Ex-BHS owner Dominic Chappell jailed for six years for tax evasion

Business

Former BHS owner Dominic Chappell has been jailed for six years for evading £584,000 in taxes.

Chappell failed to pay the tax on £2.2m in income he received after buying the chain for £1 in 2015 from retail tycoon Sir Philip Green.

Meanwhile he splashed out on a luxury lifestyle which included a £90,000 yacht, a Bentley Continental car, and a Bahamas holiday.

Shoppers walk past the boarded up BHS store on Oxford Street
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BHS collapsed in 2016 after 88 years

BHS collapsed in 2016 after 88 years on the high street – with the failure costing 11,000 jobs and leaving a gaping pension deficit.

Serial bankrupt Chappell, 53, was convicted of evading VAT, corporation tax and income tax after a trial at London’s Southwark crown court.

The charges related to Chappell’s personal services company Swiss Rock, which was paid to facilitate the purchase of BHS by Retail Acquisitions Ltd, where he was a director.

The judge, Mr Justice Bryan said the businessman had engaged in a “long and consistent course of conduct designed to cheat the revenue”.

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Chappell’s lawyers had claimed Chappell was left “utterly broke” after the scale of BHS’s pension problems “exploded” within two weeks of him buying BHS and that, had it not failed, he would have been able to pay the tax liability.

The businessman, of Blandford Forum, Dorset, had told the court he was “simply too busy” to sort out his business dealings properly and sought to blame former owner Sir Philip and auditors PwC for his misfortunes.

Regulator steps up BHS pensions probe into Green
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Sir Philip Green has faced severe criticism over the collapse

But the judge told him: “You were not overwhelmed by your other pressures, and you were not too busy or under too much pressure to spare the time to buy yourself trappings of luxury with monies that would have been better deployed to pay the taxes due.”

It is the latest court action faced by Chappell following the BHS failure.

In November 2019 he was banned from running a company for ten years and in January this year he was ordered by The Pensions Regulator to pay £9.5m into BHS’s retirement schemes.

Sir Philip, the man who sold the retailer to Chappell, faced severe criticism in the wake of its collapse, with MPs branding him the “unacceptable face of capitalism” and calling for him to be stripped of his knighthood.

The tycoon later described the select committee findings as “bizarre”.

In 2017, Sir Philip agreed to pay £363m into BHS’s pension schemes.

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