The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has secured an interim injunction against the alleged operators of an unregulated sale and rentback scheme preventing them from continuing with their business and freezing their assets.
The FCA has commenced proceedings in the High Court against London Property Investments ((LPI) and NPI Holdings, Daniel Stevens (the sole director and shareholder of both companies) and his father Anthony Kafetzis.
The FCA has secured an interim injunction stopping these activities from continuing and a restraint order freezing 17 residential properties worth approximately £3.9 million and the defendants’ other assets up to £867,770. Based upon present information, the FCA believes that the defendants’ activities have affected dozens of individuals, some of whom are highly vulnerable and who may have lost hundreds of thousands of pounds to the defendants.
The FCA alleges that:
LPI provides services to financially distressed individuals who face eviction from their homes or who have recently been evicted. Its services would include:
The FCA is asking the court to return the ownership of properties to the affected individuals, restitution for individuals who suffered losses as a result of the defendants’ actions, declarations from the court stating that the defendants acted illegally and injunctions to prevent further breaches in the future. The court proceedings are at an early stage and no date for trial has been set.