Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here. The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.
Profitable Plots directors charged with cheating Trio allegedly cheated investors of a total of $3m between 2008 and 2010
Published on Mar 28, 2012
A group of unhappy investors at the office of Profitable Group in Stanley Street in a photo dated May 24, 2010. Three directors of land-banking and investment company Profitable Plots were on Tuesday charged with cheating investors of a total of US$2.4 million ($3 million). The NEW PAPER PHOTO: ZAIHAN MOHD YUSOF
By Elena Chong, Court Correspondent
Three directors of a land-banking and investment company were on Tuesday brought to court to be charged with cheating investors of a total of US$2.4 million ($3 million).
All in, Britons John Andrew Nordmann, 53 and Timothy Nicholas Goldring, 58, and Nordmann's Singaporean wife, Geraldine Anthony Thomas, 44, of Profitable Plots faced 86 counts of abetment by conspiracy to defraud investors in an investment scam.
They had allegedly persuaded investors to put money into a scheme to be used exclusively to finance the purchase of Boron CLS Bond, a chemical-based lubricant technology.
Through an agent, the trio allegedly lied to investors that even major corporations had a stake in the Boron investment scheme. Each investor sank in between US$2,000 and US$300,000, and was allegedly promised a 12.5 per cent return-on-investment in six months at most.
Read the full story in Wednesday's edition of The Straits Times.
High Court dismisses appeals by directors of Profitable Plots
Published on Jun 23, 2015 8:02 AM
Profitable Plots directors Timothy Goldring (centre) and John Nordmann were convicted a year ago of cheating investors and jailed for a total of 15 years. Ms Geraldine Thomas (left) was acquitted during the trial. -- ST FILE PHOTO
By K.C. Vijayan Senior Law Correspondent
Two directors of land-banking firm Profitable Plots, who were jailed a total of 15 years for cheating investors, have had their appeals against their sentences dismissed by the High Court.
Britons Timothy Goldring, 60, and John Nordmann, 55, were both convicted in the State Courts a year ago on 18 charges of cheating after a 64-day joint trial that began in April 2013.
Goldring was jailed for seven years and Nordmann got an eight-year sentence after investors lost around $915,000.
Justice Tay Yong Kwang, in judgment grounds released yesterday, said their jail terms were neither "unduly harsh" nor "too lenient". Pointing to aggravating factors, he said that despite the evidence against them, they blamed "virtually everyone else except themselves" for Profitable Plots' downfall and failed to provide restitution to those they cheated.
This despite receiving just over US$1 million (S$1.3 million) in remuneration along with fellow director Geraldine Thomas, 46, from the Boron investment scheme they used. They had lured clients to invest in it by promising 12.5 per cent returns within six months. Instead, they lost $3.1 million after part of the returns was used to pay Profitable Plots' existing debts.
Some 68 other charges were stood down. Ms Thomas, a Singaporean, was acquitted during the trial.
Profitable Plots, set up in 2005, was known for its TV commercials that featured former English football stars Bryan Robson and Steve McMahon urging viewers to "buy UK land".
The authorities took notice when angry clients stormed its offices in Stanley Street near Shenton Way, demanding what they claimed were overdue payouts.
Both Goldring and Nordmann appealed to the High Court, representing themselves and arguing that the district judge was "wrong in several ways and for a whole gamut of reasons".
They provided 29 appeal grounds each and their written submissions ran into 377 pages, noted Justice Tay, who heard the appeals in February and April this year.
The judge was not convinced and affirmed both conviction and sentence. He found that both men "concealed material information from the staff and investors", having known from the outset that Boron product sales were insufficient to produce the returns they had promised and clients' investments were spent elsewhere.
Justice Tay noted that Nordmann and his wife Geraldine had shipped 18 tonnes of personal effects from their home in Malaysia to France while the probe was going on.
"Clearly they had ample means and opportunity to make restitution, at least in part, to the victims of the Boron scheme," he wrote, noting that only $66,000 remained in the firm's bank accounts seized by the Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) during its probe.
"Despite the evidence... they blamed virtually everyone except themselves for (Profitable Plots') downfall. They blamed CAD for intervening, third parties for speaking up in the public sphere and hastening (Profitable Plots') downfall, investors for trying to defraud them."
However, he rejected the prosecution's call to enhance the jail terms imposed.