standupsitdown wrote: 10 Apr 2017, 17:52
Orient have paid their tax bill now so avoided the Inland Revenue winding up order. There is a another one outstanding but that's for a much smaller amount.
No they haven't; not as far as anyone I know involved with the O's trust ~ LOFT ~ is concerned anyway; do you have a link to that information?
I think you're confusing the issue with the
The Sun reported in March that their owner Francesco Becchetti had 'paid the tax bill to HMRC to earn the club a stay of execution from administration ~ but that there are still huge debts to be paid.'
What actually happened was that In a hearing at the High Court last month, Mr Registrar Briggs gave the club until June 12th to pay off sums of money to creditors. To the best of my knowledge this has not yet happened and incidentally Becchetti has seen his basketball franchise in Italy severely demoted several levels due to the same problems.
At present LOFT are working on a worst case scenario of liquidation and them running a phoenix club as low as the Southern League second tier or even the Essex Senior League and ground sharing at Dagenham & Redbridge.
LOFT learnt only last Thursday that the players and staff at Leyton Orient Football Club have still not been paid.
This is despite a promise made to them the previous Friday, when their wages were originally due. Staff were assured then by the chief operating officer, Vito Miceli, that they would receive their salaries by 6th April......They didn't get them and the O's played their game at Cambridge United on Saturday with a team consisting of only three players over the age of 20 and the rest scholar pros and other academy players.
The club is in utter disarray. The chief executive, Alessandro Angelieri, has not been seen at the ground for months. A number of suppliers have approached the trust since the winding-up hearing on 20th March, and it is now clear that there are well over 50 creditors who between them are owed hundreds of thousands of pounds.
This news once again shows that owner Francesco Becchetti and his team, Alessandro Angelieri and Vito Miceli, are unable to keep their promises. It is astounding that they can treat their staff with such contempt while living in comfort themselves. Becchetti lives in a £22m mansion in Mayfair but can't or won't pay his bills, while Angelieri reportedly lives in luxurious accommodation paid for by the football club; it is not clear whether his rent is still being paid. If it is, the trust quite naturally find this particularly disturbing given the situation with creditors and staff.
Vito Miceli is the messenger for the president and the chief executive, but he is unable to answer the many questions the staff have. His reassurances, like his promises, are not worth anything. All three have failed miserably in their responsibility as employers and their failure to pay their staff and the club's players is a shameful breach of responsibility.
LOFT will be meeting the PFA this week to discuss how they can help move the club out of this crisis. They are doing everything that they can to support the dedicated staff at the football club during this extremely difficult period. They have called on Becchetti, Angelieri and Miceli to sort out this problem and then sell the club to more competent people who understand that employers are legally obliged to pay their staff according to the contracts of employment.