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The hypocrisy of Captain Tom’s daughter exposed in damning report: Watchdog finds Hannah Ingram Moore and her husband ‘misled’ public as they pocketed £1.5m from foundation set up in lockdown hero’s name

Lockdown hero Captain Tom’s daughter and her husband ‘misled’ the public and made ‘repeated failures in integrity’ as they pocketed around £1.5million from the foundation set up in his name, according to a damning Charity Commission report.

The watchdog found Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin benefited ‘significantly’ through their association with the high-profile charity.

Mrs Ingram-Moore made ‘disingenuous’ statements about the six-figure sum she initially demanded to become chief executive of the Captain Tom Foundation (CTF).

There was also a misleading suggestion that proceeds from a £1.4million book deal would be made to the foundation, including from Captain Tom’s autobiography Tomorrow Will Be A Good Day.

The report revealed the grasping couple had twice been invited to ‘rectify matters [over the book deals] by making a donation to the charity in line with their original intentions as understood by those involved’ but had ‘declined to do so’.

Mrs Ingram-Moore’s claim that she was paid £18,000 for her appearance at an awards ceremony ‘in a personal capacity’ was also criticised, with the report stating the money should have gone to the foundation.

Confusion over intellectual property rights for branded goods, such as bottles of gin, led to possible financial losses for the charity.

The couple were also censured for citing the foundation’s name in a planning application for a spa pool block at their home in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire, that has since had to be demolished.

Hannah Ingram-Moore making ‘disingenuous’ public statements suggesting she had not been offered a six-figure sum to become the Captain Tom Foundation’s chief executive, when she had actually requested a £150,000 remuneration package to take on the role. This sum was rejected by the Charity Commission and she ended up receiving the equivalent of £85,000 per annum for a maximum of nine months on a three-month rolling contract.

The Ingram-Moores issuing misleading suggestions that donations from book sales would be paid to the foundation. An advance of almost £1.5 million for a three-book deal was paid to Club Nook, a company where the Ingram-Moores are directors, but none went to the charity. Requests to hand the funds over to the foundation were ‘declined’. Captain Tom wrote in the prologue of his autobiography that it had ‘given [me] the chance to raise even more money for the charitable foundation.’

A claim by Mrs Ingram-Moore that an appearance at the Virgin Media Local Legends Award ceremony, for which she was paid £18,000, was undertaken in a personal capacity. The Commission said there was no evidence to support this and the money should have gone to the foundation, which received a separate £2,000 fee.

Confusion over handling of intellectual property rights, which the Commission said were owned by the family but offered to the foundation to use without appropriate agreements in place, leading to possible financial losses to the charity. A £100 limited edition bottle of Captain Tom gin was sold without a ‘written agreement in place’ over the ‘exact amount of money that will be donated’.

Using the foundation’s name in a planning application for a luxury spa facility in the grounds of the family’s £2.25 million home in Bedfordshire. The Ingram-Moores claimed this was an error that occurred while both were ‘busy undertaking global media work’. The building – which was larger than agreed by Central Bedfordshire Council – was torn down earlier this year after the couple lost an appeal against the local authority’s order to demolish it.

The couple have now been widely slammed – with one retired Met chief blasting: ‘It strikes me as greedy and wicked.’

The hard-hitting 30-page report concluded Mr and Mrs Ingram-Moore’s failings ‘amount to misconduct and/or mismanagement’.

The Commission had already banned Mrs Ingram-Moore, 54, from being a trustee or holding senior management roles in any charity in England and Wales for ten years, while her 67-year-old husband was struck off for eight years.

It confirmed it had not referred the contents of its report to the police or Crown Prosecution Service ‘as we have not found evidence of criminal activity’.

But Lord Foulkes of Cumnock, who sat on the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities to scrutinise the Commission’s activities, told the Mail: ‘It’s entirely right that there should be an investigation because it appears that money that was given in good faith may have been misappropriated.’

Charity Commission chief David Holdsworth today said: ‘The failings amount to misconduct and, or, mismanagement.’

Retired Met chief Mick Neville also slammed the Ingram-Moore’s as ‘greedy and wicked’.

The CTF was incorporated in May 2020 to raise funds for ‘the values held dear to [Mrs Ingram-Moore’s] father’, including loneliness and mental health.

Donations and other funds received were separate from the £38.9 million raised by Captain Tom’s circuits of the family garden leading up to his 100th 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡day and which benefited NHS Charities Together.

The Ingram-Moores became trustees of the foundation in February 2021 – a day after the death of Captain Tom, who was knighted by the late Queen.

Mrs Ingram-Moore resigned from her post weeks later, just before the process to appoint her as CEO began. Her husband remained a trustee until they were disqualified by the Commission in July this year.

The watchdog opened its investigation in March 2021 and escalated it to a statutory inquiry in June 2022 over concerns about the charity’s management and independence from Captain Tom’s family.

The couple described the inquiry and their bans as trustees as a ‘harrowing and debilitating ordeal’.

But a series of PR disasters, including a car crash TV interview with Piers Morgan where Mrs Ingram-Moore denied being offered a six-figure salary to become the foundation’s CEO but admitted receiving £800,000 in proceeds from the three books her father wrote, tarnished their reputation and that of the foundation.

During a planning inquiry into the family’s bid for the luxury spa in the garden of their grade II listed seven-bedroom home, their barrister announced the foundation was to close. The commission cannot order the closure of a foundation.

The couple were subsequently ordered to tear down the spa block and the house was put on the market for £2.25million in April.

Charity Commission chief executive David Holdsworth said the report had uncovered ‘repeated failures of governance and integrity’ and the foundation had ‘not lived up to that legacy of others before self, which is central to charity’.

Only 140 of around 900,000 trustees had been disqualified since 2019, he added, showing the ‘serious nature of the issue we found’.

‘The public, and the law, rightly expect those involved in charities to make an unambiguous distinction between their personal interests and those of the charity and the beneficiaries they are there to serve,’ Mr Holdsworth said.

‘This did not happen in the case of the Captain Tom Foundation. We found repeated instances of a blurring of boundaries between private and charitable interests, with Mr and Mrs Ingram-Moore receiving significant personal benefit.

‘Together, the failings amount to misconduct and / or mismanagement.’

But the Ingram-Moores said they felt ‘unfairly and unjustly’ treated and accused the commission of ‘selective storytelling’.

In a statement, they said: ‘A credible regulatory body would provide the full truth, rather than misrepresenting, and conflating facts and timelines that align with a predetermined agenda.

‘True accountability demands transparency, not selective storytelling.’

They said the inquiry had taken a ‘serious toll on our family’s mental and physical health, unfairly tarnishing our name and affecting our ability to carry on Captain Sir Tom’s legacy’.

A spokesman for the Captain Tom Foundation said: ‘The Captain Tom Foundation is pleased with the Charity Commission’s unequivocal findings regarding the Ingram-Moores’ misconduct.

‘We join the Charity Commission in imploring the Ingram-Moores to rectify matters by returning the funds due to the Foundation, so that they can be donated to well-deserving charities as intended by the late Captain Sir Tom Moore.

‘We hope they do so immediately and without the need for further action.’

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