Supported housing impresario sent to jail for contempt

LONDON: A supported housing impresario has been sent to jail for ‘contempt of court’.

He repeatedly refused to honour a succession of court ordered information requests.

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-million dollar judgements from both 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 in his first substantive interview in nearly a decade.

He said his lawyers had told him a term of imprisonment was “highly unlikely”, and it was only when he was handcuffed in the dock he grasped what was coming.

“I didn’t even have a toothbrush!” he said.

Demands from creditors – chiefly Glenn chasing tens of millions of pounds and New Zealand liquidators acting to recover nearly $120m for Inland Revenue – has seen Watson 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 including the Warriors NRL team, in recent years, he said his thinking about this drastic step has changed after his stint in Pentonville. “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 said.

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

A spokesman for Glenn said ongoing actions were “about justice and holding Watson responsible for his actions and, hopefully, preventing others from 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 judgement 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 any 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. 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. 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 as a book and sell the film rights to streaming giants.

He said 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 the bathroom of a Japanese restaurant in London.

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

“I really do feel bad for people that have lost money. It was just, it was just completely avoidable,” he said.

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