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Captain Tom Moore three years on from his death – how the circus has distracted from this 100-year-old man’s extraordinary act

Captain Tom left behind an incredible legacy (Picture: PA)

The British public can probably all agree that Captain Sir Tom Moore was one of the best of us.

The nonagenarian, walker in hands, circled his back garden 100 times during the first coronavirus lockdown in 2020 to raise £38.9 million for the NHS.

But three years on from Captain Tom’s death, his extraordinary deeds and hard work have been overshadowed by the actions of others – including those he should have been able to trust to carry on his legacy.

The Captain Tom Foundation promised huge things, but only three years after his death, the charity is closed down.

Money to the tune of £800,000 promised to the charity was pocketed by his own daughter, Hannah Ingram-Moore.

And now a damning Charity Commission report concluded Captain Tom’s family gained ‘significant personal benefit’ from their links to the charity.

Captain Tom Moore with (left to right) grandson Benji, daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore and granddaughter Georgia after he completed his 100 laps (Picture: PA)
Latest pictures on Monday show the spa has been almost completely demolished (Picture: PA)

The family’s fall from grace is being rounded off by the demolition of a spa – which they attempted to pass off as being for the benefit of local elderly people – built without planning permission at their Grade II listed family home.

Metro.co.uk takes a look at everything that’s happened since Captain Tom’s death and how it’s tarnished his family’s reputation.

The Captain Tom Foundation

The Captain Tom Foundation was first established in June 2020 to ‘recognise and raise money for organisations supporting the elderly in the UK’.

Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin became trustees of the charity in February 2021, around the time of his death – though she resigned as a trustee a month later.

In July 2021, the Charity Commission stepped in to prevent Ms Ingram-Moore from being appointed as the foundation’s chief executive and receiving a £100,000 salary, calling the move ‘neither reasonable nor justifiable’.

A month later, Ms Ingram-Moore became chief executive of the foundation on a nine-month contract worth £85,000 a year. After this contract expired a new chief executive, Jack Gilbert, an experienced charity sector manager, was appointed.

In February 2022 it emerged that the Ingram-Moores paid £50,000 in expenses related to consultancy, transport, and security for Captain Tom’s publicity tours to other companies ran by themselves.

The Charity Commission later ruled that these expenses were legitimate.

Missing money

The spa pool was lifted out of the building using a crane (Picture: Bav Media)

In the 2020-21 financial year, the information commissioner and fundraising regulator raised concerns about the charity’s accounts – issues which were then resolved.

During an interview with Piers Morgan on TalkTV, Ms Ingram-Moore confessed to taking money from the NHS fund-raising veteran – from the sale of his books.

She said they kept £800,000 from three books he had written – despite their prologue insisting the money would go to charity.

She told TalkTV’s Piers Morgan that Sir Tom wanted them to keep the book profits.

She said: ‘These were my father’s books, and it was honestly such a joy for him to write them, but they were his books.

‘He had an agent and they worked on that deal, and his wishes were that that money would sit in Club Nook.’

Club Nook is the name of Ms Ingram-Moore’s own business.

In January 2022 Ms Ingram-Moore was paid £18,000 for judging a charity award in Bristol, appearing at the Ashton Vale Club for Young People and handing them the ‘Virgin Media O2 Captain Tom Foundation Connector Award’.

But the foundation received just £2,000.

The Charity Commission

Hannah Ingram-Moore watched on during the demolition (Picture: Bav Media)

In June 2022, the Charity Commission announced it would investigate the foundation after questions arose regarding its financial relationship to members of the Ingram-Moore family.

Concerns were raised that Captain Tom’s family personally profited from the charity, which was set up in his name.

The Commission held a number of conversations with the foundation, but it launched the formal inquiry after new evidence of potentially serious misconduct emerged.

In July 2023 the foundation stopped taking money from donors and a statement on its website says this will continue while the inquiry continues.

Solicitors representing the Ingram-Moores said the foundation was ‘unlikely to exist’ in the future – as they may choose to shut the charity down.

It’s looking into claims that a private company controlled by Ms Ingram-Moore and her husband potentially profited by trademarking the ‘Captain Tom’ brand without objection from the foundation.

In response, the couple said it had trademarked the name in April 2020, before the foundation was formed.

The unauthorised spa

Captain Tom Moore celebrated his 100th birthday by carrying the 2012 Olympic torch (Picture: PA)

Ms Ingram-Moore and her husband applied in 2021 for permission to build a Captain Tom Foundation building in the grounds of their Grade II listed home in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire.

The L-shaped building was given planning permission, and it was set to be used ‘in connection with the Captain Tom Foundation and its charitable objectives’.

But in February 2022, planners received a part-retrospective plannning application, which would increase the size of the building, change its shape from L-shaped to C-shaped, and house a spa pool.

Those retrospective plans were refused, and Central Bedfordshire council ruled that the ‘now-unauthorised building’ must be demolished in July 2023.

The Ingram-Moores challenged this ruling, but their appeal failed in November of last year.

The implication that the family had used Captain Tom’s name to try and push through the pool plans sparked outrage.

Inspector Diane Fleming said the ‘scale and massing’ of the building had ‘resulted in harm’ to The Old Rectory – their family home.

They were ordered to demolish the building by February 7 of this year, with the bulldozers rolling in days before that deadline.

The damning Charity Commission investigation

The demolition of the building began in earnest last month (Picture: Bradley Page)

A 30-page document has now been published after a two-year investigation by the Charity Commission.

It concluded Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin made ‘repeated failures’ at the helm of the foundation.

The watchdog’s CEO David Holdsworth cited ‘repeated instances of a blurring of boundaries between private and charitable interests’, with the couple ‘receiving significant personal benefit.’ 

He added: ‘Captain Sir Tom inspired a nation and reminded us what service to others can achieve even in the most challenging of times.  

‘His determined fundraising efforts, and the incredibly generous public response, brought a smile and hope to many of us during the pandemic.

‘We should remember his achievements and how grateful NHS Charities Together is for the £39million he raised for the causes they support.  

‘Sadly, however, the charity set up in his name has not lived up to that legacy of others before self, which is central to charity. Our inquiry report details repeated failures of governance and integrity.’ 

This article was originally published on February 5, 2024

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