Does it really matter who owns Leeds United?
By Tony Attwood
In 29 July 2011 a Parliamentary committee on football said that they were 
appalled by what was going on at Leeds United.
Ever since 2005, the reminded us, no one knew who owned Leeds 
United.  Ken Bates said he didn’t own any Leeds shares, and was just the UK rep 
of Forward Sports Fund in the Cayman Islands – the company that 
owned Leeds.  The company operates in Europe through an office in 
Switzerland and Swiss law makes it impossible to know what’s going on 
within its companies.   The Football League insisted they be told who 
owned Leeds United.  The club and the companies shrugged their shoulders and 
did nothing.
The suddenly Leeds was sold to Ken Bates, who is a tax exile in Monaco and who 
owns the club via another tax haven – Nevis.
As the attempts to find out what Bates was up to he banned the 
Guardian from the ground, and then banned the BBC from all admission 
except where it had a contract with the Football League that allowed it 
in.
Although no one knew who owned Leeds  The Football League allowed 
Leeds to continue on the grounds that no one owned more than 10% of the 
club.  It has always seemed a ludicrous statement. In the end it came 
out in a court case in Jersey that Mr Bates owned some of Leeds but had 
made “an error” when he had previously informed a court in Jersey that 
he and his long-term financial adviser, Patrick Murrin, each held one 
“management share” in Forward Sports Fund, the Cayman Islands-registered 
company which owns Leeds.
Yet in an affidavit sworn for the same court in May, Bates stated 
that in fact he does not have any shares in Forward at all. His previous 
statement, that he had been the joint owner, was “not correct,” he 
said, and “an error on my part”.
The affidavit, sworn in a legal action Leeds brought against a 
Jersey-based company, Admatch, for money Bates said was owed to the 
club, attached a letter from the director of Château Fiduciaire, 
financial administrators of Forward, based in Geneva. The letter said 
there are 10,000 “participating shares” in Forward, and the owners will 
not be revealed because Château Fiduciaire protects its clients’ 
anonymity unless ordered by a court to disclose them.
The Football League does not disclose who have been named as the 
owners of a club for the purpose of the fit-and-proper-person test, 
claiming that it cannot do so under the Data Protection Act. But the 
fact that the owners of Leeds United were shown as holders of 10,000 
shares in a Cayman Islands company, whose administrators will not 
disclose their identities without a court order, does raise the issue – 
how could they have been checked as fit and proper.
That raises the possibility that Forward’s takeovers of Leeds, with 
Bates as the chairman, in 2005 then in 2007 when Forward bought the club from 
administrators, may never have been properly ratified by the 
League.
.
So MPs told Revenue and Customs who collect tax in the UK to 
investigate, and asked the FA to do some digging too.  Nothing happened, except 
that Leeds is now being sold to GFH Capital of Bahrain who are 
owned by Gulf Finance House bank.
The auditors of GFH said in their last report that the company, “had 
accumulated losses of $300.69 million contractual obligations…”  They 
said it was insolvent.  There is talk now that GFH will buy Leeds in the style 
of the Glazers buying Manchester United and put the debt on the 
balance sheet of Leeds.
Now GFH Capital has issued a press release in which it lays out plans for 
sustained investment in Leeds.
It is possible – although the fact is we still won’t exactly know who owns 
Leeds.   But it is also possible that since there is no obvious 
source of all the investment, that Leeds will quite soon, once again, be bust.  
And we still won’t know who owns them.
So here’s the question: does it matter who owns a club?  Well, yes it does, 
especially if you want to try and stop new buyers coming into 
clubs, loading them with debt and then either milking them or sinking 
them.  It matters if you don’t want crooks running clubs.  It matters if you 
don’t want clubs to be the heart of money laundering arenas.  
Indeed although no proof is given as yet there are stories circulating 
that football is indeed one of the main money laundering arenas in the 
world.
In fact it is getting to the point where the last thing that matters 
is the talent of players. All that matters is how to move the money.  
Given the huge amounts being paid to players, and the fact that we don’t know 
who owns clubs, then really we can’t be surprised.
“Hello Alfonso.  Your salary is £250,000 a week.”
“Fine Mr Chairman”
“Now we have to remove some of that for taxation purposes, by law, so we will 
do that, and you will receive about £120,000 a week.”
“Oh”
“But fear not – you will get the rest paid through our Cayman Island 
account into your Cayman Island account.  You’ll like the Cayman Islands – nip 
over and pick up a suitcase when you are a bit short of the 
readies.”
“Sure thing boss.”
Don’t believe me?  I have actually seen that happen in the publishing trade.  
Why not football.
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PETE CASS (1962 - 2011) Rest In Peace Mate

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