Tom Hayhoe, the Covid Corruption Commissioner, Starts Phase Two of His Investigation, That Being Looking at Ways To Retrieve Funds Lost to Bounce Back Loan Blaggers and Business Grant and Eat Out to Help Out Scammers

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A quite novel and innovative scheme is being kicked about about Whitehall at the moment, regarding how to retrieve the huge amount of cash seemingly lost to Bounce Back Loan Blaggers and other Covid related finance schemes.

If that scheme, which I am fully aware of and have given a lot of input into gets approval, (and the powers that be would be mad not to give it approval), it will draw a line under the BBL scheme and give people who made a mistake and didn’t set out to blag a BBL, but may be seen to have done so, a way out of their predicament.

In fact, that scheme is a mirror image of what I have been advising many BBL defaulters to do for years now, with the addition of one important factor that I couldnt offer, but the Government can.

My results speak for themselves, £10m’s recovered over the last few years that would never have been, so I am quite excited about what the Covid Corruption Commissioner is working on and do so hope it gets the green light, as it will end the suffering of a lot of good people, currently being labelled as bad people.

More on that later, until then read on to discover what the Covid Corruption Commissioner is now up to and what Rachel Reeves has to say:

Failed pandemic-era PPE contracts cost the British taxpayer £1.4 billion, as an interim report commissioned by Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, lays bare the scale of the scandal.

The Covid Counter Fraud Commissioner’s report reveals the price the British public has paid for undelivered contracts which saw taxpayer cash squandered on unusable PPE.

The last government’s over-ordering of PPE, and delays in checking it, mean that £762 million is unlikely to ever be recovered. These failures saw substandard PPE – gowns, masks and visors – not inspected for two years, meaning public money could no longer be recouped.

Now Reeves is going further and faster to recover the £468 million that could still be recovered from suppliers – money which the government will put back into communities and public services including the NHS, police and armed forces.

Recovery action has so far resulted in £182 million being returned to the public purse, and PPE suppliers referred to the National Crime Agency for suspected fraud.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said:

The country is still paying the price for the reckless handling of Covid contracts which saw taxpayer pounds wasted and criminals profit from the pandemic.

This investigation and plan to recover public money underlines our commitment to ensure that every penny spent during the pandemic is fully accounted for.

We have always been clear that money poorly spent or fraudulently claimed belongs to the British people. This Government will bring criminals to justice and put taxpayer’s money back where it belongs – in the NHS, police and armed forces.

Most of the wasted money went on surgical gowns. Over half (52%) were non-compliant, but because much of the defective PPE was not quality tested until after warranties had expired, there is little chance of recovering the money.

This interim report marks the end of Phase one of Commissioner Tom Hayhoe’s investigation– scrutinising PPE contracts.

The Commissioner has now begun work on Phase two, which will see it investigating fraud and error in other pandemic spending programmes such as furlough, bounce-back loans, Business Support Grants and Eat Out to Help Out.

The Commissioner will provide a full update in a final report to the Chancellor at the conclusion of his term in December 2025.