He
does exist. His passport was passed to the Premier League in August
2009. The league checked with the Saudi-Arabian embassy and the Saudis
investigated and confirmed that Ali al Faraj did exist and lived in
Riyadh. He has since been used as the straw man in several small London
property deals with Yoram Yossifoff and allegedly been sued by his
lawyers in Saudi Arabia for non-payment of fees.
However, there is not one shred of evidence that at any point he exercised control over Pompey.
So
who did? Our story begins in 2007 when Arkadi Gaydamak (father of Sacha
Gaydamak) purchased a property company, Ameris Holdings, from Balram
Chainrai and Levi Kushnir in a deal brokered by Ron Mana and Yoram
Yossifoff.
By 2008, Arkadi Gaydamak was under
pressure with the French courts investigating his involvement in the
Angolan civil war and a crash in Israel's property market. The Israeli
property market was under assault from two directions: the crash in
asset value and the man who had loaned money to several Israeli property
CEOs - Shelley Narkis, the King of the Grey Market and Israel's biggest
loan shark. Narkis is a convicted extortionist, jury tamperer and is
feared throughout Israel. One of his non-motorbike riding, machine
gun-toting employees is our old friend Daniel Azougy, debt collector
extraordinaire.
In the financial whirlwind which
followed, various CEOs fled Israel. Boaz Yona of Heftsiba to a hideout
in Italy and Arkadi Gaydamak, who owned Ocif investments, to Moscow.
The
domino effect destroyed Heftsiba and OCIF investments, and left
Gaydamak unable to finish paying for Ameris Holdings. Arkadi's many many
creditors from his Israeli businesses included Ron Mana, Yoram
Yossifoff, Daniel Azougy and Balram Chainrai and Levi Kushnir. Azougy
was a long time friend of Mana and Yossifoff.
Mana,
Chainrai and Kushnir were awarded a lien on the assets of Betar
Jerusalem, but Israeli insolvency law being very different to UK law,
they had trouble extracting any money. In January 2009, Daniel Azougy
attempted to convince the Betar general manager to transfer all the
club's money out of the club claiming to be working for Gaydamak. A
swift phone call to Moscow later, and this attempt to extort money from
Betar was quickly and very publicly rebuffed. Azougy got a flea in his
ear and no money.
The following month, Azougy and Narkis, visited Arkadi Gaydamak in Moscow to try and get their money back.
As with Azougy's visit to Betar, he came back from Arkadi empty handed.
In
September 2008, when his creditors were wrangling over the remains of
Ocif, Arkadi Gaydamak had listed Portsmouth FC in a court submission as
one of his assets claiming it was worth £300m. It was the Gaydamak
family's last known tangible asset. It was deep in trouble, for sale
very cheaply and he had just told his creditors that it belonged to him.
It was a tempting prize, with tens of millions of TV money due to come
into the club and a forthcoming transfer window in which quick cash
might be realised.
Just five months after the
abortive Moscow trip by Azougy and Narkis, Chainrai, Kushnir, Mana,
Yossifoff and Azougy were involved in an attempt to take over Pompey
using the unfortunate Ali al Faraj as a smokescreen.
Balram
Chainrai admitted to being a close friend of Yoram Yossifoff and
transferring £2.5m, 50% of the proposed purchase fee, to Yossifoff in
London in July 2009. Although Chainrai claims this was just a loan, his
and Levi Kushnir's names were passed to the Premier League as
prospective owners by directors of Portsmouth FC. However, Sacha
discovered the involvement of his father's creditors, as Peter Storrie
later lamented in public, and decided to sell to Sulaiman Al Fahim
instead - for £5m and a promise to pay £9m in January 2010 and a further
£20m by 2011.
Sacha's suspicions had been
raised when the 'billionaire' Arabs Ahmed and Ali al Faraj were able to
produce proof of funds of less than £750k, and the answers to questions
about what their business interests and 'connections to royalty' were
turned out to be 'negligible' and 'none' respectively. Clearly, Ali and
Ahmed weren't football takeover material.
However,
Ahmed knew Yossifoff from their minor property letting businesses in
London, and for the purposes of being the untraceable, uncheckable,
unreachable straw-man figurehead, his brother Ali was perfect. A hermit
in a country which refuses to allow Israelis in, or even those with an
Israeli stamp in their passport. No wonder none of them ever met him.
As
all Pompey fans remember, al Fahim's disastrous regime lasted just 40
days before the club ran out of money and was forced into the hands of
the five creditors, still hiding behind the "billionaire brothers" Ali
and Ahmed al Faraj.
Azougy, Mana and Yossifoff
had placed their interest in a company called Falcondrone, while
Chainrai and Kushnir, according to sources, formed Portpin Ltd through
their solicitor Mark Jacob.
