The Mail on Sunday

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A WOMAN who ran scam publishing firms that raked in more than £1 million from victims who believed they were supporting good causes has been banned from acting as a company director.

Ashley Dawn Thorley, 39, of Stockport, Greater Manchester, was a boss of the Teenage Informatio­n Bureau, which persuaded businesses to sponsor the production of booklets about sexually transmitte­d infections. It gave the impression of being a charity but was actually a commercial firm that banked over £ 400,000 from donors. I warned against it in 2013, after a Mail on Sunday reader was asked to pay £199 for 31 small booklets to be distribute­d to schools. After an investigat­ion by the Insolvency Service, the High Court ordered the company into liquidatio­n.

Thorley went on to run Data Northern Ltd. It cold- called s mall b u s i n e s s e s , falsely implying that it was a charity connected to t he police. I reported in 2017 that Thorley’s company was asking for donations of £179 a time to supply schools with booklets warning teenagers against taking drugs, pictured right. Once a donation was made, the firm was told it had entered a contract to carry on paying, with the threat of bailiffs if it refused.

The booklets were written by Thorley, and i nvestigato­rs from the Insolvency Service found that most of the schools that were supposed to receive them actually received nothi ng, while t hose t hat di d receive the booklets felt they were so poor that they threw them away.

In February last year, the High Court i n Manchester ordered Data Northern to close down. By then, the company’s bank account showed it had received £949,282 from donors, with Thorley pocketing £152,860. She is now banned from setting up or controllin­g any limited company until September 2029.

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