First and most importantly, thank you to everyone who has helped SME Alliance and its members in so many ways during what has been another tough year. Although a few members have managed settlements in a few cases, that has been the exception rather than the rule and let no one tell you those settlements were generous in any true sense of the word.
Generally, and I am not sure whether I'm still surprised about this or not, too many bankers and their advisors still seem to think claims for fair and reasonable compensation for lives and businesses destroyed between one and two decades ago, amounts to a war. They battle on ( as I've said before this year) regardless of the huge personal damage they continue to cause. They've either lost sight of what went on over a decade ago, or just as conveniently, have tried to bury it all, by re-writing history. Any ideas of just "doing the right thing for a change " seem to be completely outside their blinkered vision. For them, it seems also, the massive adverse PR and indeed, as we have been told, the actual loss of business, seems to be acceptable collateral damage. The recent Advice from Jonathan Laidlaw QC , drove a horse and cart through Lloyds Bank's " Griggs Review". The FCA also was criticised strongly. How embarrassing it was during a recent debate, to hear a Minister attempt to defend the indefensible. Ministers, unlike many supportive constituent MPs, think the five million or so SMEs employing over 25 million people , are just nothing to do with them. On a wider basis it is clear to most of us that almost no one ( except apparently SME Alliance and its members and friends and a few MPs) is prepared to stand up to what have been described as criminally corrupt bankers and their advisors. If anyone still doubts this idea of corruption, have a look not only at the Advice mentioned above, but also the damning report written by Sally Masterton, " Project Lord Turnbull" issued earlier this year. Five years on, Lloyds finally admitted they had in fact commissioned the report in 2013, after half a decade of denials. The Report makes devastating reading. Meanwhile the NCA, the SFO, the FRC and the FCA, to name just a few disinterested parties, apparently hope this will all just go away. Turning to the 72 per cent taxpayer disaster which is RBS, it perhaps the board thinks has got off lightly this year because of our greater focus on Lloyds. It seems fairly clear to me that the spotlight will be brightly back to shine on RBS and its GRG division in 2019. May I remind everyone that SME Alliance is a small group of people but one which tries to punch well above its weight. We can do this only because we are extremely focused. We are not trying to change the world, not even the banking system. We are trying to make sure our members get the compensation to which they are entitled so that they can get on with their lives. I would also like to thank many in the media who have been so supportive with their time this year as well as members of the APPG on Fair Banking ( special mention for Kevin Hollinrake) as well as many MPs who have been helping individual members. We will keep fighting because it is to our mind unacceptable that major financial institutions such as Lloyds , RBS and other banks and in particular certain senior executives and executive directors of those banks, should continue to deny and cover up the enormous human and other damage they have caused and continue to cause and believe they are and remain above the law. Best wishes, Nick Gould
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19 December 2018 Treasury and FCA have become Lloyds’ lapdog in response to Griggs compensation farce Victims of the HBOS Reading scandal have reacted angrily to the announcement by City minister John Glenn MP that Lloyds Banking Group (LBG) will be allowed to conduct its own review into the flawed compensation scheme for HBOS Reading victims.
