Captain Tom’s daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband are disqualified from being charity trustees after spa row

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CAPTAIN Sir Tom Moore’s daughter and her husband have been disqualified from being charity trustees.

A family statement confirmed the Charity Commission has barred Hannah Ingram-Moore and partner Colin after a row over an illegal spa built with money raised by the NHS Covid hero.

Getty Images – GettyHannah Ingram-Moore, daughter of Captain Sir Tom Moore and husband Colin[/caption]

AlamyWar veteran Captain Tom Moore at his home in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire, after he achieved his goal of 100 laps of his garden[/caption]

PAWork to demolish the unauthorised spa pool block at the home of Mrs Ingram-Moore took place in February[/caption]

Hannah, 52, engineered her father’s publicity during the coronavirus pandemic when Sir Tom, then 99, began a walking challenge.

He had been challenged by his grandson to walk 100 laps of his garden before he turned 100 years old.

Sir Tom suddenly turned into a nationwide icon, with Hannah approaching a PR consultant to maximise publicity.

Towels, t-shirts, gin, dolls, books, a movie, and even a miniskirt emblazoned with Sir Tom’s face on it were all produced.

Hannah then set up Club Nook Ltd to protect all the intellectual property that had been made from the Captain Tom phenomenon as well as the Captain Tom Foundation for charity work.

Withe public behind him, Sir Tom raised £38.9million for the NHS and became a pandemic phenomenon.

He was knighted by the late Queen during a unique open-air ceremony at Windsor Castle in the summer of that year.

Sir Tom died from Covid after he was admitted to hospital with troubled breathing soon after a family holiday to Barbados.

But in the years following his death, the family has brought itself negative publicity.

A proposal aimed to make Hannah Chief Executive Officer of the foundation with a pay packet of £150,000.

The eye-watering sum was rejected by the Charity Commission who said Hannah’s appointment was “neither reasonable nor justifiable”.

Hannah also admitted to pocketing money that was earned through the books sold by Sir Tom.

Then came the infamous spa complex – consisting of a spa block, with a pool and changing rooms, at the family’s Bedfordshire home.

It eventually was demolished in February, with Hannah snapped watching on from a gate at the family’s neighbouring residence.

The spa was lifted out of the illegally built add-on and carried away on a lorry.

Its removal ended a chapter in Hannah’s unravelling life after Captain Tom united the nation during the Covid pandemic.

In a statement, the Ingram-Moore family said they “fundamentally disagree” with the Charity Commission’s decision to disqualify them as charity trustees following an investigation.

The Charity Commission opened a case into the Captain Tom Foundation shortly after his death in 2021 and launched an inquiry in June 2022.

It came amid concerns about its management and independence from Sir Tom’s family.

The statement said: “We have been served an order of disqualification as trustees by the Charity Commission, it was stated that if we did not appeal this order, by the 25th June 2024 deadline, we would appear on the register of removed persons.

“The disqualification has been imposed without the conclusion of the statutory inquiry into The Captain Tom Foundation.

“The Commission’s failure to conclude the inquiry prolongs our deep distress and hinders our ability to move on with our lives, extending the pain and impact on our family and our father / grandfathers’ legacy. It has been a harrowing and debilitating ordeal that has gone on for over two years.

“We are increasingly concerned that the Charity Commission’s process may have evolved into a relentless pursuit, and question whether it is a tactic by the Commission to make our lives more difficult, by suspending us in constant fear and mental anguish.

“The orders of disqualification do not state that Hannah Ingram-Moore or Colin Ingram-Moore have misappropriated or received unauthorised payments from the charity’s funds, including public donations. We have never accessed or made any payments from the charity’s bank account.

“Independent Trustees have maintained full control over the charity’s finances since inception.

“We fundamentally disagree with the conclusions reached by the Charity Commission.

“Despite our vehement objections to the Disqualification Order, we have made the extremely difficult decision not to pursue an appeal.

“The profound emotional upheaval and financial burden make such a course of action untenable.

“It is widely recognised that the funds raised in April 2020 were directed entirely to NHS Charities Together. Public donations were managed by JustGiving and transferred directly to NHS Charities Together, without any involvement from our family in the distribution process.

“We have fully co-operated with the Charity Commission at all times.”

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