Jacob was an old friend of Yossifoff, having worked in a London law firm of his as far back as 1998.
On
October 6th 2009, Chainrai and Kushnir loaned Pompey £6m, and according
to the evidence given in the High Court in August 2010, were to be
repaid £7m in two months, an interest rate that is in excess of 130%
APR.
In return they took a fixed charge over the
club's major asset, Fratton Park and proxy control over the 90%
shareholding in Pompey held by Falcondrone. There was already an
unpublicised winding up order in place from HMRC which stemmed from a
failure to pay any tax for the last two months, in breach of an
instalment plan offered by al Fahim.
A winding
up petition automatically freezes the company bank account, so all the
initial transactions went via Portpin's client account at Fuglers.
Normal practice is for a company to seek a validation order at the High
Court to unfreeze the account and allow the company to trade if it can,
with the consent of the petitioner, in this case HMRC. That gives the
petitioner the right to see all transactions in and out of the account.
Normally, the account balance is monitored by the Premier League to
ensure football debts can be paid. So using the client account had the
effect of limiting scrutiny by HMRC and the Premier League. In this
case, HMRC agreed a new instalment plan and withdrew their winding up
order.
Although the club now had access to its
own account once again, the regime continued to do business via the
Portpin client account. Mark Jacob had been added to the board on
October 5th and Daniel Azougy was given complete control of the finances
at what seems to have been the first and last board meeting of the al
Faraj era - with Ali al Faraj not present.
Peter
Storrie was informed by the regime that he was to deal only with the
football side of the business and Tanya Robins was informed, apparently
much to her disgust, that she now effectively reported to Azougy.
However,
Azougy could obviously not access the Fuglers client account. Only one
man could order the accounts team at Fuglers London HQ to transfer money
and that was Mark Jacob. And although he had the title of Executive
Director of Portsmouth FC, Portsmouth FC were not paying him. Nor were
Falcondrone. Only Portpin Ltd paid Jacob, via their fees to Fuglers.
This
arrangement meant that Portpin had control over the shares, fixed
asset, bank account and executive director of the business. In August
2010, during HMRC challenge to the CVA, Gregory Mitchell QC argued that
this amounted to control of Portsmouth FC as shadow directors. The term
'shadow director' is defined in the Companies Act 2006 as a person 'in
accordance with whose directions or instructions the directors of the
company are accustomed to act'.
So did Portpin ever tell Jacob what to do, and, if so, did he do it?
Well,
as was revealed in the HMRC challenge, Portpin wrote to Jacob in
December 2009 and demanded a solicitors' undertaking that he send the
next Premier League TV payment, which the Premier League were insisting
went to football creditors, to them instead. He agreed. However, the
Premier League contacted Jacob and, when he revealed the undertaking to
them, they directed the money straight to football creditors. The
Premier League also placed a transfer embargo on Pompey.
On
December 23rd 2009, HMRC once again issued a winding up order to
Portsmouth FC. The club had immediately failed to fulfil any part of
their new instalment plan, with the tax and national insurance on wages
not being paid in October, November and December, let alone arrears of
tax, VAT etc. This had the effect of once again freezing the club's bank
account. Money can be paid into a frozen bank account, and indeed this
is where the club's ticket revenues and merchandise sales continued to
go. However, it couldn't be accessed by the club. Had a validation order
been sought, the approximately £2m in the club's account could have
been paid to creditors, and repaid the small creditors and charities
many times over. However, it sat there, unused.
The
reality is that while visibly the Premier League appeared to be doing
nothing, behind the scenes they were playing a blinder. Their refusal to
allow TV money or transfer revenue into the club meant there was no
quick way for the five creditors to get the money they were owed by
Arkadi back. This is the main reason no players were sold until the end
of January, because at any other time the revenue would have gone
straight to creditors.
In early January 2010,
when they realised it was going to be near impossible to recoup any
money they had put into Pompey from the TV rights payments or transfers
that had brought them here, Portpin asked Jacob to supplement their
fixed charge with a floating charge over all the assets, enterprise and
monies of Portsmouth FC. This was retrospective, as any money from
Portpin had already been and gone. Therefore, this charge is invalid.
The reason can be found in the maxim; "past consideration (for a
debenture) is no consideration".
To obtain a
valid security you need to provide a new consideration (ie you need to
lend new money). However, Jacob issued the charge retrospectively,
giving them absolute control over everything of value at Pompey.
(Jacob's actions were above board here, he issued the charge, but it's
not up to him to determine its validity). So when Portpin put Pompey
into administration in February 2010, there was a valid fixed charge,
but the floating charge was never valid, and has never subsequently been
tested in court. The fixed charge should have been released when Pompey
came out if administration, as Portpin were given the asset on which it
was secured.
