Townsville Bulletin

ASIC moves on Cameron

Businesswo­man faces charges over lack of shares disclosure

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THE corporate watchdog has charged former Bellamy’s director Jan Cameron with masking what it says was her true stake in the formula business by using a mysterious Caribbean-based associate.

The Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission said yesterday it was charging the Tasmanian businesswo­man, 67, with failing to disclose 14 million Bellamy’s shares she owned via Curacao-domiciled firm The Black Prince Foundation when the Launceston­based formula company went public in August 2014.

ASIC said that Cameron’s 14.74 per cent stake was nearly triple the 5.0 per cent Corporatio­ns Act threshold that dictates when a person must lodge a substantia­l holder notice.

The watchdog also says Cameron (pictured) lodged another misleading initial substantia­l holder notice amid an acrimoniou­s boardroom battle at Bellamy’s in early 2017. ASIC says Cameron failed to properly disclose her true and complete relationsh­ip with Black Prince, and the basis upon which she held her interest in the company.

Cameron was revealed as the controllin­g power behind Black Prince amid the 2017 shareholde­r revolt, which resulted in the removal of Bellamy’s chief executive Laura Mcbain and installati­on of two new directors aligned with

Cameron. The Tasmanian firm had been struggling through Chinese market complicati­ons and regulatory hurdles in the country.

Cameron, the founder of outdoor apparel brand Kathmandu, faces a fine, a maximum penalty of five years imprisonme­nt, or both if the charges are proven.

The case is being prosecuted by the Commonweal­th Director of Public Prosecutio­ns and a hearing is listed for a mention in Hobart Magistrate­s Court on March 12.

Bellamy’s was sold to the China Mengniu Dairy Company last year in a deal that netted Ms Cameron a reported $300 million.

Cameron did not publicly state whether she supported or opposed the takeover but offloaded a chunk of shares in the lead-up to the deal.

This was taken as a sign by onlookers that she would not stand in the way of the sale.

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