case first came to light in 2006 when the City of London police linked a number of inquiries in the UK to activities under investigation by federal agencies in the US.

‘Utterly destroyed’  Widow Andrea Goswami: “To destroy people’s lives in this way, just for money – it’s just sheer greed.”

“The devastation and the impact that victims have suffered has been huge and it’s had drastic consequences to individuals lives – marriages breaking down, selling of properties, individuals losing their businesses, having to work again when they were about to go in to retirement,” said Det Insp Gower.

“The enormity and scale of the devastation, I can’t even say in words what has happened in relation to this case.” Andrea Goswami travelled halfway round the world to tell her story in a Tampa courtroom.  “Going into the courtroom was the hardest thing I have ever had to do,” she said.  But she was determined to get justice for her husband.

She said he was utterly destroyed by the realisation he’d been conned and the shame of losing everything he had invested in. Andrea only discovered the true scale of the losses after he died.  “He didn’t want me to worry about it. My husband’s a very proud man and he would never have told me the truth, he would have soldiered on. If he hadn’t been so desperate at that time, if he’d only been able to talk to me about it – we could’ve got through it.

“He must have been so desperate about the situation and obviously didn’t know what to do for the best – he’d feel like he failed us. It wasn’t his fault but he wouldn’t have seen it that way because that’s the sort of person he was – very loving, kind and caring and very intelligent and wanted to do the best.”

Richard Pope, originally from St Albans in Hertfordshire, was arrested in Spain and extradited to the US. He pleaded guilty in March 2011 of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud between 2004 and 2008.

UK background   In March 2013, the trials of Paul Gunter and Simon Odoni took place with Pope testifying against them. Both men were found guilty of three counts of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, wire fraud, as well as 19 counts of mail and wire fraud and 19 counts of money laundering.

Pope and Gunter had originally worked together in insurance in the UK.  Gunter had lived in London but later emigrated to the US.  Odoni, also originally from St Albans, tried to avoid his bail in the UK by relocating to the Dominican Republic, living in one of the beachside properties purchased through the scam.  He was later arrested in Florida while travelling through Miami Airport.

Paul Gunter was sentenced to 25 years, Simon Odoni got 13 years and 4 months while Richard Pope received a far shorter sentence in return for his co-operation of 4 years and 9 months.  All three men are spending years behind bars. But no sentence will be long enough for Andrea Goswami and her family.

“They’ve got families of their own. Would they do that to their own families? It doesn’t even bear thinking about what sort of a mind they must have. To me it’s incomprehensible and it makes me so, so angry that when I see what they bought with all the victims’ money – they bought houses and boats and cars and property and left us with nothing. No amount of money can ever ever replace my husband.”