However, the rest of their secured
debt is a myth, and the January 2011 transfer of the whole £17m charge
was plainly invalid and should never have occurred without £17m of new
money being loaned to Pompey at the same time.
On
February 2nd 2010, following the sale of Younes Kaboul and Asmir
Begovic to Spurs and Stoke, Pompey were finally up to date on their
currently owed instalments to Football creditors. Football rights (TV)
payments and incoming transfer revenue channeled directly from the
Premier League to football creditors had wiped out the arrears.
This
meant that although the club had run up crippling debts during the
period to non-football creditors, the club could finally receive the
transfer money and the Premier League, bound by their own rule book,
could do nothing about it. Portpin saw their chance and requested the
money be sent to them by Jacob from the client account and £2m was
wired, apparently to Switzerland.
Falcondrone,
Azougy, Yossifoff and Mana were furious. Some of whatever sums of money
had come into the club also belonged to Falcondrone. From their
perspective, Portpin were no longer partners, but rivals for whatever
could be salvaged from the wreck of Pompey.
The same day, Azougy sent a forged letter [click here
to see a copy of it] claiming to be from Ali al Faraj demanding that
Jacob in future only repay money to Portpin with the permission of
Azougy. So did Jacob comply with this instruction from the nominal
beneficial owner of Portsmouth FC? Of course not. He was a solicitor and
his clients told him to transfer more money, so he did. A few days
later, a further £2m was transferred to Portpin.
Section
127 of the Insolvency Act says that: ‘In a winding-up by the court, any
disposition of the company’s property, and any transfer of shares, or
alteration in the status of the company’s members, made after the
commencement of the winding-up is, unless the court otherwise orders,
void’.
As the £4m was transferred to Portpin
after the commencement of the winding up order it is highly likely to be
unlawful. Baker Tilly are investigating transactions of PCFC Ltd and we
await their report with interest. Certainly Andrew Andronikou confirmed
publicly to the Pompey Virtual Alliance in 2010 that the transfer would
probably have to be reversed as it appeared to fall foul of section
127.
One interesting feature of this
controversial money transfer is the situation of Mr Jacob. As a
solicitor, he had to be careful which legal persona he adopted, either
acting as Portpin's solicitor or Portsmouth FC executive director. Jacob
is no schmuck. He knew that if he transferred the money as Executive
Director of Pompey, he was likely to be called to account later. But no
one can hold him accountable if he transferred the money as Portpin's
solicitor, acting purely for Portpin. This would mean that Jacob's
higher loyalty to his client took precedence. But he could only transfer
the money if a director or appropriate authority acting on behalf of
the football club told him to. And an appropriate authority did: the
people who really ran the club - Portpin. So it looks like Jacob is
rightly free and clear.
So what we have here is a
company in Portpin that controlled all the shares, assets, money, bank
account and Executive Director of Portsmouth FC. They repeatedly told
him what to do and he did it, even when ordered not to by the 'owner' of
Portsmouth FC, even when insolvency law seems to prohibit it.
Multiple
sources have confirmed that in fact the operation of the bank account
leaves little room for ambiguity. In accordance with the Solicitors
Regulatory authority rules on the operation of client accounts, Jacob
needed authorisation to transfer funds out of the account, from Portpin.
What greater level of control could anyone have over a business than
the shares, assets, director and payments? Ali al Faraj, controlled
NOTHING.
In order for a creditor to be selected
for payment during this period, department heads submitted lists of who
needed to be paid to Tanya Robins. She was then required to hand this
list to Daniel Azougy, who would forward it to Jacob and the directors
of Falcondrone and Portpin. The list would come back from the shadow
directors representing Portpin and Falcondrone to Jacob with asterisks
next to those who should be paid. No asterisk, no payment. This lead to
the club's website being shut down for non-payment in December 2009, as
all the lobbying from the department heads and even nominal CEO Peter
Storrie, to have the very small bill paid had fallen on deaf ears. Jacob
reportedly said: "I can't authorise it". Storrie apparently paid the
bill from his corporate credit card.
In early
February 2010 Jacob and Fuglers were 'uninstructed' by Portpin following
the discovery of £1.5m in unauthorised payments to individuals who are
still unknown. Portpin removed their business to Balsara and Co and
Jacob left Fuglers shortly afterwards.
Once
again, this is a clear demonstration of control by Portpin over the
business. When payments were made from Portpin's client account that
they had NOT authorised, action immediately followed.
Sources
close to the situation at the time claimed that Jacob was entirely
blameless in this and that Azougy, a convicted forger, had created a fax
which fooled the accounts team at Fuglers to send payments to a number
of still undisclosed bank accounts.
Pompey were
fined £1m by the Premier League following rule breaches concerning
Daniel Azougy during this period. He was revealed as a fraudster and
forger in a national newspaper during December 2009, and Jacob was
forced to defend the situation in another national newspaper interview
shortly afterwards.
