So many Innocent people, Trusted this Carey, Kilkenny Cat?

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Catriona Carey’s company Careysfort pursued over outstanding debt in UK

This is not the first time the company has been targeted by Companies House

Catriona Carey’s activities were exposed by ‘RTÉ Investigates’
Catriona Carey’s activities were exposed by ‘RTÉ Investigates’

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The UK company at the centre of an alleged €600,000 mortgage scam involving former ­Ireland hockey player Catriona Carey is being pursued for an outstanding debt.

A judgment for €300 (£257) was registered against Careysfort Asset Estates this month by the Civil National Business Centre (CNBC).

The CNBC handles civil claims for monies owed in England and Wales. It is the second judgment filed against Careysfort in the last two years.

In June 2022, a judgment was registered for €580 (£497). The details of the debts have not been disclosed, but both judgments remain outstanding.

A notice for compulsory strike-off for the controversial Careysfort Asset Estates is still pending.

A first Gazette notice, which is a public warning that Companies House in the UK will strike a company off its register, was published on February 27

Carey has the option to object, but the company will be dissolved unless cause is shown to the contrary.

A confirmation statement – a document that limited companies must file each year containing details of its directors and shareholders – is overdue.

This is not the first time the company has been targeted by Companies House. In October 2021, Careysfort was due to be struck off but this was later discontinued.

Four months later, RTÉ Investigates exposed how the Carey company was allegedly involved in a mortgage scam that defrauded people out of hundreds of thousands of euro. Recent accounts filed for Careysfort said it had retained fixed assets worth €76,189 (£65,208), down from €106,338 (£91,000) in 2021.

However, Companies House has put a warning note on the company’s credit score.

Carey is currently being pursued through the courts for other debts. Pepper Finance lodged High Court proceedings over an outstanding mortgage debt last October.

The debt relates to a house she bought in the Rochfort Manor estate in Co Laois.

Her late father, John Carey, gave her security for the mortgage by supporting a charge over 30 acres of land he owned in Demesne, Co Kilkenny.

The Sunday World understands Carey had failed to make any repayments on the mortgage loan account for a number of years and the level of arrears is now in excess of €370,000.

Bank of Ireland is also suing Carey over an outstanding debt.

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