Speaking on behalf of the Government at the end of a Westminster Hall debate into the LBG’s compensation scheme for HBOS Reading victims, Mr Glenn said HM Treasury had agreed that the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and LBG would appoint an “independent reviewer” to assess LBG’s compensation scheme. This is despite the FCA agreeing to the original scheme and the appointment of a supposedly independent chair in Professor Russell Griggs, even though he had a prior business relationship with LBG. The scheme was set up in April 2017 to provide, in the words of LBG chief executive Antonio Horta Osorio, “fair, swift and appropriate compensation for the victims of the HBOS Reading fraud.” However, 20 months on, many victims are still awaiting fair compensation. An in-depth opinion from Jonathan Laidlaw QC, who has represented The Bank of England among others, found that the review is “procedurally defective and “unfair” and its methodology and guiding principles are “flawed and appear partial to LBG’s interests”. He concluded “to genuinely right the wrongs of the past, LBG should revisit the serious shortcomings of the Griggs Review and the FCA should commence its investigations and disciplinary process without further delay.” SME Alliance, which is supporting many of the HBOS Reading victims, said that the reaction by HM Treasury, along with its recent support for a bank sponsored review system for SME complaints, showed that it is bending over backwards to placate untrustworthy bankers. Said Nick Gould, chair of SME Alliance: “The Treasury and the FCA have become Lloyds’ lapdog. Allowing Lloyds to appoint its own ‘independent’ assessor once, could be dismissed as weird, but twice smacks of either arrogance or complicity. By commissioning a review of the Griggs process, the Treasury, FCA and Lloyds are accepting explicitly that Russell Griggs was not independent. “The other key failing of this defective proposal is that it kicks a solution further down the road. and Many HBOS Reading victims have already been waiting more than a decade to get fair recompense for losing their livelihoods and more which has led to years of undue stress. It is extraordinary that Lloyds still seems to ignore the human aspects of this on-going nightmare.” SME Alliance also supports the call made by Kevin Hollinrake MP, chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Fair Business Banking, during the debate for Mr Horta Osorio to resign. It also thanked all the MPs who contributed to the debate, notably Ed Vaizey MP, who spoke at the first parliamentary debate into HBOS Reading 10 years ago. SME Alliance has already filed a formal complaint to the FCA under the Senior Managers and Certification Regime about the conduct of executive directors at LBG, in which it alleges that “Antonio Horta-Osório has been aware of the evidence of serious criminal conduct originating at HBOS Reading at least since 19th April 2011.” In February 2017 six people were jailed for a total of 47 years and nine months for a fraud both HBOS, and subsequently LBG insisted for many years, did not happen despite many internal reports into the fraud from 2007. In April 2017, LBG set up a process which Mr Horta-Osorio said would provide “provide fair, swift and appropriate compensation for the victims of the HBOS Reading fraud.” About SME Alliance SME Alliance was formed in September 2014 to support SMEs “battling against fraud, corruption and misconduct in the financial sector” and to lobby for the fair treatment of businesses by their banks and advisors. 17th December 2018 Leading fraud QC demands Lloyds revisit “defective”, “unfair” and “partial” compensation scheme for HBOS Reading victims Calls for regulatory investigation into “lack of integrity” by senior Lloyds directors One of the UK’s leading legal experts in financial crime has called for Lloyds Banking Group (LBG) to “revisit the serious shortcomings” of the compensation scheme set up in April 2017 to provide to “provide fair, swift and appropriate compensation for the victims of the HBOS Reading fraud.” An in depth review by Jonathan Laidlaw QC, who has represented The Bank of England, the Football Association, Grenfell victims and directors of public companies facing Serious Fraud Office (SFO), Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and US Department of Justice (DoJ) investigations, found that the review, led by LBG appointee Professor Griggs, is “procedurally defective and “unfair” and its methodology and guiding principles are “flawed and appear partial to LBG’s interests”. Mr Laidlaw QC also found that executive directors of LBG may have misled members of their own board, and their conduct “clearly discloses a lack of integrity required by those who are part of the [Senior Managers and Certification Regime] SCMCR”. This is the FCA’s regulatory regime that holds senior managers, including LBG chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio, to account for the actions of the bank. These damning conclusions come in a 28-page advice published by SME Alliance, which supports business people in their disputes with banks, ahead of the parliamentary debate tomorrow on the Griggs process, called by Kevin Hollinrake MP, chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Fair Business Banking. SME Alliance has also filed a formal complaint to the FCA under the Senior Managers and Certification Regime about the conduct of executive directors at LBG, in which it alleges that “Antonio Horta-Osório has been aware of the evidence of serious criminal conduct originating at HBOS Reading at least since 19th April 2011.” In his advice, Mr Laidlaw QC, reviewed LBG’s statements regarding the Project Lord Turnbull report written by senior LBG risk expert Sally Masterton. LBG initially denied that this was an official report, including in a letter sent in 2014 to the Crown Prosecution Service by its lawyers Herbert Smith Freehills, but last month admitted it was written