02078876548

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  • 0
    Tat replies to investor
    Have nothing to do with them.  They are tied up with the ex-directors of Manor Rose, as the company address given in Derbyshire relates to them.  All these companies are the same, steer clear for your own safety.
  • 0
    excosbloke replies to what next
    | 8 replies
    Will Polston is or was working for Central markets in 2012. I'm also a manor rose investor I'm sad to say.
  • 0
    Cone replies to excosbloke
    Will polston is a re- nowned homosexual. Has been on the london gay scene for years.
  • 0
    Jaks replies to excosbloke
    | 6 replies
    Has anyone got any updated information on Emission Offset Ltd. / Burbank of London / Haydon Driscoll / folding of company.
  • 0
    Tat replies to Jaks
    | 5 replies
    His company has been stopped from voluntary dissolution so that his debts can be claimed from the company. A Letter before Action has been sent to both companies registered offices at Aldermaston and Sevenoaks. This has three weeks to run before court proceedings are issued.  Whether they get anywhere is another matter.
  • 0
    exinvestor
    an interesting read, for those of who are interested in what happens to an ex-investor.

    Harassed for Challenging a Land Banking Company ?

    http://landbankingvictims.co.uk/forum/
  • 0
    TrackerHacker
    Hahahhahaha

    Daniel Burgoyne.. I have found you!
    You scrawny little tyke, I will hunt you down and I will chop you into tiny pieces.
    You will regret what you have done to my dad and our family.

    Watch your back boy!

    Fellow people who have lost money due to this guys fraudulent behaviour please check out his Facebook and tell me where I can find him.  

    https://www.facebook.com/daniel.burgoyne.9


    Get back to me
  • 0
    Jaks replies to Tat
    | 4 replies
    Hi
    Hope something comes of this...surely a company cannot just go into 'voluntary dissolution' without people being able to claim back what they owe to investors. It's not the Director's money...this is not the same as going bankrupt...where has the money gone?
    The Director of Emission Offset / Burbank of London didn't invest our money as he was supposed to...that is fraud...
    Justice will prevail.
  • 0
    Tat replies to Jaks
    | 3 replies
    No they can't just go into voluntary dissolution.  There is a process through Companies House.  If an investor objects to the dissolution they can do this through the Companies House procedures. This thereby ties the director to his company and therefore his debts.
  • 0
    Jaks replies to Tat
    | 2 replies
    So who do I contact about this..do you know?...I will object to the dissolution of this company if tihs is the proper procedure.....how do I find out about Companies House procedures?  
    I need to do this - whatever it takes... and get my savings back...these people have stolen my savings and don't 'give a monkeys'.....and I am very annoyed about this - to say the least.....I could be a lot more verbal...!

    I will go to court about this if necessary..these people need bringing down...I am sick of feeling like a victim....no more....let's get this sorted out.
  • 0
    Tat replies to Jaks
    | 1 reply
    If you contact Companies House in London on 0303 1234 500 and ask that you wish to object to a company dissolution and explain the circumstances they will point you in the right direction.  I wish you good luck.
  • 0
    Jaks replies to Tat
    Thanks Tat..will contact them - although the police are dealing with the theft from me so don't know who I should involve...too many cooks...
  • 0
    Jaks replies to Jaks
    Hi Henry
    Emission Offset Ltd. have asked Companies House for Voluntary Dissolution.
    You can object to the dissolution as they owe you money. They require written proof of how you have tried to recover your funds.
    Email them at;
    "Companies House Enquiries" <enquiries@companies-house.gov.uk>
    for further information. This should be done as quickly as possible.
  • 0
    Jaks replies to Henry
    | 1 reply
    Hi Henry
    Emission Offset Ltd. have asked Companies House for Voluntary Dissolution.
    You can object to the dissolution as they owe you money. They require written proof of how you have tried to recover your funds.
    Email them at;
    "Companies House Enquiries" <enquiries@companies-house.gov.uk>
    for further information. This should be done as quickly as possible.
  • 0
    Good News replies to terry riches
    | 2 replies
    http://insolvency.presscentre.com/search/defa ... arbon%20credits

    World ends for World Future Limited and two related companies

    14 March 2013 11:30

    Three London-based companies involved in a scheme to sell carbon credits to the public have been ordered into liquidation by the High Court on public interest grounds following an investigation by Company Investigations, part of the Insolvency Service.

