The Scotsman

Entreprene­ur banned from running firms over fake invoice scam

● Oil and gas slump forced him to lie to bank in bid to save business

- By STUART MCDONALD

An award-winning businessma­n who created a false invoice for more than £425,000 as his firm was going bust has been banned from running a company for 11 years.

Hermann Twickler was lauded by the business community after he used his life savings to launch Pressure-fab, an oil and gas industry equipment supplier, and quickly turned it into a success story.

The German-born tycoon started the Dundee-based firm in 2010 and was named Emerging Entreprene­ur of the Year in 2012 after the firm raced to a £6 million annual turnover and a skilled workforce of 90.

Pressure-fab designed and manufactur­ed specialist rig equipment and was considered Scotland’s largest offshore container manufactur­er.

In 2013, Mr Twickler, 48, was named Business Leader of the Year, and the company reported a near £1m profit.

However the downturn in the oil and gas industry led to orders drying up and the company was placed into administra­tion in July 2016, and its remaining 42 employees made redundant.

The Insolvency Service launched an investigat­ion into the company and discovered that a month before the administra­tion Mr Twickler submitted details of a false invoice for £426,600 to his bank.

He had an agreement in place with the bank to provide him with finance to help with cash flow while awaiting payment of invoices.

The investigat­ion discovered that Pressure-fab was given a payment of £250,000 from the lender after it sent the bogus invoice and Mr Twickler personally received £78,000 of the sum.

The businessma­n, of Dundee, has now been disqualifi­ed from acting as a company director until 2029.

The investigat­ion found Pressure-fab owed more than £1.1m to creditors after going bust. Five other companies owned by Mr Twickler were also placed into administra­tion in July 2016.

He was declared bankrupt last year with debts of more than £500,000.

Mr Twickler, who trained in Germany as a master manufactur­er and was a former executive at shipbuilde­rs VT, ploughed £500,000 into the Scottish start-up.

Operating from a 250,000sq ft facility next to the A90, the group had the resources to design and fabricate bespoke projects of up to 2,000 tonnes of steel volume and single components of up to 50 tonnes.

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