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Maximum 15-year ban for fake insolvency practitioner

An insolvency practitioner has been handed a 15-year ban after he was found to be a de facto director of Rigil Kent Acquisitions Limited (RKAL), while disqualified from acting as a director, as well as deliberately undermining the insolvency regime through RKAL’s dishonest activities.

Maximum 15-year ban for fake insolvency practitioner
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As well as the ban, the judge in charge of the case has ordered the Director of Public Prosecutions to consider criminal prosecution for Kevin Morris, also known as Kevin Gordon Sykes, 61, from north London.

Breaching a disqualification is a criminal offence and the Insolvency Service can prosecute these cases. Mr Morris’ latest disqualification has also been passed to the Director of Public Prosecutions to consider further action.

RKAL, which was established in 2015, presented itself as a turnaround or recovery service, and promised companies in financial difficulties that it would enable them to wipe their business debts and avoid formal insolvency proceedings, for a fee of between £5,000 and 10 per cent of the failing company’s total liabilities. Morris would assure directors that they could walk away from any further financial or legal responsibility in the company, which was not true.

RKAL was shut down by the Insolvency Service in February 2018, along with eight associated entities, and an investigation was launched.

RKAL’s website described the company as offering “unlicensed Insolvency Practitioners”, which do not exist.

It also stated that RKAL would “discuss options such as Corporate Rescue Sale, a Company Voluntary Arrangement or a Scheme of Arrangement all of which we will implement for you taking the worry off your shoulders.” However, no evidence of this was identified in the investigation.

Mr Morris benefited financially from RKAL’s activities while no money was returned to creditors including those of the distressed companies RKAL acquired.

According to documents filed at Companies House, the sole director of RKAL was Nataliia Fox, who was in a relationship with Mr Morris at that time. She was under his direction and generally working on his instructions.

As a result, Ms Fox has been disqualified for 11 years, for allowing the company to trade as it did, and allowing Mr Morris to act as a director while knowing he was disqualified from doing so.

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