Construction News

Tue April 23 2024

Related Information

Court shuts network of phantom construction companies

3 Feb 16 A network of construction and civil engineering companies with reported combined sales of over £50m and assets of £8.4m has been shut down after investigations revealed they never really existed.

The paperwork was all bogus
The paperwork was all bogus

It turns out they were phantom businesses, bought off the shelf, as part of an elaborate fraud.

The companies never actually traded  – they just filed bogus accounts, with fictitious directors, and were run solely to obtain credit.

The High Court has now ordered them into liquidation on grounds of public interest following an investigation by the Insolvency Service.

The court heard how some 15 ready-made companies had been bought off the shelf from two company formation agents by a person using the name Jonathan Hunting.

Although the companies were dormant and had never traded while under the control of the formation agents, when bought and activated by the new owner fictitious directors were appointed. The dates of their appointments were back-dated by several years to the date of incorporation of the relevant company so as to lend legitimacy to the false accounts. These accounts showed significant assets and trading since incorporation by some of the companies.

Related Information

None of the companies had any physical presence at their registered offices located in different parts of the country and ostensibly each was independently owned and operated.

Chris Mayhew, company investigations supervisor at the Insolvency Service, said: “These supposedly unrelated companies had no legitimate purpose and existed solely to seek to obtain easily disposable goods on credit including expensive motor vehicles on lease finance with no intention of paying for them.

“False accounts were filed by some of the companies to create the impression that they were substantial and credit worthy businesses and had been trading profitably for a number of years which the investigation found to be blatantly untrue. Where no trading accounts had been filed the first step, backdating the date of the director’s appointment, had been taken to continue with the fraud.

“I would urge businesses approached for credit to question why a potential new corporate customer would choose to back date the appointment of its recorded officers and to file accounts showing significant trading and assets at a time when clearly the company was still on the shelf of the company formation agent dormant awaiting sale.

“We work closely with a number of partners such as Companies House to prevent the abuse of the corporate regime by such deliberate lack of transparency and the Insolvency Service will continue to investigate and bring to a halt companies harming or about to harm legitimate business by operating in this way.”

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »