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Company director 'faked his own death' to avoid disqualification | Company director 'faked his own death' to avoid disqualification |
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A director faked his own death in an effort to avoid disqualification from running companies, the Insolvency Service has said. | A director faked his own death in an effort to avoid disqualification from running companies, the Insolvency Service has said. |
Bradley Trevor Silver, also known as Bradley Silva, is still being sought by the government agency after its lawyers were told he had taken his own life. | Bradley Trevor Silver, also known as Bradley Silva, is still being sought by the government agency after its lawyers were told he had taken his own life. |
The 49-year-old was disqualified from acting as a director for 14 years, beginning 2 November. He was the sole director of 24/7 London, a sham company that was wound up in the public interest by the Insolvency Service in September 2016. | The 49-year-old was disqualified from acting as a director for 14 years, beginning 2 November. He was the sole director of 24/7 London, a sham company that was wound up in the public interest by the Insolvency Service in September 2016. |
The company allegedly used forged documents saying falsely that it had worked on contracts for TV shows including Big Brother, Britain’s Got Talent, The X Factor and The Only Way is Essex. | |
Last week Silver was disqualified from acting as a company director for 14 years for dishonest attempts to obtain credit on the back of fictional accounts, and for using forged documents and invoices. | |
Investigators also found Silver had filed false accounts for his company, claiming a turnover of £4.7bn and assets of £2.4bn, said to have been audited by Deloitte. | |
They found that Deloitte had not audited the accounts, which contained basic errors including presenting numbers in billions instead of thousands. | |
In the days prior to the disqualification hearing, a “friend” of the director, calling himself Adam Solomans, contacted lawyers to say Silver had killed himself. | In the days prior to the disqualification hearing, a “friend” of the director, calling himself Adam Solomans, contacted lawyers to say Silver had killed himself. |
Suspicions were raised as the friend appeared to share a mobile phone number with Silver and soon stopped responding to emails. Solomans’ name and signature both featured on a cheque paid into 24/7 London’s bank account which had bounced. | |
In her judgment, registrar Christine Derrett said she did not accept that Silver had died, adding that, in all probability, he and Solomans were one and the same. | In her judgment, registrar Christine Derrett said she did not accept that Silver had died, adding that, in all probability, he and Solomans were one and the same. |
Insolvency Service chief investigator Cheryl Lambert said it was “one of the most bizarre cases” she had ever come across. | |
She said: “That Mr Silver appears to have tried to fake his own death through suicide in order to avoid disqualification is disgraceful. | |
“Directors should be aware that the Insolvency Service will not shy away from confronting dishonesty and removing these people from the marketplace.” |