Landbanking duo wound up

Two companies have become the latest landbanking firms to be wound-up following an investigation by The Insolvency Service.

Regency Land Sales Ltd and Regency Land Group Limited IBC, based in London, Spain and Belize were both wound up in the High Court following an investigation by the Government’s Companies Investigations, part of The Insolvency Service.

As well as selling worthless land, the companies even attempted to sell land they did not own, The Insolvency Service said.

The investigation found Regency Land Group Limited, formed in Belize and operated from offices in Spain, used telesales methods to sell small plots of agricultural land in Grantham to members of the public. The company misleadingly suggested the land would ‘accrue further value when it was rezoned for planning purposes’. In reality, enquiries made of the local authority by Investigators have confirmed there is no real prospect of such rezoning taking place. Regency Land Sales Ltd, an England & Wales registered company, acted as UK sales agent for its offshore relation.

The investigation followed on from an earlier enquiry into Britannia Land Management Limited, which also sold land in Grantham and which identified similar concerns over the activities of that company, resulting in it being wound up by the High Court in the public interest on 18 October 2010.

Both Britannia and the Regency companies have been managed by Llewellyn Adam Hannah-Shelton, a UK citizen resident in Spain.

During the investigation, Hannah-Shelton and others said to be in control of the two companies failed to co-operate with investigators and did not provide full information regarding their affairs. Nevertheless, the investigators were able to establish that the land sold to the public was never legally transferred into their names and that whilst purchasers were given a “guarantee”” of 8% growth on their investment in the first 12 months

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