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Ken Bates is not at all dodgy



Alan Gilliver

New member
Oct 18, 2006
78
Ken Bates was born on 4th December 1941.

2 Months later his mother died. Abandoned by his father, he was cared for in a W.
London council flat by step-grandparents.

In his late teens he worked with his father in a quarry business near Manchester

Aged 22 he married Theresa, the daughter of a wealthy Irish squire (Bates buys
his first Bentley)

The quarry prospered and began to supply ready-mix concrete to an ever
expanding construction industry. Bates ran the company.

28th January 1965: Bates launches Howarth on the Manchester Stock
Exchange. Howarth is a construction and property development company
based in Burnley.


Also in 1965 he becomes chairman of Oldham Athletic.

1966 A member of Oldhams' board resigns saying, “Bates believes in a committee
of two, with one absent”

1966 bates begins a building project in the British Virgin Islands. It involves the
reclamation of several acres of land and a small island called
Anegada. The British Foreign Office supports the project.

1967 Howarth is in trouble. At the shareholders meeting Bates say “we have put
the worst of the troubles behind us. I am not getting out.”

July 1968. Some of the bankers who helped Bates finance the British Virgin Islands
project refuse to work with him; citing his “appalling manners”. At this time Bates admits to the Financial Timesthat he earned his money by “breaking the rules”. Bates, his wife, and now 5 children move to the British Virgin Islands. Bates resigns as a Director of Howarth and as Chairman of Oldham Athletic.
Vice-Chairman, Harry Massey says, “Bates was too ambitious, too quickly. His pace was too fast.”

24th July 1969. Howarth reveals debts of £1.8 million and calls in
the receiver.

1969. After 1year of the British Virgin Islands project locals complained of
Bates's “vulgar behavior”, especially local female politicians. After a local town flooded, allegedly as a direct result of the land reclamation, locals threatened violence against Bates's “cavalier attitude”.


1970. Concerned about Bates's continued presence in the area and the level of civil unrest, the British Government intervened. Bates says he wants $10
million to go “or I'll get mean”.

21st April 1974. Bates accepts $5.8 million from the British Government to leave the island. "It's grossly unfair,” says Bates who pays all the creditors, but fails to earn his anticipated fortune.

Bates moves to Dublin, Ireland and now opens his own bank – Irish Trust Bank.
The bank is focused on small savers in Ireland and attracts 1,400 savers in it's first year of operation (including George Best and Bobby Charlton)

1971. Bates's bank advances a large sum to International Trust Group which also,
curiously, owns 20 per cent of the bank itself.



17th April 1972. Following concerns from the Irish Central Bank, Bates resigns as a director to be replaced by Freddie Pye (a former wrestler, scrap merchant and Chairman of Stockport County.) Pye metals immediately secures a loan of £200,000 from the bank.



1974. Bates meets John Papi, a Kuwati, employed by Stoy Ayward as an insolvency expert. Acting on advice from Papi, Bates took over Kemp Directories
for £1 (earned Bates over £1 million)and Owen Press also for £1.



1975. Irish Trust Bank is in difficulties. The Irish Central Bank cites too many loans
to annonymous offshore entities. These loans were not being repaid. Bates, even though he is not officially a shreholder or Director fights a court action to revoke the bank's license.

23rd March 1976. Bates and 2 other men (described as “heavies”) walk onto the bank's premises and seize documents. A warrant is issued for Bates arrest. The judge orders Bates to return the papers and grants the application to close down the Irish Trust Bank.

1977. Across Ireland many small savers are faced with loss of life savings. The
Irish Government intervenes, during election year, and promises to repay all the lost savings in full. The investigation could never prove that any loan was made either directly to Bates, or any company Bates was directly associated with. There were however some remarkable coincidences.

Bates emerged from the seventies with about £5 million. Much from the advice
of John Papi. Bates then grew his hair long and moved to Australia.



November 1981. Bates resurfaces in London and meets with John Papi who informs him that he can have Chelsea Football Club for £1.Acting on this advice, Bates buys Chelsea. Though, interestingly, when submitting his ownership of this and at least one other company submits an incorrect date-of-birth.

