Thomas Kingston’s business ‘was chasing nearly £50 million in bad debt’

Last year, Thomas Kingston died by suicide. Kingston was married to Lady Gabriella Windsor, the daughter of Prince Michael of Kent and his wife Princess Michael. Kingston’s death came in the middle of a particularly chaotic time for the monarchy and there was a sense that many people within the Windsor clan were left reeling. Gabriella, now a widow, quietly left the home she had shared with Thomas and she moved back into her parents’ palace apartment. Gabriella spoke at the inquest, as did Thomas’s father. The inquest heard from many people that Thomas going off his medications “provoked” his suicide (that was the word used in the inquest). But now, more than a year later, something else has come out: Kingston possibly had business trouble?

His death – intolerably sudden, as it was – left friends stunned and shocked, and his wife, Lady Gabriella Windsor, heartbroken. But now, 14 months later, more light can be shed on the scale and scope of Thomas Kingston’s business ambitions and perhaps also on some of the pressures that the 45-year-old former hostage negotiator was contending with.

After serving in the Foreign Office – notably in Baghdad, during the worst years of the Iraq War when he inspired a colleague to describe him as ‘one of the most remarkable people I have ever worked with’ – Kingston plunged into the financial world. By 2017 – two years before his marriage to Prince and Princess Michael of Kent’s daughter Ella, 44, in the presence of Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip – he became a director of Devonport Capital, which specialises in providing finance for companies involved in post-war reconstruction.

The company, of which Kingston was joint owner, has now been put into administration. A preliminary statement shows that Devonport Capital owes creditors a staggering £29.5million. Kingston and his fellow director and joint owner, Paul Bailey, had secured the backing of New Zealand-born billionaire Christopher Chandler, who helped finance the television channel GB News. Such was Chandler’s faith in the duo that he’d invested millions in Devonport – and is currently owed nearly £13million by the company.

His Majesty’s Revenue & Customs is owed £788,000, though that’s dwarfed by the £1.67million which Devonport owed to another of Kingston’s companies, Aberdair Ltd. Tom’s father, the eminent barrister Martin Kingston, is personally owed £162,000.

All of this might suggest that Kingston had been overwhelmed by a sea of debt. But that would appear to be inaccurate: Devonport was, and is, in a position to return all money to investors and creditors – and still have a £2.5million surplus.

‘In February 2024, the decision was taken to wind down the business of Devonport Capital,’ a spokesman tells me. ‘Having made significant progress realising and securing funds, it became clear earlier this year that the best way to ensure fair and proper allocation of outstanding recoveries was to place the business into administration.’’

[From The Daily Mail]

This story was published by the Mail about a week ago, and I’ve been trying to figure out if the business is being put in administration (the British version of bankruptcy) so that Devonport’s holdings can be liquidated and the creditors can mostly be paid. But then the Telegraph just added another wrinkle – it seems like there were significant money and debt problems at Devonport after all:

Thomas Kingston’s company was chasing nearly £50 million in bad debt when he took his own life, documents show. Documents have revealed the financial difficulties that faced his company, Devonport Capital, the time of his suicide.

An administrators’ report showed that the company was placed into administration earlier this year after some creditors had been considering legal action to recover their debts. Two major borrowers were defaulting on combined debts equating to £48 million.

Kingston became a director of the company in 2017, which specialises in providing finance for companies involved in “high-risk, post-conflict jurisdictions” with post-war reconstruction. Michael Goldstein and Avner Radomsky, administrators from RG Insolvency, said: “Whilst the company was undoubtedly successful, the environment in which it operated meant that inevitably there were bad debts suffered along the way. Over time the interest compounding on amounts outstanding to lenders when the company’s borrowers failed to repay became increasingly challenging to manage. There are two significant loans in default, a total of approximately $60 million, including default penalties and accrued interest which have very significantly impacted the company’s performance.”

The report added that it is “uncertain as to the recoverability” of the £49 million in loans they are seeking to recover. As a result, they are estimating repayments between 20 and 60 per cent, which equates to between £9.8 million and £29.4 million.

[From The Telegraph]

There’s a reason I didn’t go into accounting and tax law, my God. I will just take it on faith that while Devonport was “successful” in some ways, they were also taking on more “bad debt” than they could handle, and the interest was going through the roof. There’s a huge discrepancy between the Mail saying “owes creditors a staggering £29.5million” versus the Telegraph saying “chasing nearly £50 million in bad debt.” Yiiikes. I wonder if Kingston and Lady Gabriella kept their finances completely separate too.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.

