Fraudulent gold mining company shut down

A GROUP of connected companies – including one from Chesterfield- have been operating an unauthorised, fraudulent goldmine investment scheme, with the companies between them banking over £330,000 in respect of the gold mining scheme.

McKinley & Grant (McKinley) of Chesterfield, along with Santo Montana, Lorem Ipsum Trade Services (Lorem Ipsum), Cedar Trade Services (Cedar) and Evolution Trade Services Limited (Evolution) are connected by one individual who has exercised control over those companies, Harvey Bennett.

The petitions to wind up the companies were presented in the High Court on 4 July 2016, following confidential enquiries by Company Investigations, part of the Insolvency Service.

Lorem Ipsum, Cedar, McKinley and Evolution all acted as sales agents for the gold mining scheme, in which partnership rights were sold in the investment vehicle Santo Montana, which was said to hold rights to gold mining concessions in Peru.

Those agents, none of whom were authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority, cold called unsuspecting members of the public, whose names had been acquired from database leads, offering them the opportunity to invest in three existing gold mining concessions in South America via Santo Montana.

Prospective investors were enticed by offers of an initial dividend of 20% to 50% of their investments, for example £3,000 per share, and further dividends every six months for a period of 6 years. No such returns were ever paid.

Prospective investors were told that they could expect, ‘on a conservative basis’, to receive returns of between 206% and 457% over their 6 year investment term.

The investigation found that prospective investors were informed that Santo Montana had a joint venture stake in unspecified mines in South America, with at least one of those located in Peru, the joint venture partner being a company called Montana de Oro S.A.

Not only could that company not be traced but Santo Montana failed entirely to cooperate with the investigation, its registered office location having been vacated without notice and the last of its designated members having resigned by January 2016, leaving the investment vehicle essentially rudderless since that time.

The investigation found no evidence that any of the funds paid by the investors had been used to acquire or to finance Santo Montana’s investment in any gold mines or that Santo Montana had any genuine interest in any gold mines, whether in Peru or otherwise.

In the absence of cooperation from any of the companies, the limited accounting records obtained appear to show the main beneficiaries of the fraudulent scheme being sales agents and Mr Bennett.

The selling companies appear to have been abandoned or to have ceased trading by late 2015 save for Evolution, who had agreed to take over all administrative services for Santo Montana as of January 2016.

However, the only contact information made available to Santo Montana investors, including those who had made carbon credit purchases, is a website address, www.evolutiontradeservices.net, a website not currently accessible.

With Santo Montana having abandoned its trading premises Santo Montan investors have no means to contact any of the scheme companies.

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