    The investigation found that the three companies, World Future Limited, Capital Wealth Ltd and Fourteenforty Limited were linked and that the credits were wholly unsuitable for investment by the public.
    World Future Limited (www.world-future.co.uk) marketed the credits, was supplied by Fourteenforty Limited and made payments to Capital Wealth Ltd whose sole director was James Ward.

    The investments were marked up by between 150 and nearly 250 per cent of the original price paid by World Future Limited to its suppliers including Fourteenforty Limited. They were sold in five projects set up in:
    Hydro Power project in China,
    Wind Power project in India,
    REDD Reforestation project in Kenya,
    Forest Management project in Papua New Guinea,
    and a Biomass project in Thailand.

    The investigation found that investors received unsolicited phone calls and were misled as to the prospective investment value of the credits; for example they were told to expect returns of at least 25 per cent and in some cases as much as 50 per cent within a year.

    The investors were also told that airlines would be buying carbon credits every time a plane took off and that investors would have to get in first to maximise returns. In addition they were told that their investment could be withdrawn at any time. All of these claims were false.

    World Future Limited began selling carbon credits for investment in July 2011 and ceased trading less than ten months later in April 2012 having raised some £2.5 million from the public, following The Service’s intervention.

    World Future Limited and Capital Wealth Ltd then placed themselves into voluntary liquidation, which was overridden by the compulsory winding up order by the Court.

    Company Investigations supervisor Chris Mayhew said:
    “There was no credible evidence to support the assertions made to investors, who had nothing to gain and everything to lose from being contacted by World Future”.
    “Rogue companies cannot be allowed to rip off vulnerable and honest people and will not be tolerated by The Service and action will be taken to put them out of business”.
  • 0
    The Sun replies to Good News
    | 1 reply
    Any Erin pics? Disrobed?

    Domain name:
           world-future.co.uk

       Registrant:
           Eren Metcalfe

       Registrant type:
           UK Individual

       Registrant's address:
           Level 33
           25 Canada Square
           Canary Wharf
           London
           E14 5LQ
           United Kingdom

       Registrar:
           iTransact Ltd [Tag = ITRANSACT]
           URL: http://www.itransact.ltd.uk 

       Relevant dates:
           Registered on: 13-Jun-2011
           Renewal date:  13-Jun-2013
           Last updated:  13-Jun-2011

       Registration status:
           Registered until renewal date.

       Name servers:
           ns1.itransactuk.net
           ns2.itransactuk.net
           ns4.itransactuk.net

       WHOIS lookup made at 12:17:37 26-Apr-2012
  • 0
    Eren Fully Clothed replies to The Sun
  • 0
    Henry replies to Jaks
    Thanks for the tip.
  • 0
    Deep scam
    | 4 replies
    I know someone who has just done a short stint working for a firm run by the moores & co. It was short because he left as soon as he realized what was going on, these guys are real bandits, it's amazing that they can keep setting up new companies with the aim of separating people from their money and get away with it.
  • 0
    jon
    Paul Moore Director at MH Carbon.
    T.D.writes: I invested in carbon credits that I bought from MH Carbon Limited, after the company told me that businesses buy these credits. Mine were supposed to be sold in October.

    When October came I was told that while I stood to make a 20 per cent profit, if I waited until November this would rise to 25 per cent. It seemed sensible to wait, but then in November, MH Carbon told me no one was buying.

    The company added that in April the Government would be introducing legislation that would force businesses to buy carbon credits or face heavy fines. I invested all my savings, so now I am extremely worried.
    Warning: Carbon credits are a permit to pollute but a risky investment

    Warning: Carbon credits are a permit to pollute but a risky investment

    I have yet to see any ordinary investor make a penny from trading in carbon credits, and I am afraid you are not going to be the first – though I do have some good news for you.

    MH Carbon, based in the City of London, is run by its sole director Jeffrey Razaq, so I asked him whether it was true you were first told your credits were showing a 20 per cent profit, with a promise of more to come, yet suddenly they could not be sold at all.

    He told me he had bought the company on November 14 last year, and that the broker who dealt with you had already left by then. There was no record of what you had been told, he said.

    Well, I asked, what about the idea that the Government was going to force companies to buy carbon credits from investors like you? Razaq came up with an announcement made last June, but he had the honesty to admit that all this does is make major companies report their greenhouse gas emissions. By no stretch of the imagination does it force them to buy credits.

    Fair enough, but what about the claim on MH Carbon’s website that ‘the EU carbon price may triple by 2013’? Did it? And even if it did, there are two different types of credit – one traded by governments and international corporations, and ‘voluntary credits’ sold by firms such as MH Carbon to people like you – so which one saw the massive price rise?

