Former LCF boss and wife sentenced for selling saddles, hot tub
The former CEO of collapsed British investment firm London Capital & Finance and his wife have received six-month sentences for selling saddles, a hot tub and other luxury items in breach of a restraint order, the Serious Fraud Office said on Thursday.
The former CEO of collapsed British investment firm London Capital & Finance and his wife have received six-month sentences for selling saddles, a hot tub and other luxury items in breach of a restraint order, the Serious Fraud Office said on Thursday. The collapse in 2019 of LCF, which promised high interest rates on "mini-bonds" before its failure triggered one of Britain's biggest retail investment scandals, cost around 11,600 investors more than £237 million ($318 million). A London judge called the sales by Michael Thomson and his wife Debbie, whose sentence was suspended for two years, "an attack on the administration of justice."
Lawyers for Thomson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Thomson, who had already been serving a suspended sentence for a previous breach, admitted to recklessly breaching an SFO restraint order twice and Debbie four times by receiving a £2,000 holiday refund and selling items with a combined value of almost £5,800, the SFO said.
The assets are subject to restraint proceedings because of the continuing SFO fraud and money-laundering investigation. ($1 = 0.7462 pounds)
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