EXCLUSIVE: Jeremy Hunt’s re-election campaign and CCHQ have accepted tens of thousands from a dormant shell company with undisclosed ties to a Mayfair private equity fund
The Tory Treasurer's department initially rejected donations from "Ironduke Management", fearing it broke Electoral Commission rules, then U-turned
Here's the story🧵
Ironduke Management is registered at 10 Piccadilly , but has no physical premises or website or phone number.
The sole director and shareholder is a woman called Jennifer Dowling. It's actually run by her husband, Tom Dowling, who describes himself as a tax consultant
Since its creation in 2018, it has registered itself as a dormant company.
It is currently the subject of a final notice from Companies House to file its accounts.
If it fails to do so, it will be forcibly dissolved in May.
Its last accounts said it had £1 in cash and assets and described the firm’s activity as “financial intermediation”.
I spoke to Tom Dowling. He insists that, in actual fact, Ironduke is not dormant - its next accounts will show it now performs work for another company.
That company?
Ong (One Nation Group) Capital, a private investment fund based in Mayfair specialising in "Levelling Up projects". Its shareholders, he says, are sympathetic to the Tories.
Here's an intriguing detail.
Last year, a subsidiary of Ong - "Ong Residential" - tried to donate £2,100 to CCHQ.
CCHQ rejected the money, saying it was an impermissible donor - i.e. it broke the rules.
Dowling appears to have been behind the attempted donation. He says he is the "CEO designate" of Ong.
But his attempts to donate to CCHQ did not stop there.
He has also made donations via Ironduke. He says Ong Capital's shareholders are aware of this, but did not instigate it.
At first, Jeremy Hunt's association returned Ironduke's cash and CCHQ placed its money under review.
Remember: it is unlawful to take money from a company that does not carry on business in the UK.
Dowling appears to have argued Ironduke - though officially dormant - has technically been active for years.
How?
He told CCHQ it passes HMRC's "Badges of Trade" test - which evolved out of the Income Tax Act 1918. Among other things, this says a company may be conducting business - even if it is doing little - so long as the intention/motivation to make profit in due course.
This was good enough for the Conservative Party, whose director of fundraising, Mike Chattey, gave the green light, telling him it was "great news" the matter had been resolved.
The party has pocketed ~£25k to date - unclear if more to be disclosed in the coming weeks.
The question I have repeatedly asked Dowling is: why not donate personally?
Why instead donate through a dormant shell company on the brink of being forcibly dissolved to which he has no public connection?
Why donate through a firm which receives payments from a separate Tory-linked private equity fund?
Answer there has come none.
He insists however that he has followed the rules, that, though ONG Capital know about the donations, the money is not theirs, and that he is free to give money as he pleases within the law.
A Tory spokesman said: “All donors are checked in line with the Electoral Commission guidelines.
“All reportable donations are properly and transparently declared to the Electoral Commission, published by them, and comply fully with the law."
ENDS
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Maynard has been ordered to repay cash used to rent state-of-the-art printer and produce Tory leaflets.
He's made another repayment after claiming his party did not use his taxpayer funded office when it did.
And his abuse of the rules has led the IPSA investigator to propose all MPs are banned from using their offices for party purposes in any context.
Damning findings do not find wrongdoing over Maynard's extraordinary £106,000 total claims for printing - top of any Tory MP - as "comprehensive audit" impossible due to "resource constrains"
But two breaches are clear and admitted by MP, leaving him exposed to referral to standards commissioner.
EXCLUSIVE 🚨 The Sunday Times has obtained "black box" data from a tracking device inside the Mercedes rental car used by Akbar Shamji — a suspect in the case of teenager Zac Brettler's death.
We have used its GPS data to create minute-by-minute reconstruction of his movements on the night.
It shatters his story and shows he lied to police repeatedly during their investigation.
Met had the data, but failed to analyse it in depth, so never confronted him about inconsistencies, such as his claim he was at home during fatal fall:
Former bankrupt crypto investor Shamji and gangster Dave Sharma were the last people to see Brettler alive.
They confronted him about money they felt he owed them before he jumped off a 5th floor flat opposite MI6 headquarters.
A coroner delivered an "open verdict" meaning his death was suspicious but its cause unknown.
Before and after his death, Shamji was driving a rental vehicle fitted with a state-of-the-art tracking device, whose data we have analysed over several months.
He told police he went home hours before Brettler's fatal jump at 2.24am. In fact, he was in the same building. He had returned after taking call from Sharma and suddenly speeding back at 80 km/h. He went upstairs and remained alone with Sharma for 11 minutes.
Data shows other striking details such as detour over Vauxhall Bridge just after he had gone down to the river by foot and "looked for Zac" in the water.
Here's a vintage example of FOI vandalism I've been dealing with.
The department: David Cameron’s Foreign Office.
The subject: David Cameron’s lobbying career.
🧵
In January 2023, Cameron visited Sri Lanka.
While there, he met the president twice. Once at his residence. Another time at lunch with the British ambassador.
Within months, he was being paid to drum up investment for Port City Colombo, a highly controversial Chinese infrastructure project.
It is part of President Xi’s Belt and Road Initiative. Critics believe it could become a military base.
In November 2023, shortly after Cameron’s appointment as foreign secretary, I asked the Foreign Office for copies of:
1) any notes or memos about the former PM’s trip to Sri Lanka 2) any correspondence with his team beforehand
I specifically asked for any emails from/to Laurence Mann, Cameron’s long-term adviser who was involved in the Greensill scandal and who now works for the Foreign Office.
Under law, I was supposed to get a response within 20 working days. In other words, by 21 December.
I was privileged to know Zac Brettler when he was a little boy.
Following @praddenkeefe's investigation into his death, I spoke to his extraordinary parents.
Today, they give The Sunday Times previously unpublished evidence about the night their 19-year-old jumped from a balcony after a confrontation with a gangster.
It poses huge questions of the Metropolitan Police. Like crime-scene photos of the blood-like smears detectives somehow did not swab or test... (1/6)