    Razaq conceded there was no threefold price rise. It was simply a prediction, and it certainly did not apply to your ‘voluntary credits’ anyway. He said: ‘As this figure has not been achieved, I have taken the decision to remove reference to it from the website.’

    I did wonder how much Razaq actually knows about carbon credit trading. Enquiries show he has previously worked as a director of companies authorised by the Financial Services Authority, and licensed by the Office of Fair Trading, but these were in unrelated fields.

    So, I asked him where he learnt about carbon credits. Nowhere, came the answer, with Razaq telling me he has not worked in the sector before. The good news – as you already know – is that after I contacted him Razaq rang you up and asked what you wanted.

    You told him you would settle for your money back, and forget about any mythical profits. And to my pleasant surprise, you now have your £9,960 savings back.

    Razaq told me: ‘I personally believe that the regulation of the carbon market by the FSA would be a welcome step to provide investors with greater protection and peace of mind with these alternative investments.’

    Of course, he is absolutely right. As things stand, carbon credits are a minefield for investors and a playground for conmen. The FSA is well aware of this, and officials complain privately that they are hog-tied by existing laws that were passed by Parliament more than a decade ago, when carbon credits barely existed.

    And that means it is up to Treasury Ministers to find a way to bring in regulation and stop the rip-offs. I won’t hold my breath.

    Threats from First Utility after it makes a mess of simple bill

    Mrs P.A.P.writes: I have been trying for a year to resolve a problem with First Utility Energy. I was a customer for two years and had many problems with its accounts department. I was persuaded to remain for the second year only by the promise of a £100 loyalty bonus. When the time came, the bonus offered was £10 short. First Utility also owed me £5 in bank charges because of its errors, but when  I deducted this from a bill, it caused untold grief. I switched supplier last year and since  then I have been trying to get  an accurate final statement.

    First Utility’s systems do not seem able to cope with normal arithmetic. The company agreed that it owed you £5, but when  you deducted this from a bill, its computer showed you were in arrears.

    Then several weeks ago,  First Utility said it had made a payment straight into your bank account, yet nothing arrived.

    Finally, you received a demand for £84, with the threat of debt collectors and legal action if you failed to pay. There was no mention of the money First Utility owed you, and you were so worried by the threats that you paid up.

    A few weeks ago I contacted the company’s chief executive. Foolishly, First Utility emailed you immediately, saying it was reluctant to deal with me, even though you had asked it to do so.

    You then received a cheque  for £228. There was nothing to show how this was calculated, though it was described as  a ‘dual-fuel discount’.

    Finally, First Utility told me:  ‘A failure on our part meant that Mrs P did suffer a delay in resolving the payment of her dual-fuel discount. She also experienced problems with payment methods and dates.’

    The company has acted to ensure other customers are not affected, and by the time  you read this you will have  received a written apology.

    Share con victim in new attack

    K.G.G.writes: I own a small number of shares that I bought some years ago when they were marketed by a boiler room firm of brokers. Unexpectedly, I have now been contacted by a law firm in Birmingham. The lawyers say they can sell the shares for me at a good profit, but in order to proceed I need an International Corporate Trading Number, and as I am not registered for this already, it will cost £5,000. This sounds like a scam. Is it?

    Oh yes, this is a scam. The offer you received comes from Miller & Cole, solicitors said to be based in Corporation Street in the centre of Birmingham, and it is signed by Mr Jonathan Lloyd who describes himself as ‘Senior Solicitor, International Corporate Finance’.

    He says the £5,000 fee is a legally required deposit, explaining: ‘This is in accordance with regulations in place to safeguard against money laundering, fraud prevention, tax evasion and the further mis-selling of corporate stock.’

    Even leaving aside the rotten English that makes it look as if there are regulations against fraud prevention, rather than the opposite, the letter itself is hogwash.

    There is no such deposit scheme. In fact, there is no trace of Jonathan Lloyd in Corporation Street, and no such law firm as Miller & Cole in Birmingham or anywhere else in the country, according to Law Society records.

    The only genuine thing is the phone number in Birmingham, but modern technology means this could be redirected to anywhere in the world. I did ring it, but my call went straight to an answering machine and nobody rang me back.

    And curiously, the fax number given by Miller & Cole has cropped up before, in a similar scam that used a New York address but asked for fees to be sent to a bank account in Cyprus, which is probably where your money would have ended up had you not smelt a rat.

    Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/experts/ar ... l#ixzz2P85oswf4
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