The New Zealand Herald

Leo’s dad asked for $90,000

Sam Forrest said as primary caregiver, he should get some of donated money

- Phil Taylor

The father of Down syndrome baby Leo Forrest asked for a $90,000 remunerati­on payment from the half-million-dollar fundraisin­g campaign set up to support his son, according to correspond­ence seen by the Herald.

Samuel Forrest (right) suggested as Leo’s primary caregiver, he should be paid the $90,000 in the first year and up to $70,000 the next.

Mr Forrest says he is not being paid these amounts but declined to explain how he is being funded.

He has rejected claims that the money from donors worldwide is not being spent responsibl­y and that some is unaccounte­d for.

But he confirmed he has removed Trina McLachlan as a trustee of the Leo Forrest Trust.

Ms McLachlan told the Herald they fell out over the recommenda­tion of a banker that larger with- drawals should require the signatures of both Mr Forrest and Ms McLachlan. She said Mr Forrest was against that and it didn’t happen.

Mr Forrest said Ms McLachlan had been replaced by “an independen­t non-beneficiar­y custodian”, whom he would not name.

He denied the falling-out was over how withdrawal­s from the fund were to be authorised but would not say what was behind it.

Ms McLachlan has concerns about how the money is being applied and earlier claimed the trust fund balance had dropped by $100,000 since A$350,000 was put in when it was set up this year.

“When Sam asked me to be the alternativ­e trustee he told me he wanted me to give the opposing view in the best interests of Leo,” she said. “The moment I did that at the bank, that’s when it all went pearshaped.”

Mr Forrest has told the Herald there are investment­s Ms McLachlan doesn’t know about. He has

defended buying a 3-year-old car worth about $20,000 and flying business class with his family at a time when his wife, Ruzan Badalyan, was pumping milk for Leo.

Ms Badalyan gave birth to Leo in January in Armenia, where disabled babies are often put in orphanages.

Mr Forrest later said his wife had disowned Leo and he planned to raise him on his own in New Zealand.

He set up an appeal on the Go Fund Me site to help with expenses.

The couple have since reconciled and live in West Auckland.

The site recorded that more than $600,000 was raised, but Mr Forrest told the Herald that was incorrect, and the amount after fees of $40,000 came to “a little over $500,000” Australian at a time when the NZ and Australian dollars were near parity.

The Herald has seen correspond­ence that indicates that Mr Forrest authorised that the trust be set up with a payment of $A350,000. He indicated that he had held some funds back to buy items such as household furnishing­s and a car.

Baby Leo was to be the primary beneficiar­y of the trust, with Mr Forrest a discretion­ary beneficiar­y.

Mr Forrest asked that he be paid from trust money $90,000 in the first year and up to $70,000 in the second for his role as “primary caregiver”.

On Wednesday afternoon, he told the Herald this was incorrect. He said he was unable to comment further about payments from the trust.

Mr Forrest confirmed in the correspond­ence that he planned to return to paid employment at the end of 2015. He requested that baby Leo’s mother not be an appointor, trustee or beneficiar­y, “for her own protec- tion. I will support her.”

He had planned to set up a website to “chronicle our journey as a family with a DS [Down syndrome] child — but also have a proportion dedicated to raising funds in relation to our Armenian programmes for the trust”.

Mr Forrest has previously said some of the money donated would be used for the only orphanage in Armenia that regularly took aban- doned Down syndrome babies and to support parents there who chose to keep children with disabiliti­es.

He told the Herald on Wednesday that this was now “on ice” due to corruption in Armenia.

Mr Forrest had hoped to raise $60,000 in the appeal, enough to bring Leo home and to care fulltime for him as a solo dad for a year, and was overwhelme­d by the response.

He was the fourth generation of his family to belong to the Exclusive Brethren but broke away several years ago about the time his marriage to a church member foundered.

He has four children from that marriage, whom he has not seen since. In February, his former wife, Kylie Forrest, said it was his choice. “He still has legal access arrangemen­ts.”

 ??  ?? Baby Leo was born in Armenia, where Down syndrome babies are often shunned.
Baby Leo was born in Armenia, where Down syndrome babies are often shunned.
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