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Britain-born, naturalised Vincentian businessman Dave Ames in a June 2016 photo. (IWN photo)
Britain-born, naturalised Vincentian businessman Dave Ames in a June 2016 photo. (IWN photo)
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Naturalised Vincentian, Britain-born Dave Ames, former chairman of Harlequin, the company that owned the former Buccament Bay Resort, was on Wednesday convicted in the United Kingdom in connection with a 226 million pounds fraud.

The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) in the United Kingdom successfully convicted Ames, who was behind the fraud involving celebrity-endorsed luxury resorts in the Caribbean, including Buccament Bay Resort, a press release said.

The FSO said that a jury at Southwark Crown Court found Ames, 70, guilty on two counts of fraud by abuse of position.

He offered no evidence in his defence and will be sentenced in September.

An SFO investigation uncovered how Ames deceived over 8,000 UK investors in the Harlequin Group, a hotel and resorts development venture. Victims were led to believe they had a secure investment in property whereas, in reality, Harlequin Group was never operating as promised, the press release said.

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The business model relied upon investors paying a 30% deposit to purchase an unbuilt villa or hotel room, half of which went toward fees for Harlequin and relevant salespeople, while Harlequin put the remaining 15% toward construction.

Investors were fraudulently told that the building of the properties would be further funded by external financial backing.

With no additional source of funding, three properties needed to be purchased to finance just one of the luxury accommodation units.

This led to the exponential expansion of the scheme, the diversion of investor money between resorts and ultimately a funding shortfall of over 1.2 billion pounds by 2012 — seven years after Ames launched the scheme.

By this point, an expert accountant told Southwark Crown Court that investors were exposed to a near 100% risk of loss, which Ames did not contest.

The SFO investigation revealed that by the time it went into administration in 2013, Harlequin had sold around 9,000 property units to investors, with less than 200 ever actually being constructed.

Throughout the entire eight-year project, only 28 of over 8,000 investors ever completed on a purchase, leaving well over 99% with no return on their investment. The Harlequin Group ultimately lost a total of 398 million pounds of investor funds.

Several thousand victims lost pensions and life savings to the fraud, while Ames enriched himself and his family by 6.2 million pounds.

The Harlequin companies were family businesses, employing at certain times both David Ames’ wife and his son, who was paid 10,000 pounds per month.

Ames had been temporarily barred from serving as a company director due to a previous bankruptcy and therefore styled himself as the “Chairman of Harlequin”.

The SFO uncovered how he repeatedly ignored warnings that the business was likely insolvent, while concealing this reality and continuing to sell more units to investors.

Ames sacked associates who raised the alarm, and on one occasion told colleagues that concerned investors needed “to be put in their place” to avoid attracting “bad press”.

Ames made publicity a key priority, promising celebrity-sponsored tennis, golf and football academies with marketing videos in which he personally explains his vision for the resorts.

Predicting major tourism development opportunities, he even secured the endorsement of politicians in the region, including the Prime Ministers of Barbados, St Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

Lisa Osofsky, director, Serious Fraud Office, said: “David Ames committed fraud on a huge scale, knowingly exposing thousands of UK investors to losses totalling hundreds of millions of pounds.

“Diligent SFO investigators reviewed millions of documents, traced over 8,000 investor deposits and called on more than 25 witnesses, to expose the full extent of Ames’ deception.”

In St. Vincent and the Grenadines, in June 2016, Ames fled the jurisdiction and returned to the UK after being summoned to court to answer to tax evasion and theft charges.

Ames is alleged to have either stolen, or evaded the payment of EC$8,282,792.28 representing monies owed to the government from value added tax and income tax receipts, as well as customs dues.

He fled St. Vincent by boat two days after being summoned to appear in court in June.

The prosecution withdrew the charges in 2018, saying that was the better option than having them dismissed by the court.

Once a charge is withdrawn, the prosecution can lay them again in the future.

In 2020, the government acquired the former Buccament Bay Resort, which was closed in December 2016 and sold it, as well as additional surrounding lands to

Sandals Resort International for US$17.5 million (about EC$47 million).

7 replies on “Dave Ames found guilty of fraud in the UK”

  1. Duke DeArment says:

    So very terrible! Everyone else has to submit a business plan before such an enterprise is allowed to take place. You have to wonder how all of the “brilliant” idiot authorities in the UK as well as SVG and other governments could not see that this scheme was doomed to failure at inception. So very much, in finance cannot work. Even the monetary policy of currency is doomed to failure in the long term..including the US Dollar, so, by association, the EC dollar as well. It is just a question of when.
    Study how the Federal Reserve Act came about and subsequent ending of the gold standard in 1971, which started the now failing Petro-dollar. It seems possible that Europe may be forced into the gas-ruble, whether they like it or not… let’s wait and see.
    The Ames affair is minor to what’s coming globally.

  2. Some people in svg should brought to the courts as well to answer for their part in it, that makes it possible for him to do it

  3. I hope people in SVG get back their money. I wonder how many politicians and judges he had to grease. We will never know.

  4. Take warning says:

    Which other svg family and friends enjoy some of these monies and may even ge a villa for themselves? We will like to know. Another example of corruption ?

  5. Will the pensioners involved get back their money? Now the place has been sold to sandals should not the recipients of the money send back the money to these pensioners in the UK?

  6. Nathan J Green says:

    The property was sold by the official receivers and they would have got a massive slice of that money right off the top, ask Brian Glasgow.

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