-----Original Message-----
From: Nick Allen 
Sent: 30 May 2007 08:41
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Guardian article (longish) By David Conn


 Leeds leave creditors clinging to wreckage
Ken Bates' dealings - including the non-payment of St John Ambulance, and a 
proposed penny to pound rescue plan - have angered creditors. 
David Conn May 29, 2007 11:59 PM

Amid the wreckage of Leeds United, in the appalling, familiar list of those 
left unpaid by another bust football club, sits an organisation which does not 
even charge for its services, just asks clubs to contribute towards expenses. 
Nevertheless, there it is again, in the £35m mountain of debts which Ken 
Bates's Leeds is not paying: St John Ambulance, owed £165.

At what is expected to be an angry creditors' meeting on Friday, the 
administrator, Richard Fleming of accountants KPMG, is proposing that Leeds be 
sold to a new company headed by Bates, in return for a payment of only 1p for 
every pound of debt. That proposal is backed by the three anonymously-owned, 
offshore companies who claim collectively to be owed £17.78m. If it is passed, 
St John Ambulance will be given £1.65 and will still be expected to turn up 
again next season to tend to the Elland Road injured.

Other organisations which will suffer the same fate, contained in a 
tightly-typed, 25-page list of creditors produced by the administrators, 
include suppliers of all the basics to a football club: local schools, 
hospitals and universities, the gas, electricity and water utilities, and Leeds 
City Council's leisure department, which is owed £124,121.

The speed with which the deal to sell the club was done, and questions about 
the identity and motives of the offshore companies, have infuriated many people 
in Leeds, a city now deeply embarrassed by the car-crash plight of its only 
professional football club. Bates, despite being a belligerent and unabashed 
chairman, is not even officially a shareholder; Leeds United is owned by the 
Forward Sports Fund, registered at a Cayman Islands PO box, with a Swiss-based 
company Chateau Fiduciaire named as its director. Bates's solicitor, Mark 
Taylor, has described Bates as Forward's "UK representative", the closest Bates 
comes to ownership of the club.

On May 4, the same day that Leeds were placed in administration, Fleming 
announced the deal to sell the club for 1p in the £1 to a new company, of which 
Bates and Taylor are directors, again owned by the Forward Sport Fund. It will 
have to pay what are known as "football creditors" - players and other clubs 
owed money - in full if the club is to be allowed to compete in League One next 
season, but all other debts will be all but wiped out.

Forward, according to club records cited in the administrators' report, paid 
£4.5m to take over Leeds in January 2005 from the previous owners, a group of 
local businessmen chaired by the insolvency accountant, Gerald Krasner. Forward 
now claims it is owed £2.419m, loaned in the failed attempt to keep the ailing 
club in business.

One of the two other offshore companies, Krato Trust, registered at a PO box in 
Charlestown, Nevis in the West Indies, claims to be owed £2.5m, having lent the 
club £2.25m between December 2005 and June 2006. Astor Investment Holdings, 
registered at a PO box in the British Virgin Islands, with an office in another 
tax haven, Guernsey, claims to be owed £12,839,309, having loaned the club 
£11,285,269 between August 2005 and October last year.

Both Krato and Astor Investment have told the administrator they have no 
connection to Bates, Forward Sports Fund or any other director of Leeds. 
Fleming told me his firm had made "fairly extensive inquiries" to confirm there 
was no legal connection between them and said, in fact, the owners of Astor 
were unknown.

Krato and Astor have stated that they have no connection with Forward or Bates. 
Nevertheless they have agreed to the proposal to sell the club to Forward for 
1p in the pound, even agreeing to reduce the amount they will receive. Astor 
has agreed to write off half its claim if creditors approve the sale, while 
Krato has agreed to accept nothing at all.

Asked why the two anonymously-owned offshore entities should agree so 
dramatically to write off millions of pounds put into Leeds, in return for a 
sale to a new company in which they state they have no interest, Fleming said: 
"At the time we agreed it, there were no other offers. Maybe they had football 
in their hearts and wanted the club to survive."

The proposals need 75% of creditors to agree, so the offshore companies can 
block any alternative because their debts amount to 45% of the total. However, 
the transfer of the club is not expected to proceed without a storm. Several 
creditors have said they intend to challenge the administrator, demanding to 
know who is behind Astor and Krato to see proof they are not connected to 
Bates, and ask for solid evidence of the money the offshore trusts claim to 
have put in. Krasner, the former chairman, has offered to represent creditors 
free of charge to challenge the sale to Forward for what he describes as: "A 
derisory offer to creditors, people who have supported Leeds through thick and 
thin."

After a season in which Leeds were relegated, often watched by a depressed, 
half-full Elland Road where adult ticket prices averaged about £35, there is 
not a great popular appetite for Bates retaining control. Rick Duniec, chair of 
the Leeds United Supporters Trust, says:"Our main concern is to see our club 
restored to health, and it seems quite a widespread opinion that people want a 
change to more local ownership."

Leeds, a city which has been thriving economically, still has no major venue 
capable of hosting concerts and Elland Road has long seemed an obvious site for 
development, especially if it had a thriving modern football club at its heart. 
United's debt-laden collapse since the team reached the 2001 Champions League 
semi-final is infamous enough, but the detail of the last three years, 
chronicled in the administrator's report, still makes shocking reading.

Krasner and his consortium took over in March 2004, with £95.5m of the debts 
taken on by the former chairman, Peter Ridsdale, and his board written off. 
Krasner's consortium sold Paul Robinson, Alan Smith, James Milner, Mark Viduka, 
Elland Road, the Thorpe Arch training ground and, for £5m, an option to develop 
Elland Road, but still could not stem the club's losses.

In January 2005, with the Inland Revenue pressing for payment of £1.2m, the 
consortium sold the club to the Forward Sports Fund. Bates became the chairman 
and the offshore companies put their millions in, yet despite reaching the 
play-off final in 2006, selling Rob Hulse and Matthew Kilgallon, and receiving 
£4m compensation from Chelsea for two youth players, Tom Taiwo and Michael 
Woods, Leeds continued to haemorrhage money. The administrator's report does 
not make clear why that happened. Creditors piled up and last month HM Revenue 
and Customs issued a winding-up petition. Leeds owe almost £7m in unpaid tax 
and VAT.

It will be a surprise if the taxman accepts 1p in the pound, and with ordinary 
creditors likely to challenge too, the club's destiny appears to lie with the 
decision on Friday of two opaque funds, registered in the West Indies and BVI.

St John Ambulance, though, is unlikely to involve itself in any rows. The 
charity has tended not to make a fuss and avoided public statements, as it has 
been left unpaid, time and again, by football in its boom time. 

Money owed

£631,595

Wages still owed to several former players including Michael Ricketts, Paul 
Butler, Eirik Bakke, Steve Stone and Jermaine Wright

£216,667

Money still owed to Danny Mills, who last played a competitive match for Leeds 
in May 2003

£3,839

Owed to New Burley Window Cleaners

£46,604

Owed to Leeds Metropolitan University

£2,900

Owed to Boo's Disco of Bramhope in Leeds for the hiring of mobile discos

£8,997

Owed to the West Yorkshire Ambulance Service

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