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If he was a home owner the then Trustee will look to realise anyway, since he was declared bankrupt.Should get a Charging Order on Property if a home owner.
the guy is 72, what effect does bankruptcy have on pensions ?looks like sole traders also coming under the wrath of the Insolvency Service investigations - petitioning for Bankruptcy Orders or Undertakings for fraudulent BBL applications. Zack the Gardener was given a lengthy 12 year Bankruptcy Undertaking.
Must have a cut a few lawns to reach the turnover level for the full £50K entitlement!
Zbigniew Majewski accepted a 12-year BRU which came into force on Wednesday 28 February.
Majewski secured two £50,000 Bounce Back Loans in July and December 2020 for his Zack the Gardener business, breaking the rules of the scheme which permitted only one loan for a company.
The 72-year-old, of Perryn Road, London, was also declared bankrupt in March 2023.
Theoretical questionshould claw back the fraudulent BBL amount from his State Pension entitlement every 4 weeks.
You cannot put an attachment of earnings order on a state pension. It only applies to earnings. There are other methods of takinh money from those barely existing on state benefits, but I'm not sure they apply to state pension.Theoretical question
I believe there is a pension credit in the uk which exists to ensure all pensioners receive a minumum amount. Can an attachment of earnings order be put on a pension and does it get taken into account for pension credit (as in pointless to take money from state pension if a different benefit just tops it back up)
What happens if he goes into care ?
A lot of these punishments look more symbolic than effective
As i said then - pointless making a 72 year old bankrupt for 12 years as won't likely have much affect and def won't get any money back to the state overall.You cannot put an attachment of earnings order on a state pension. It only applies to earnings. There are other methods of takinh money from those barely existing on state benefits, but I'm not sure they apply to state pension.
Agreed - it is useful to see them all in one place.I welcome these updates though, and thank you for them.
Compared, perhaps, with the punishment given to unpaid carers who dared to earn more than £151 per week?Agreed - it is useful to see them all in one place.
But it does gall to see the minimal effect of the sanctions given in these cases compared with the stressed people in other threads worrying they might be chased down for minor theoretical infractions.
precisely (one of our friends is caught out as a group of 3 mums of disabled children have been taking it in turns to use each other for respite with the PIP payments made through the local authority but that means each time they do it - for that week they earn enough they shouldn't have got the PIP - if they could have found a carer they would have paid them and they would have been fine - it just makes no sense)Compared, perhaps, with the punishment given to unpaid carers who dared to earn more than £151 per week?
My monie’s on mid-late September.At least we get to vote our dissatisfaction this summer.
precisely (one of our friends is caught out as a group of 3 mums of disabled children have been taking it in turns to use each other for respite with the PIP payments made through the local authority but that means each time they do it - for that week they earn enough they shouldn't have got the PIP - if they could have found a carer they would have paid them and they would have been fine - it just makes no sense)
no but the group of mums using it to pay each other for respite care is interacting with their carers allowance. If they had paid a 3rd party (more) it would have been fine, but paying each other now and again means in the weeks that any one of them put the invoice through they weren't eligible for carers allowance (or something like that - I don't know all the minor details, we are friends with one of them who has a 19 year old disabled daughter)PIP isn't income dependent though?
Gambling ? so he bought a lottery ticket for £2.50 then ??Bad boy no2 for today - A Devon Plumber who ran the taps dry on a £60K BBL. Well at least he ended up with a nice family holiday and a puppy (lets hope its wasn't a XL bully!), followed by a bit of gambling with taxpayers money.
Michael Bingham, was sentenced to 20 months in prison, suspended for two years, when he appeared at Plymouth Crown Court on Thursday, January 25. He was sentenced for two counts of fraud by false representation, contrary to section 2 of the Fraud Act 2006.
He must do 150 hours of unpaid work to be completed in the next 12 months. Julie Barnes, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said: “Michael Bingham showed a complete disregard for a scheme to help businesses survive in the pandemic on not just one, but two separate occasions.
“He spent taxpayers’ money on his own personal living expenses, using the loans for a family holiday, gambling, and even to buy a puppy. Bingham provided a totally fictitious turnover for his business, invented another, and never had any intention of paying the money back.”
Bingham first applied for a £10,000 loan in June 2020, claiming his PCB Plumbing business had a turnover of £40,000. In subsequent interviews, he admitted to Insolvency Service investigators that he invented this figure.
Bingham ignored the rules of the scheme which stated the loans had to be used for the economic benefit of the business by transferring the money to his personal account.
Just one month later, Bingham successfully applied for a £50,000 loan, inventing the company name M and B Gas Installations the day before his application. M and B Gas Installations never traded or was registered with Companies House.
Bingham transferred £22,000 to his father-in-law with a view to starting a drive-laying business which ultimately turned out to be short-lived. He spent the remainder of the money on a camping holiday with his family, Christmas presents, a puppy, and gambling, the court heard.
what ? force him to clean drains and dig holes ! give decent jobs to decent people !!!Why restrict his ability to work in the health and education sector?
FORCE him to work in the health and education sector, and pay an additional tax till the 50K debt to society is repaid.
Seems like a great deal for insolvency practitioners "we think you are a naughty boy, agree with us and pay us x (via the liquidation fee) and you don't have to go to court"This is anew one or me! YOUPOPUP LTD
Liquidators of the opinion that the Directors misused £50K BBL funds and engaged Solicitors to commence proceedings against the Directors under the Insolvency Act 1986 and/or Companies Act 2006.
Following negotiations settlement terms were agreed with both Directors resulting in £10K having to be paid to vacate the action. The £10K was then swallowed up in Liquidator fees.
seems a good deal - £10K only to walk away with £50K.
Thought the Insolvency Service makes the decision on prosecutions & compensation orders?
And yet they still made the loan to the deceased person 2 weeks later? Is that not acceptance, on the part of the bank, that the company was entitled to the money, despite the death of the account holder?“The bank spoke to a person purporting to be the loan applicant Francis Taylor on May 20, 2020. It was discovered at that stage Francis Taylor was deceased, having passed away some six months earlier.