Alan Tabley, of Vine Court, Box, also failed to disclose the extent of company property to the liquidator and did not preserve accounting records for a three year period.
Now the 59-year-old, who was an officer of Kempton Properties Ltd which went into voluntary liquidation in 2003, could face the prospect of a jail term.
Tabley pocketed more than £50,000 worth of property from the company when it was being wound up, a judge at Swindon crown court was told today.
In January he took £21,750 in shares and a property on Heathfield, Chippenham, another £12,542 two days later and a further £18,623.99p from the proceeds of sale of another property on Heathfield.
He also did not declare the full extent of the company's property to the liquidator on May 14, 2003, or retain the accounts from May 2003 up to May 2005.
Tabley pleaded guilty to three counts of removing part of company property.
He also admitted one charge of failing to disclose the full extent of company property to the liquidator and one of not retaining accounts for three years.
Tabley pleaded not guilty to failing to keep proper accounts, removing £2,000 in cash from the company, failing to deliver all documents to the liquidator and failing to comply with parts of the Insolvency Act.
He had originally denied all of the allegations but changed his pleas to guilty on the five matters meaning a trial will not be necessary.
Oliver Willmott, prosecuting, said "These pleas have been considered and are acceptable. We propose to deal with the outstanding counts at sentence."
Simon Morgan, defending, asked for the case to be adjourned so a pre-sentence report can be prepared on his client by the probation service.
He also said that Table was receiving psychiatric assistance' for some time and said he may submit a report from a psychiatrist.
Recorder Nicholas Haggan QC adjourned the case to Thursday November 29 and released Tabley on unconditional bail.
See Original Article
If your company needs help with debt and you would like some friendly and professional advice then call us now.
Call us on: 0800 071 1616
Email us on: info@debtsgone.co.uk
Website: www.debtsgone.co.uk
Saturday, 13 October 2007
Posted by Debtsgone LTD at Saturday, October 13, 2007
Labels: Former company boss faces jail
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2007
(260)
-
▼
October
(29)
- NEW YORK, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Tesco Plc (TSCO.L: Qu...
- Smoke ban rebel Nick Hogan has settled his case ag...
- Elephant Loans and Mortgages has seen its share pr...
- Investors in United Land Holdings - the "landbanki...
- Luciano Pavarotti died with debts of at least £12 ...
- Men are typically in more debt than women when the...
- Thousands of borrowers are poised to challenge len...
- A BUSINESSMAN who got into financial trouble claim...
- Otto Thoresen has, perhaps, the toughest job in Br...
- WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bu...
- A gambler known as the Fat Man has won his appeal ...
- A JUDGE has criticised an apparent attempt to keep...
- Cheyne Finance has become the first structured inv...
- Portland Business & Financial Solutions Limited ha...
- FIGHTING the obesity epidemic could bankrupt the N...
- There’s Armageddon, and then there’s the alternati...
- Credit checking firm e-bcm calls on government to ...
- Plans for a US-style insolvency regime for UK bank...
- Alan Tabley, of Vine Court, Box, also failed to di...
- Bankruptcy is the legal situation in which a corpo...
- UP to nine people have been made redundant after a...
- SKY BLUES fans could be forgiven for thinking it's...
- Pensioners who fail to claim the benefits to which...
- What are a company director's obligations to credi...
- PARENTS end up an average of £1,140 in debt in the...
- Responding to a new survey by Wilkins Kennedy whic...
- The number of pensioners who have been forced into...
- Leading City lenders today accused the government ...
- More higher-income households are getting into tro...
-
▼
October
(29)
No comments:
Post a Comment