|
Thursday 22nd July 2010 |
Text too small? |
The Serious Fraud Office is to investigate allegations against an employee of the failed property investment group, Blue Chip, for alleged misinformation to investors and altering loan documents to induce financiers to lend.
While separate from the rest of the SFO's major probe into the collapsed group, a final report on which has been completed and is under consideration, the latest investigation adds another sorry chapter to the tale of once NZX-listed Blue Chip, which collapsed in 2008 owing more than 2000 investors more than $84 million.
SFO director Adam Feeley said police had forwarded information "suggesting that documents provided to investors by a Blue Chip franchise employee were misleading."
"There is also an allegation that lending documents may have been altered by that employee to induce financiers into lending funds for property investments."
Police had decided the matters raised were appropriate for SFO investigation.
A decision on the transactions under investigation is expected in the few weeks, Feeley said.
Blue Chip founder Mark Bryers escaped prison in May when he was found guilty of 34 charges relating to the company's collapse, angering out of pocket investors who saw his punishment of a $33,750 fine and 75 hours' community work as inadequate.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
Devon Funds Morning Note - 22 April 2026
AGL - Accordant Group Limited announces opening of Rights Offer
April 22nd Morning Report
BPG - Q4 FY26 Update: ARR reaches $26.8m
Devon Funds Morning Note - 21 April 2026
April 21st Morning Report
CHI - Government diesel storage at Marsden Point
April 20th Morning Report
NZK Market Update - Earnings Guidance Upgrade
MEL - Meridian Energy monthly operating report for March 2026