Weekend Herald

‘I didn’t have a toothbrush’

Being jailed was a bolt from the blue, Eric Watson tells Matt Nippert. The controvers­ial businessma­n finally addresses his tax problems, Hanover Finance, that bitter split with Sir Owen Glenn, and what life in Pentonvill­e Prison was really like.

- Matt Nippert

Eric Watson, fresh out of prison, is mulling bankruptcy and writing a book about his life and times that he hopes to sell to Netflix.

The controvers­ial London-based Watson, once New Zealand’s most famous businessma­n, has had a torrid past few years after losing major court cases and incurring largely unpaid hundred-milliondol­lar judgments from Inland Revenue for tax avoidance and Sir Owen Glenn over what were ruled deceitful investment deals.

In October Watson was sentenced to four months in London’s notorious Pentonvill­e Prison for contempt after a judge ruled he’d been hiding assets from Glenn in his mother’s name.

He was released just before Christmas and this week spoke to the Weekend Herald in his first substantiv­e interview in nearly a decade. He said his lawyers had told him jail was “highly unlikely”, and it was only when handcuffed in the dock he grasped what was coming: “I didn’t even have a toothbrush!”

Demands from creditors — chiefly Glenn chasing tens of millions of pounds and New Zealand liquidator­s acting to recover nearly $120 million for Inland Revenue — led Watson to plead penury in several recent court proceeding­s and he is now openly mulling bankruptcy.

Once New Zealand’s fifth-richest man, but who has sold up his local assets in recent years, he said his thinking about this drastic step changed after his Pentonvill­e stint.

“It’s a distinct possibilit­y . . . I thought that might really f *** me up, business-wise, having a bankruptcy. But now I’ve had prison.”

He had spent more than $20m on legal battles with Glenn in recent years — his opponent had spent $40m — and said: “In certain philanthro­pic ways we’re both helping the starving lawyers of the UK.”

A Glenn spokesman said ongoing actions were “about justice and holding Watson responsibl­e for his actions and, hopefully, stopping others being deceived”.

Watson claimed action taken against him by Glenn was a “vendetta”, and his company Cullen’s tax avoidance was due to poor advice from law firm Russell McVeagh and the judgment debt could be recovered with a lawsuit.

Liquidator­s acting for Cullen reviewed Watson’s complaints about his legal advice and decided they were “without merit”.

Russell McVeagh declined to comment.

Watson also confirmed his position as a UK non-dom since 2002, a legal position popular with Russian oligarchs, which enables him to live in London without paying income tax on income earned outside the United Kingdom.

“We do not pay tax, as many high net worth New Zealanders would know — like [the late] Doug Myers, for example,” he said.

Regarding his devastatin­g court losses, Watson claimed to be philosophi­cal: “Litigation is, at the end of the day, it’s a toss of the coin.

“We lost . . . we thought we were going to win. S*** happens.”

Watson said he had already written 80,000 words of a collection of anecdotes about his life and times, and true crime tales of those he had met behind bars, and hoped to soon publish a book and sell the film rights to streaming giants.

He had interviewe­d murderers and armed robbers at Pentonvill­e, and also intended to detail for the first time his 2002 fight with Russell Crowe in London.

In his Weekend Herald interview, Watson also addressed Hanover Finance, a finance company he co-owned that collapsed at the start of the global financial crisis, causing thousands of investors to lose hundreds of millions of dollars.

“I really do feel bad for people that have lost money.”

Watson blamed other parties, and general economic conditions, for Hanover’s failure.

HIt depends on what you mean by ‘broke’. Personally, you know, potentiall­y, I could declare bankruptcy. It’s a distinct possibilit­y ... I just haven’t got around to it.

is optimism was either relentless or delusional, but Eric Watson hadn’t packed a toothbrush for his October 19 date in a London courtroom. It was a sentencing hearing — the latest in a series of seemingly endless, and endlessly expensive, proceeding­s with Sir Owen Glenn — where Lord Justice Christophe­r Nugee was handing down his penalty after having ruled Watson was in contempt two weeks prior.

Watson says he’d been briefed on a range of possible outcomes after he was found to have hidden assets from creditors, but had put little weight on the fourth possibilit­y — “highly unlikely” he says his lawyers told him — of being sent to prison.

“Maybe I’m too optimistic about things, but four wasn’t a hot favourite to win the derby,” he says.

As the judge asked him to stand to hear his fate, Watson’s mind was largely turned to a dinner booking that evening at a friends’ vegan restaurant where he was due to convince a clutch of English, German and Spanish businessme­n to buy into a €200 million property deal.

