The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Why would a luxury hotel in Tokyo buy wine I never owned?

Probes a world of scams and scandals

- By Tony Hetheringt­on

R.S. writes: I invested in wine through the Bordeaux Wine Company (BWC) which, as you reported recently, has collapsed. I actually sold my wine eight years ago, but I have now been contacted by Empire Investment Capital Limited, which says BWC bought two cases of wine for me, and not one case as I had thought. Empire says it has a buyer, the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Tokyo, which will pay £9,700 for the case of Mouton Rothschild 2002 which I supposedly own. The hotel will also pay Empire a 20 per cent finder’s fee. However, Empire wants £1,408 up front, refundable on completion of the deal. I believe this is a scam, and I have refused to pay.

THIS is a scam, based on a rip-off, wrapped inside a big lie. For starters, Empire Investment Capital Limited, with offices in Twickenham and in the City, should not even be using this name any more. It told Companies House last October that its name is now Empire Managed Properties Limited.

But leaving this aside, what about the details of its pitch to you. Should you really believe that you own wine worth thousands of pounds, while for the past eight years nobody has spotted this or charged you for storage? And how did Empire get control of that case when BWC’s wine has been in the hands of the liquidator since last summer?

Against this background, has Empire genuinely done a deal with one of the most luxurious hotels in the world? No, it has not. A charming Michiko Fujikawa, head of marketing at the hotel, told me: ‘Greetings from Tokyo.

Mandarin Oriental,

Tokyo, does not have an appointed wine merchant in Europe.’ Michiko knew absolutely nothing about any deal with Empire.

And if this was not enough to undermine Empire’s approach, I found the wine you are supposed to own is on sale for around £4,400.

So, I asked Raymond Empson, the sole director of Empire, whether he would care to pay me

£9,700 for a case if I went out and bought one now for £4,400.

I also asked Empson how he managed to do a deal involving wine which you are clear does not even exist. And why, I wondered, would the hotel in Tokyo tell me there was no such deal.

Empson offered no explanatio­ns, and no comments. Perhaps he was put off by my warning that on the face of it, Empire appears to be making fraudulent claims, contrary to Section 2 of the Fraud Act 2006, to persuade you to fork out £1,408.

Or perhaps he chose silence because I made clear that I knew a year ago his company had approached investors who lost money in another wine scam.

Again, the wine company was in liquidatio­n, yet Empire had supposedly done a deal with Shangri La Hotels in Hong Kong, which would pay well over the odds for surprising­ly ordinary wine. The catch? Investors had to pay thousands up front to join in the deal.

Often when a scam investment firm crashes, its client list is passed to a different firm, operating what is called a ‘Recovery Room’. Its salesmen are tasked with squeezing more money out of the same victims by promising to get back their original losses, if only they will put up fresh cash to get things moving.

Last Thursday, I made a final bid to get Raymond Empson to speak to me. I called Empire on 0207 459 4089 and gave my name. After some conversati­on in the background, the line went dead. I rang again. Could I speak to Mr Empson? ‘That’s not possible,’ was the reply, and the speaker hung up. Anyone contacted by Empire should do exactly the same: hang up.

 ??  ?? OFFER: Mouton Rothschild wine and, left, Tokyo’s Mandarin Oriental
OFFER: Mouton Rothschild wine and, left, Tokyo’s Mandarin Oriental
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