Page 4 - Fake Ruby CS
P. 4
The administrators, Ernst and Young, acting on behalf of The Royal Bank of
Scotland found, when examining the assets of Wrekin Construction, that the
company's owner, David Unwin, had entered an uncut ruby gemstone weighing
2 kg (4.5lb) valued at £11m, and known as the Gem of Tanzania, into the
company accounts by exchanging it for the shares.
The exchange of the Gem of Tanzania (£11 million) was for interest bearing
preference shares. David Unwin until that point had held a minority share in
Wrekin.
Unwin had acquired the uncut gem in 2006 as part of a land deal involving his
Tamar Group Ltd and was then included in the Tamar accounts as an asset
valued at £300,000. It had earlier been sold to Trevor Michael Hart Jones, a
South African businessman, for £13,000 in 2002.
However, when it was transferred to the assets of Wrekin in December 2007 it
was given the £11m price tag, based on a valuation of four months earlier,
purportedly issued by the Instituto Gemmologico Italiano, giving the impression
that Wrekin Construction had a financial surplus of £6.3m while in reality it was
insolvent.
The Instituto Gemmologico, Italy said it had never valued such a gem and
moreover on the 31st August 2007 when it was claimed it had done so, it was on
holiday and was closed. Furthermore, a laboratory manager said that the
institute does not assign values to gems, but only analyses their quality.