Azougy was present in the
directors box with representatives of Portpin and Falcondrone including
Chainrai, Kushnir, Mana and Yossifoff on numerous occasions during this
period and all were seen to arrive together and leave together by
numerous sources. Azougy was also responsible for creating fake
accounts, which were released to prospective buyers during December 2009
and leaked to The News. These accounts created £40m on
Pompey's balance sheet and removed large tranches of debt. They showed a
'Premier League receivable facility £22m' on the balance sheet, to be
paid in January and represented as an agreed advance payment of Premier
League TV revenues. In fact, no such advance had ever even been asked
for and the Premier League told interested journalists in no uncertain
terms that they weren't trusting Pompey with any money, let alone
advancing them any.
It was the creation and
distribution of these faked accounts that apparently lead to Tanya
Robins resigning from the board of Portsmouth FC, although she had
always been very uncomfortable working with Azougy, who was harsh,
abrasive and nakedly corrupt. An eye witness reported a stand up row
between Robins and Azougy where Robins told the fraudster he could not
do things like that here, and Azougy responded "that's the way we do
things where I come from", which probably explains his multiple
convictions.
On another occasion, an eye witness
also reported that Jacob had to be summoned from his London office,
where he was desperately trying to keep his legal property practice
going, to Fratton Park to avoid Peter Storrie and Daniel Azougy
resorting to a fist fight. Storrie was furious at the way Azougy was
controlling the finances and the inability of any director to get a
clear picture of the accounts. Jacob might have been processing payments
and known what was in the bank account, but the real picture of what
was due to be paid or received was kept from him.
In
fact, whilst history will have much to say about the running of Pompey
before October 2009, the picture that emerges from numerous
conversations with those closely involved is that Peter Storrie, Tanya
Robins, Mark Jacob, Paul Weld and Lucius Peart did their absolute level
best to try and ensure the club was run the right way. But they weren't
running the club. They had no real say at all.
On
10th March 2010, the Pompey Virtual Alliance and other supporters
groups met with Administrators from UHY Hacker Young. Hacker Young said
that the amount of debt the club owed was, as yet, impossible to
determine because "there was a black hole in the accounts".
Administrators demanded this be excised from the minutes or there would
be no further meetings, and after much debate it was removed. UHY ended
the meetings subsequently in any case. However, it's important that fans
know that there are serious question marks over all the financial
transactions at Pompey between October 6th, 2009and March 2010, and that
this is almost certainly why the Baker Tilly investigation is taking so
long.
Despite their history of related business
transactions, their close friendships with other members of the group,
their close proximity at matches, national newspaper articles and the
presence of their own solicitor in the same building, staying in the
same hotel and being forced to work closely with Azougy, it remains
Portpin's claim that they had no idea what he was doing or what his role
was. Their contention that they had sleepless nights worrying about how
they would get their money back in 2009 and not knowing who ran the
finances just leads to the obvious question: why didn't you ask your
solicitor who ran the finances? Why didn't you ask your friend
Yossifoff? Why didn't you ask Azougy when you were sat next to him? Are
you really saying that his role and status as a fraudster was confirmed
in two national newspapers in December 2009 but your solicitor didn't
inform you of it?
Pompey-fans.com has asked Portpin to comment on the entirety of this article but Portpin "decline to comment".
Ali
al Faraj never did have anything to do with Pompey. The people who ran
Pompey during this period were Balram Chainrai, Levi Kushnir, Yoram
Yossifoff and Daniel Azougy, with Ron Mana more distantly interested.
None of them joined the board, but all acted as shadow directors.
The
Premier League have always been adamant that anyone who acted as a
Shadow Director during Azougy's tenure at Fratton Park would not be a
fit and proper person. At every stage, Portpin's man on the board obeyed
their instructions on key financial matters. There is no room for doubt
that they were shadow directors.
Ali al Faraj
has as much to do with Pompey now as he did in 2009-10. The reality was
that lurking underneath the Arab khefiyeh of Ali al Faraj were Balram
Chainrai and Levi Kushnir; creditors of Arkadi Gaydamak, who came
looking for his assets and have since refused to leave.
Micah Hall is a Portsmouth supporter who blogs regularly at FansNetwork (access an archive of his work here) (He’s on Twitter here)
Find out more about the Pompey Supporters’ Trust
Micah Hall is a Portsmouth supporter who blogs regularly at FansNetwork (access an archive of his work here) (He’s on Twitter here)
Find out more about the Pompey Supporters’ Trust
2 comments:
08/10/12 : Trevor Birch described the above article as very interesting! Unfortunately, that's the only question he'd give a clear answer to.
This article alone could yet blast Balram Chainrai & his cronies out of the water. Let's hope so.
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