“I’m like, ‘hurry up guys, I’ve gotta get out of here’,” Watson says of the imposition on his time.

“I’m standing there listening: ‘blah, blah, blah, and the mitigating circumstan­ces, and you’ve got six months’.”

“What!?!”

In a stinging ruling, Lord Justice Nugee proposed a six-month sentence to be served at the decrepit Pentonvill­e Prison in London, but reduced it to four largely because Watson was still dealing with the after-effects of a recent Covid infection.

It was only the moment a couple of “big, burly women, like sumo wrestlers” approached him in the dock to place him in handcuffs that Watson says he realised: “This is getting a bit serious.”

It’s fair to say he was unprepared for what came next. “I didn’t even have a toothbrush! I’ve got a business suit on and a white shirt, brand new Clarks leather boots — which I ended up wearing for the next six weeks with my prison gear because they didn’t have shoes big enough in prison to fit on my size 47 floppers.”

Watson was released a month ago — just before Christmas — and is talking to the Weekend Herald from home in London, in his first significan­t interview in more than eight years.

In the time since then he has sold down his remaining assets in New Zealand (the Warriors, Bendon, an estate in Karaka), joined forces with — then made a mortal enemy of — Sir Owen Glenn, and seen his Cullen Group of companies wear one of New Zealand’s largest-ever tax avoidance rulings: $118.4m and counting.

He says he’s kept silent to date because he thinks “there’s been no real point, right? What’s the point? We lost. We lost the [Glenn] case, because the judge was pretty harsh, in that particular case. We’ve had the Cullen [tax] debacle.”

He’s talking now because, he says, he finally has time on his hands. He also sees an opportunit­y to pre-publicise a book he’s preparing on his life and times, and hopes to flip the film or mini-series rights to streaming giants.

“Unashamedl­y, you’re part of the marketing machine my friend,” he tells his interviewe­r.

(The book’s working title, From Penthouse to Pentonvill­e, is a direct adaptation of a recent Weekend Herald headline.)

During a more than hour-long interview conducted over Zoom, Watson moves between charming self-deprecatio­n, almost New Age fatalism and acceptance of his circumstan­ces, convoluted explanatio­ns as to why his recent grievous court losses should actually have been wins, and a clear-eyed appreciati­on of the difficulti­es that lie ahead. He also vapes constantly.

He’s recently claimed in court that his reason for non-payment of various debts is because he is penniless. It’s a contention he — despite the appearance of London accommodat­ions and having hired a New Zealand PR agent — reaffirms to the Weekend Herald.

“It depends on what you mean by ‘broke’. Personally, you know, potentiall­y, I could declare bankruptcy. It’s a distinct possibilit­y,” he says. “I just haven’t got around to it.”

He says his thinking about this drastic step has changed after his stint in Pentonvill­e. “I was concerned about bankruptcy. In the UK it’s only 12 months, or it can be longer if people petition for it to be longer

— which I’m sure they would. But I thought that might really f*** me up, business-wise, having a bankruptcy. But now I’ve had prison.”

Losing the coin toss

How it all got to this point for the onetime most famous (and among the 10 richest) New Zealand businessme­n is largely, he claims, down to the fallout following legal disputes with Sir Owen Glenn and the Commission­er of Inland Revenue. A breakdown of a business partnershi­p saw Glenn secure a ruling declaring their arrangemen­t was “thoroughly misleading and deceitful,” and the repayment of his £130m investment — and £43m in damages — the pursuit of which led directly to Pentonvill­e.

Watson insists he only lost this case on a technicali­ty, with what he alleges was a key document being ruled inadmissib­le at the start of trial.

“Litigation is, at the end of the day, it’s a toss of the coin. And the mega multimilli­on dollar toss of the coin? We lost. And I have no qualms about that. We did lose, but you have to understand we thought we were going to win,” he says, adding: “Shit happens.”

Watson treads a careful line in discussing Lord Justice Nugee’s judgment, but disagrees with a number of adverse determinat­ions made by the court about his credibilit­y and business practices. “I have to respect the process, but obviously I disagree with a number of those conclusion­s, vehemently.”

And despite the titanic legal struggle, Watson initially insists, “I actually have no hard feeling towards Owen.” He claims his one-time business partner actually profited handsomely from the deals.

Watson also later says his contempora­ry business partners patched him into conference calls from his cell and “could see through what this really was: It’s an onslaught from a guy who’s got hundreds of millions of dollars and feels a bit like a cheated spouse in a one-sided divorce.”

