Five Star director sentenced following SFO charges
Media Release
6 June
2012
Five Star
director sentenced following SFO
charges
Anthony Walpole
Bowden (71), a former director of Five Star Consumer Finance
Limited (Five Star) was sentenced in the Auckland High Court
today to nine months home detention and 100 hours community
work after pleading guilty to charges arising from a Serious
Fraud Office (SFO) investigation.
Mr Bowden pleaded guilty to charges under the Crimes Act in April, following the SFO investigation into the collapse of Five Star.
Five Star traded as a finance company accepting deposits from the public and investing those deposits in consumer and commercial lending.
Mr Bowden is the third individual to be sentenced in this finance company investigation.
SFO Chief Executive, Adam Feeley says “It is a reflection of the thoroughness of the investigations and the line taken by the courts in recent decisions, that a number of finance company directors are now willing to acknowledge their culpability for their company failures.”
The other three individuals charged were Nicholas George Kirk, Marcus Arthur MacDonald and Neill Allan Williams.
Mr Kirk and Mr McDonald received sentences in December 2010 of two years and eight months imprisonment, and two years and three months imprisonment respectively. Mr Williams has entered a not guilty plea and is awaiting trial.
ENDS
Background to investigation
Five Star Consumer Finance Limited traded as a finance company accepting deposits from the public and investing those deposits in consumer and commercial lending The directors were Anthony Bowden, Nicholas Kirk and Marcus MacDonald. Neill Williams was not appointed as a director of the company but the SFO allege that he was heavily involved in the management of the company.
Five Star was placed into receivership on 29 August 2007 owing approximately 2,100 investors approximately $54 million. The receivers for the companies have to date recovered 22.5 cents for every dollar invested.
Five Star Finance
Limited, Five Star Debenture Nominees Limited and Antares
Finance Holdings Limited were related companies, and formed
the wider Five Star group. The SFO investigation
concentrated on transactions entered into between members of
the Five Star group and entities related to or controlled by
the directors.
Crimes Act
offences
Section 220: Theft by person in
special relationship
(1) This section applies to
any person who has received or is in possession of, or has
control over, any property on terms or in circumstances that
the person knows require the person—
(a) to account to
any other person for the property, or for any proceeds
arising from the property; or
(b) to deal with the
property, or any proceeds arising from the property, in
accordance with the requirements of any other person.
(2)
Every one to whom subsection (1) applies commits theft who
intentionally fails to account to the other person as so
required or intentionally deals with the property, or any
proceeds of the property, otherwise than in accordance with
those requirements.
(3) This section applies whether or
not the person was required to deliver over the identical
property received or in the person's possession or
control.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (1), it is a
question of law whether the circumstances required any
person to account or to act in accordance with any
requirements.
Section 223: Punishment of
theft
Every one who commits theft is liable as
follows:
(a) in the case of any offence against section 220, to imprisonment for a term
not exceeding 7 years; or
(b) if the value of the
property stolen exceeds $1,000, to imprisonment for a term
not exceeding 7 years; or
(c) if the value of the
property stolen exceeds $500 but does not exceed $1,000, to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 1 year; or
(d) if
the value of the property stolen does not exceed $500, to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3
months.
260 False accounting
Every
one is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 10
years who, with intent to obtain by deception any property,
privilege, service, pecuniary advantage, benefit, or
valuable consideration, or to deceive or cause loss to any
other person,—
(a) makes or causes to be made, or
concurs in the making of, any false entry in any book or
account or other document required or used for accounting
purposes; or
(b) omits or causes to be omitted, or
concurs in the omission of, any material particular from any
such book or account or other document; or
(c) makes any
transfer of any interest in a stock, debenture, or debt in
the name of any person other than the owner of that
interest.
The Role of the SFO
The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) was established in 1990 under the Serious Fraud Office Act in response to the collapse of financial markets in New Zealand at that time. It operates three investigative teams:
• Fraud
Detection & Intelligence;
• Financial Markets &
Corporate Fraud; and
• Fraud & Corruption.
The SFO operates under two sets of investigative powers.
Part I of the SFO Act provides that it may act where the Director “has reason to suspect that an investigation into the affairs of any person may disclose serious or complex fraud.”
Part II of the SFO
Act provides the SFO with more extensive powers where:
“…the Director has reasonable grounds to believe that
an offence involving serious or complex fraud may have been
committed…”
New Statement of
Intent
The SFO’s new Statement of
Intent (2012-2015) has just been published and is available
online at: www.sfo.govt.nz