PPE Medpro declines to say how it would repay
millions if told to do so
Government is seeking to recoup money from Michelle
Mone-linked firm after gowns rejected as unusable
David Conn
Fri 25 Nov
2022 18.23 GMT
The company
awarded large government personal protective equipment (PPE) contracts after an
introduction by the Conservative peer Michelle Mone has declined to say how it
would repay millions of pounds of public money for unused equipment if ordered
to do so following a dispute with the government.
The
Guardian reported this week that leaked documents indicated that Mone and her
children secretly received £29m originating from the profits on these contracts
after her support helped the company, PPE Medpro, secure a place in the “VIP
lane” that the government used during the Covid pandemic to prioritise firms
with political connections.
After
Mone’s approach, PPE Medpro secured government contracts worth £203m to supply
face masks and sterile surgical gowns.
The leaked
documents, which were compiled by HSBC, show PPE Medpro paid at least £65m in
profits to Mone’s husband, the Isle of Man-based financier Douglas Barrowman,
just months after securing the contracts. Barrowman then made a series of
distributions from those profits, including a secret £29m payment to a trust
that benefits Mone and her children, the documents indicate.
However,
the gowns that PPE Medpro supplied under the second contract, for which the
government paid £122m, were rejected by the Department of Health and Social
Care (DHSC) after a technical inspection carried out by officials, and have never
been used in the NHS.
For the
past 10 months, the DHSC has been seeking to recoup money from the company for
the unused gowns through mediation, a dispute resolution process.
On
Thursday, the Guardian asked Anthony Page, a PPE Medpro director, given the
revelation that the company paid Barrowman at least £65m in profits, whether it
had the funds available to repay the government should that be the outcome of
the mediation.
Neither
Page nor his lawyer replied.
Page has
said the gowns did pass inspection and that PPE Medpro is entitled to keep the
money.
On
Thursday, in response to an urgent question in the Commons from Labour’s deputy
leader, Angela Rayner, the junior health minister Neil O’Brien described the
PPE Medpro gowns contract as “underperforming”. O’Brien said court action would
follow if the parties could not reach a satisfactory agreement.
The
minister said the DHSC had “a substantial team” working on recouping money from
companies whose PPE contracts were “underperforming”. The government has come
under sustained pressure to do so after a series of highly critical reports on
its PPE procurement during the coronavirus pandemic. Of £12bn spent, the DHSC
wrote off £9bn on PPE that was either substandard, defective, past its use-by
date or dramatically overpriced.
Earlier
this year, the Guardian revealed that Mone first approached Michael Gove in May
2020 offering to supply PPE through her “team in Hong Kong”. This approach was
made before the company was even incorporated.
Gove, now
back in the cabinet as the minister for levelling up, is under mounting
pressure to explain his role in the subsequent award of the contracts to PPE
Medpro. He said this week that he referred all offers of PPE to “the
appropriate civil service channels”. Emails released to the Guardian following
a Freedom of Information Act request, however, show that after approaching
Gove, Mone then contacted the Cabinet Office minister responsible for
procurement, Theodore Agnew, on his private email.
She told
Agnew: “Michael Gove has asked to urgently contact you [sic]. We have managed
to source PPE masks though [sic] my team in Hong Kong.”
Mone’s
offer was then referred to civil servants operating the “VIP lane”, which gave
high priority to PPE recommendations from MPs, peers and other politically
connected people. Within weeks, the DHSC had awarded the newly formed company
an £80.85m contract for the supply of 210m face masks, followed by the £122m
gowns contract awarded on 25 June 2020.
The leaked
documents reported on by the Guardian this week were compiled by HSBC, whose
officials became concerned about the flows of millions of pounds from the
profits on the PPE deals through various accounts linked to Barrowman and Mone.
In September 2020, Barrowman was paid at least £65m in “profits” from the PPE
deal, the HSBC report states. It says that money was transferred in two
instalments to the Warren Trust, one of Barrowman’s Isle of Man trusts, using
the reference “Distribution”.
From there,
transfers totalling £45.8m were made to Barrowman’s personal HSBC Isle of Man
bank account. That account, in turn, transferred £28.8m in October 2020 to the
Keristal Trust, the beneficiaries of which, bank records indicated, were Mone
and her children, the report states.
The
Keristal Trust’s “settlors” – a reference to the individuals who created or
funded it – were Barrowman and another individual linked to PPE Medpro, the
document indicates. The document adds that the Keristal Trust’s bank account
was opened in May 2020. That was the same month Mone recommended PPE Medpro to Gove
and Agnew.
HSBC was
unable to corroborate any concerns of wrongdoing by the couple, but it did
identify a number of “risks” related to retaining Barrowman and Mone as clients
– including what it saw as potential reputational damage to the bank. Multiple
sources have told the Guardian that HSBC then decided to drop the couple as
clients.
Contacted
about the new disclosures, HSBC said it was unable to comment, even to confirm
if the couple had been clients. A lawyer for Mone said: “There are a number of
reasons why our client cannot comment on these issues and she is under no duty
to do so.”
A lawyer
who represents Barrowman and PPE Medpro said a continuing investigation limited
what his clients were able to say on these matters. He added: “For the time
being we are also instructed to say that there is much inaccuracy in the
portrayal of the alleged ‘facts’ and a number of them are completely wrong.”
The House
of Lords commissioner for standards, who is investigating whether Mone breached
rules governing peers’ conduct by failing to register an interest in PPE Medpro
and lobbying for the company, said this week he was unable to finalise his
report while a criminal investigation was ongoing.
The
National Crime Agency is investigating potential fraud relating to PPE Medpro
and searched the homes of Mone and Barrowman in April. No arrests or charges
have been made. Mone has denied breaking the Lords conduct rules.

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