He calls Glenn’s legal campaign a “vendetta” and alleges his former business partner’s very public battle with cancer has no bearing on the possibilit­y of settling the case as he suspects the presence of a dead man’s switch. “Why would his estate settle any differentl­y? I think he’s left instructio­ns after his death — ‘Here’s another £50m, continue to pursue Eric Watson’.”

For Glenn’s part, a spokesman for his office says Watson had chosen, since a key 2018 ruling, “to put assets beyond the reach of creditors” and the ongoing action was also “about justice and holding Watson responsibl­e for his actions and, hopefully, preventing others from being deceived”.

Watson has no doubt his troubles with Glenn are not over, and almost tries painting himself as David versus a legal Goliath. “Owen’s $40m that he’s spent has been spent very well. He does have a very, very effective and ruthless team of the highest-paid QCs in the world.”

Referring to Glenn’s penchant for high-profile charitable donations, Watson says, “well, God bless him. I mean, he likes to give money away, but he can’t put his name on litigation.”

But case law lasts forever. Of the staggering sums spent by both parties to date (Watson says he’s spent less than Glenn, but

It’s been super interestin­g. And life should be interestin­g. Of course I’ve got micro regrets, but I haven’t got any macro regrets.

still in the tens of millions) he jokes: “In certain philanthro­pic ways we’re both helping the starving lawyers of the UK.”

‘We do not pay tax’

The parallel tax dispute that took place contempora­neously on the other side of the world was rooted in a long-running dispute with the Inland Revenue Department over Watson’s exit from New Zealand in 2002. Then he shunted his wealth through a series of related-party Cayman Islands loans in order to — as the High Court ruled in 2019 — avoid tens of millions of dollars in tax. None of this has yet been paid, and interest is accruing.

Proceeding­s in London had canvassed Watson’s tax structurin­g, and he makes no bones about his — perfectly legal — position: “Each deal is structured on the basis of minimising tax.”

And personally, he says, he’s a tax resident of the UK but has taken advantage of that country’s nondomicil­ed status popular with oligarchs.

He describes this status as: “We do not pay tax, as many high net worth New Zealanders would know — [the late] Doug Myers, for example — it’s a jurisdicti­on which enables people to live there and pay tax only on the earnings in their country, not on their worldwide income.”

He foresees no problems from Inland Revenue if he were to return to New Zealand — when the Covid crisis and MIQ spaces permit — except for one small issue. “I don’t have any tax issues at all. Aside from the fact that we, that Cullen, owes Inland Revenue a hundred and something million.”

But despite his pleadings of personal poverty and with Cullen now in liquidatio­n, Watson sees a way for the taxman to get satisfacti­on. He claims his advisers Russell McVeagh were negligent in urging him not to accept an $8m settlement offer from IRD in 2012, and raises the prospect of a civil claim to force the law firm — or its insurers — to cover the tax bill.

“We handed that to the liquidator­s on a plate,” Watson says triumphant­ly.

But KPMG, appointed by Inland Revenue to Watson’s Cullen Group, concluded in a recent report that this proposed claim had “no merit”.

After the interview, Watson emailed a 2019 legal opinion penned by Wynn Williams — who, it must be noted, ran Cullen’s unsuccessf­ul defence in the tax proceeding­s — sketching out the claim. The opinion also said Russell McVeagh had assessed the chance of Cullen losing the case at the time of the settlement offer to be no more than 30 per cent.

The Weekend Herald sent this opinion to two tax law professors, both of whom said there was not enough supporting informatio­n to make a firm assessment of its prospects — but that they did not appear high. Auckland University professor Matthew Littlewood says: “If KPMG have decided it isn’t worth pursuing, they’re probably right.”

KPMG, acting as liquidator­s for the Cullen Group, said in a statement this week that they stood by their assessment of the claim. A clarifying statement from the accountanc­y giant added: “There was insufficie­nt evidence to support Watson’s assertion that the case against the law firm was ‘very strong’.” Russell McVeagh declined repeated requests for comment.

House of Hanover

Another small speed bump to overcome with any return by Watson to New Zealand would be the lingering fallout from the demise of his Hanover Finance, which left thousands of investors hundreds of millions of dollars short after it collapsed at the beginning of the global financial crisis.

He was co-owner of the company alongside managing director Mark Hotchin, who Watson speaks of with some affection. “He’s a brilliant property operator, with a mega, mega portfolio. Well done, Mark. And I mean that genuinely.”

But Watson does claim sympathy for those who didn’t do so well. “I really do feel bad for people that have lost money. It was just, it was just completely avoidable.”

