Insolvency & Law Business Advice Show
Peter Murray is the director of Insolvency & Law, a multi-award-winning consultancy providing commercial debt recovery, credit management and corporate insolvency solutions since 2009. Each week, we offer in-depth analysis of the issues affecting company directors and business owners.
Insolvency & Law Business Advice Show
Tony Hughes: Uncovering the Pattern Behind Collapsed Loan Note Schemes
In this episode, we investigate Tony Hughes, a recurring figure in several high-profile unregulated loan note schemes that have left loan note holders out of pocket and searching for answers.
We cover:
- Tony Hughes’s directorships and shareholding roles in Platinum Assets & Developments Limited
- His earlier involvement with High Street Group, one of the UK’s most notorious investment collapses
- The role of Castle Trust & Management Services as security trustee across multiple schemes
- Overlaps with other familiar names, including William Jackson, Sonali Craddock, and New Capital Link
- Concerns raised by loan note holders who still haven’t received redemptions
- Deleted promotional blogs, disappearing directors, and a trail of repeated patterns
- And the central question: Why do the same people and sales tactics appear again and again in failed schemes?
If you’ve invested in Platinum, High Street Group, or any scheme promoted by New Capital Link, this episode connects the dots that others won’t. Share your experience or raise concerns:
investigations@insolvencyandlaw.co.uk
Or call: 020 7504 1300
Disclaimer: Insolvency & Law Ltd is not a firm of solicitors or licensed insolvency practitioners and does not provide legal advice, investment advice, or any regulated services under the Legal Services Act 2007 or the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. All content published by I&L relating to William Jackson related companies, including blogs and podcasts, is provided free of charge for general information and educational purposes only and must not be relied upon as professional advice.
Where appropriate, I&L may take legal assignment of loan notes issued by William Jackson related companies in its own name, for the purpose of enforcement and recovery. In such cases, I&L bears all associated costs and risks, and the original loan note holder is fully insulated from legal expense and liability.