Tuesday, July 09, 2013

Academy status

About this time last year, a Telegraph piece appeared plugging "a young entrepreneur and chess enthusiast".



According to the piece:


and indeed the entry form for the following Richmond Rapidplay


noted that it was "now hosted by the Chevannes Chess Academy"

and cheques were to be made payable to the limited company of that name.

What's curious about this is that if you examine the company records for the limited company of that name, extracts from which appear below

it says that no accounts were ever filed

and that the company was "dissolved"

and that it was "struck off and dissolved" in July 2010.

So, what's puzzling me is this. If a company was struck off and dissolved in July 2010, how could plugs for the same company have been appearing in the press two years later?


And how, two years after being struck off and dissolved, could a company have been asking chessplayers to send cheques payable to its account?

[Thanks to Angus]

5 comments:

John Cox said...

It doesn't *actually* follow from the facts that a company with name x was struck off in 2010, and the fact (if it be a fact) that there is no company registered with name x today, that there wasn't a company registered with name x in 2012. It may be so and certainly what you say merits investigation, but at the moment you haven't quoted facts that would absolutely show this.

And in general the answer to the question 'how come a journalist is promoting a company that's been struck off?' is 'most if not all journalists don't do company searches on companies they are writing about', isn't it?

Anonymous said...

Amateur hour! Sabrina should have asked my advice on how to profitably dissolve a limited company.

Pingu

AngusF said...

A company named Chevannes Chess Academy could have been incorporated after a company of the same name was struck off. But that hasn't happened - see here for info. (Click 'Find Company Information' on the right).

ejh said...

And in general the answer to the question 'how come a journalist is promoting a company that's been struck off?' is 'most if not all journalists don't do company searches on companies they are writing about', isn't it?'

Of course. Especially if they are not told there is anything amiss by anybody in a position to know this may be so.

john cox said...

Angus (and ejh) - both true enough.