This avoidance was not his responsibi­lity, though. He says his role with Hanover was solely as an investor — not being a director or executive — and the company’s board “loaded with independen­t directors” approved any dividend payments to him prior to the company’s troubles.

He notes he and Hotchin put assets into Hanover — “there was no asset stripping” — and points fingers at the government, whose deposit guarantee scheme came too late to cover his retail investors, and claimed mismanagem­ent by Allied Farmers, which inherited Hanover’s loan book in an investor-approved merger.

Listed companies Watson has been involved with since Hanover have also had mixed results. United States clothing retailer American Apparel was reverse-listed by Watson and a partner in 2009, but later collapsed into bankruptcy.

The company had largely traded on the notoriety of its infamous founder Dov Charney, who Watson says was “more extraordin­ary than Owen Glenn. Or me, perhaps.”

He says the company was performing well when he helped list it. “American Apparel went incredibly well for a while, and then got into difficulti­es. But you know, we were long gone by then.”

The rebranding of his Long Island Ice Tea beverage company into crypto-bandwagone­r Long Island Blockchain did not seem him interviewe­d by the FBI, he says.

In 2019 several promoters of the company pleaded guilty to insider trading charges after the renaming amid the Bitcoin frenzy triggered a stock bubble, and some communicat­ions involving Watson were included in court documents.

“The so-called investment relations guys who were managing multiple companies, including Long Island Ice Tea, they were communicat­ed with and given sensitive informatio­n and they traded the stock,” he says, drawing a clear line between his own conduct and that of others. “I didn’t sell any shares, no one associated with me sold any shares. That would have been crazy to do that.”

His flagship Bendon underwear company also went public in 2018, backed into Naked Brands, and its share price had appeared listless until this week, when Reddit-driven mania for penny stocks resulted in its shares tripling. Watson says he hasn’t given up on making deals, and is off next week chasing leads in Barcelona and Germany.

Lord Justice Nugee highlighte­d Watson’s penchant for constructi­ng deals where he shares in profits, but puts down no money — or substantia­lly less than his partners.

Watson says this is a fair reading of the way he operates, but it understate­d what he brought to the table. “That’s a great business model for your ROI [return on investment]. But you’re also putting in your network, your putting in your contacts, you’re putting in your creativity and constructi­ng the deal.”

Selling his life story

But back to books, specifical­ly his From Penthouse to Pentonvill­e, which Watson is pitching as a collection of anecdotes about his life and times and those of the people he met behind bars. He says his manuscript is already at 80,000 words, that he is working to get it adapted for the screen, and namechecks Netflix, Amazon Prime and the BBC as possible homes for his dream.

“I’ve had guys spend literally hours with me telling them how they murdered people, how they held up banks,” he says of the material he has recently been able to generate.

“One guy in there got out after 500 armed robberies 20-odd years ago, got straighten­ed out, and then robbed 28 bookies in the next 30 days,” he says of another inmate.

“The work ethic was super, and his gross margins were extraordin­ary.”

He hints at revealing more about his time dating Nicole Kidman, and is also planning to finally tell his side of the story about that 2002 fight with Russell Crowe in the bathrooms of a Japanese restaurant in London.

He now reflects on, and embraces, his prison time in a near-parody of Zen. “Everything that happens, happens in life for a reason. So the rich result I got was the experience of something that I would never otherwise have had. It’s actually been quite meaningful to me.”

A Covid lockdown-enforced bout of solitary confinemen­t at the start of his sentence was difficult, he says, but the waves of isolation parted. “I started to meet a few people and got a bit of help and started to get a bit more access around the place and it became a really, really interestin­g journey of discovery.”

It’s at this point he catches himself: “But then I don’t want to get too carried away with all that shit.” He’s got stories to tell, and a life to sell.

“It’s been super interestin­g. And life should be interestin­g. Of course I’ve got micro regrets, but I haven’t got any macro regrets.”

Asked about his hopes for critical and commercial success, Watson shrugs.

“I don’t really care what the story is. I just want to sell books, and get some money out of it.”

 ?? Photo / File ?? It was only when Eric Watson was handcuffed in the dock that he saw jail coming.
Photo / File It was only when Eric Watson was handcuffed in the dock that he saw jail coming.
 ?? Photo / Greg Bowker ?? Eric Watson says he was so optimistic about not going to jail, that he didn’t even pack a toothbrush.
Photo / Greg Bowker Eric Watson says he was so optimistic about not going to jail, that he didn’t even pack a toothbrush.

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