following “a request from the Group”. Mr Laidlaw QC questioned how Ms Masterton and Professor Griggs, while having “on the face of it the same material” came to conclusions which are “inconsistent”. Noting that “there is no good reason to doubt [Ms Masterson’s] findings”, he raised questions about the completeness of the documentation provided by LBG to Professor Griggs and his advisors. In addition, LBG’s failure to inform victims of the conclusions of the Lord Turnbull report is “unexplained and highly unsatisfactory” and led to victims being “kept in the dark” so that they “made business and personal decisions on an uniformed basis”. In February 2017 six people were jailed for a total of 47 years and nine months for a fraud both HBOS, and subsequently LBG, insisted for many years did not happen, despite commissioning many internal reports into the fraud from 2007. In April 2017, LBG set up a process which Mr Horta-Osorio said would provide “provide fair, swift and appropriate compensation for the victims of the HBOS Reading fraud.” However, more than 20 months later, many still are fighting for fair payments. SME Alliance has found that: · Seriously ill HBOS Reading victims are being pressurised to settle by LBG and the Griggs team. One victim died of cancer while still in dispute with the bank; · Victims are being given 28 days to decide on offers without being given the information being used by the Griggs team to determine the level of payments; · Victims who have settled with LBG are being forced to sign onerous Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) regarding the compensation process; · Many victims are being told that they are not eligible to enter the Griggs review, allowing LBG to put out misleading information about the level of settlements achieved; · Some victims are being forced to turn to other victims who have received settlements to support them through the onerous and extended process with LBG. The level of assistance is now running into seven figures. Mr Laidlaw QC found a number of serious deficiencies in the Griggs process. These included: · As LBG, which is in effect a party to the litigation, appointed Professor Griggs, it has a “very strong interest” in the outcome, so the review cannot be independent; · There is an issue to do with lack of disclosure of the “unnamed and unidentified accounting, insolvency and legal professionals” assisting the Griggs review; · The review was set up without reference to the views of HBOS Reading victims; · Failure to fund the cost of hiring experts to assist victims is “clearly unfair”; · The lack of an “identifiable procedure for appealing the decisions” made by Griggs was “both unusual and unfair”; · The Griggs process was “not compliant with various fair process principles” used by other similar tribunals. In conclusion Mr Laidlaw QC found that “the Griggs Review currently operating to redress the wrongs suffered by customers of [HBOS Reading] is procedurally defective” and that “to genuinely right the wrongs of the past, LBG should revisit the serious shortcomings of the Griggs Review and the FCA should commence its investigations and disciplinary process without further delay.” Nick Gould, chair of SME Alliance said: “Lloyds has failed to honour the promises of its CEO to deliver ‘fair, swift and appropriate’ redress for victims who have been suffering for more than a decade. The Griggs Review is a near perfect example of the bank being judge and jury of its own misdeeds. There is no transparency, no logical methodology and Lloyds’ executives appear to have misled victims, misled regulators and misled their own board causing untold additional pain and stress. It is time for Mr Horta-Osorio to stop the spin and put right the wrongs of this flawed process.” The Parliamentary Debate on the Griggs Review will take place on Tuesday 18 December from 4:30pm to 6:30pm. About SME Alliance SME Alliance was formed in September 2014 to support SMEs “battling against fraud, corruption and misconduct in the financial sector” and to lobby for the fair treatment of businesses by their banks and advisors. About Jonathan Laidlaw QC Rated in the directories as a leader in the fields of crime, financial crime, health and safety, inquests and public inquiries and sport and previously awarded “Crime Silk of the Year”, Jonathan Laidlaw QC has consistently been ranked by Chambers as one of their star silks. He features in the Sunday Times/Debretts list of the 500 most influential people in Britain today. Jonathan Laidlaw QC’s practice is predominantly in business and financial crime, in defending directors and companies facing charges brought by the HSE and in professional, regulatory and disciplinary matters. Much of his work, both for individuals and companies here and abroad, is pre-charge and advisory in nature. Jonathan Laidlaw QC has also appeared in the Commercial Court, major inquests and sporting tribunals and is asked to produce reports in silk-led internal inquiries. He presently acts for the Bank of England, for a number of individuals who are the subject of SFO, FCA and DoJ investigations including Rolls Royce and ENRC; for PCP in the Barclays litigation; for The FA; for directors and companies facing gross negligence and corporate manslaughter charges; for a core participant in the Grenfell Tower Inquiry; and for Operation Kenova in Northern Ireland. Recent instructions include acting for Rebekah Brooks in the phone-hacking case; in the cricket match fixing case; for the Football Association in the Hillsborough Inquests; for Statoil in the In Amenas Inquests; for Fluor, Hugo Boss and Cape Industries, BAM, Ferrovian and Kerr in fatality cases; for Monovan Construction Ltd and JTF Wholesale in corporate manslaughter cases; for the trainer Jim Best in hearings before the British Horseracing Authority; for the IAAF in a CAS hearing in Lausanne; and for Allseas in their private prosecution. |
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