Without sufficient cash Bates makes a massive mistake and does not buy the
second company which owns the stadium and surrounding land. Instead, the freehold is sold to Marler, a property development company and the club are given notice to leave the stadium in 1989.

The eighties are not great times for either Bates or Chelsea. Fighting for control of
the ground and Chelsea's problem with a hooligan element dominated the eighties. In response to this hooligan problem Bates applies for permission to erect an electric fence which is rejected by the local council.

1991. Bates and Chelsea are saved as Marler are insolvent. The freehold is now with The Royal bank of Scotland who grant Bates a 20 year lease with
option to Buy.

1992. Chelsea announce further losses and a widening deficit. They are unable to
pay many creditors, including a £1.75 million unsecured loan with The Royal Bank of Scotland. Tecnically, Chelsea are playing football while insolvent, an infringement of FA regulations.

Again, acting on advice from John Papi, who notices a mistake in the player's
contracts issued by the FA. They are in the name of 'Chelsea Football Club' rather than the 'Chelsea Football and Athletic Club'. Papi creates 2 new companies – Chelsea Village Ltd and CFAC, Ltd and on 14th August 1992 assets of Chelsea Football and Athletic Club are transferred to the new legal entity – CFAC, Ltd.

Chelsea Football and Athletic Club was then renamed CFAC, Ltd to protect the name 'Chelsea Football Club'. Next all of CFAC's assets were transferred
to Chelsea Village Ltd. Everything was now set for CFAC to be placed
in recievership.

Also around this time Papi also transferred Chlsea's players, worth £7 million,
from CFAC to Chelsea Village (whose shareholders were anonymous offshore trusts). This transaction was criticised by Touche Ross as “unlawful”. To complete the process, season ticket sales were not deposited with the old company CFAC.

June 1992. Papi transfers £620,000 to Chelsea Village leaving debts of £418,000 in CFAC. Maybanks (Chesea's printers), unaware of these transactions issued a formal winding-up order of CFAC.

May 1993. As Chelsea Village was also the largest creditor of CFAC, John Papi was
also appointed as the receiver. He announces that CFAC had “no option but to cease trading.” Creditors were outraged that the liquidator had favored Bates and in late 1993, at the request of the creditors, Bates was investigated by th FA.

Bates wins a High Court judgment to cease the investigation. Bates has to guarantee to repay the creditors.

Unsatisfied by the failures of John Hollins, Bobby Campbell, Ian Porterfield and
David Webb to transform the fortunes of the club, Bates appointed Glenn Hoddle as manager in 1993 and a mediocre Premiership club began ascending the table.


1994. John Papi's license is withdrawn and 4 years later he is jailed for cheating the Inland Revenue.

Hoddle's Chelsea reached the FA Cup final in 1994 and further success, funded by
Matthew Harding's cash, followed under Ruud Gullit and Gianluca Vialli.

Bates's marriage to wife Theresa collapses after he is discivered to be having an
affair with Pam a model (!)

Chelsea won the FA Cup in 1997 and 2000 and the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1998 and reached the semi-finals the following year.

The sudden sackings of Gullit in 1998 and Vialli, the club's most successful
manager, in 2000 showed that despite his advancing years Bates had
not lost his ruthelssness.

The Chelsea chairman, though, was struggling to tame the club's debts, believed
to be in the region of £80m. From nowhere came one of the richest men in the world - Roman Abramovich's. His takeover ensured secured the long-term future. Without him, many believe Chelsea may well have been in the same position as Leeds United and indeed Sheffield Wednesday.


Bates received a reported £17m for his original £1 investment.
 




Muzzman

Pocket Rocket
NSC Patron
Jul 8, 2003
5,313
Here and There
In 1972 a crack commando unit was sent to prison by a military court for a crime they didn't commit. These men promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Los Angeles underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire the A-Team.
 




Blimey, I remember John Papi.

He was with Stoy Hayward who were appointed as liquidators for Picadilly Estate Hotels for whom I had just been appointed Group Personnel Manager.

The company went belly up and Papi, a nasty little shit, fired me along with the other senior managers.

But I took the bastard to court for unfair dismissal and breach of conduct and won the case.

The Court's award paid for my first wedding!
 


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