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21 Responses to “Thomas Kingston’s business ‘was chasing nearly £50 million in bad debt’”

  1. Canterbury says:

    Whatever happened, the crazy speculation that willy was involved was not just absurd but offensive to the family. Willy can’t even tie his own shoelaces – he’s got servants and protection w4/7. Plus he’s got no balls, he’s a pathetic wimp

    • Libra says:

      I wonder if Thomas went to cousin William for some financial assistance and was rebuffed. Could have been the last straw..

    • sevenblue says:

      Will’s involvement got questioned, because the competent KP made a public statement that Will’s non-attendance in a funeral wasn’t because of Thomas’s death, which of course made people think the opposite. It was one of the most bizarre actions of KP during #kategate.

      • TigerMcQueen says:

        This. The speculation did was not crazy because it didn’t happen in a vacuum. There was an abundance of weird things going on at KP at that time, including the statement that linked Thomas’s death to Will. I know the statement was along the lines of the death had nothing to do with Will’s schedule, but they’re the one’s who put that connection out there! So of course people speculated.

      • Canterbury says:

        I understand but he’s not going to literally murder someone himself. That’s crazy. The rf get others to do their bidding. The speculation was willy was involved in murdering him.

      • sevenblue says:

        @Canterbury, there are certainly some conspiracy people believing it. But, at the time, people were just mocking how awful KP’s PR is. They literally released an official statement that Will isn’t busy because of Thomas’s death. That is a weird statement to make. I imagine, the media asked those questions, but KP doesn’t answer questions on the record most of the time. I think someone tweeted at the time that they don’t believe Will did anything to Kate, but Will is definitely acting like a husband who did something to his wife. It was the same sentiment in this situation too.

    • Nanea says:

      When William showed up in public a few days after all this went down — missing the funeral of his godfather while TK died by suicide — he had visible bruises in his face, IIRC.

      So one thing led to another, throw the inevitable school run into the mix — and you’ve got people speculating.

      It was, mildly put, a very strange series of events.

  2. MSJ says:

    So he was financing companies profiting from the wars; like Halliburton in Iraq. OMG 😳 ☠️

    I wonder which countries. 🤨

    • MaisiesMom says:

      That’s what popped out to me too. “Involved in post-war reconstruction?” That’s Halliburton stuff.

      It said he was a hostage negotiator in Iraq so I wouldn’t be too surprised if it at least some of it was there.

    • TQ says:

      Since he worked for the UK Foreign Office in Iraq, I imagine Iraq would have been one of the countries where he had connections for such a business.

      Sounds like the business was in terrible shape with all that debt.

  3. Lucy says:

    Well, that does explain what happened quite a bit more than blaming medication. I’m sure that there can be medication causes mixed in with what happened, but that’s a pretty significant amount of business problems. For someone with a public profile, trauma, and high expectations, that’s a very toxic mix.

    IT still doesn’t explain why William backed out of attending a funeral.

    • Tn Democrat says:

      Medication changes absolutely can cause suicidal ideation/behavior/attempts, especially when med changes are not done carefully and the person isn’t monitored properly. Unbelievable things can happen in an instant to people with no history of self harm. Loads of odd things were going on with KP at this time. A horrid situation for his family was made worse and more public by Willy’s ineptide.

  4. MaisiesMom says:

    Business and financial problems on that scale, for someone who has high expectations for success (from others and himself), unfortunately often lead to suicide or attempted suicide. I lived in Houston during the Enron scandal and there was at least one man who shot himself over it, as I recall. It’s a very sad situation. I feel for his family.

  5. Advisor2U says:

    During the court inquest into the death of Thomas Kingston a few months ago, the Royal Family’s pharmacist who innitially prescribed Thomas’s anti-depressants, was not ordered to court. She made no statements to explain why she prescribed the medications, or how things could have went wrong. All statements were made by the coroner, and Gabriella and thomas’ father.

    But what I am more curious about is whether Gabriella and her father-in-law were aware of Thomas’s enormous business problems and financial debts, and knowingly withheld this information from the judge. Because this information is nowhere to be found in the court documents. This (near) bankcrupty info and his financial struggles at the time, could have put the suicide investigation, and the court inquest to explain his suicide, in a completely different light, rather than the focus on the unlogical explanations given regarding his ‘anti-depressant medication’ (which were rather assumptions, I may say).

    • MaisiesMom says:

      I don’t know if he was on SSRIs, but they can make people with suicidal ideation more likely to go through with it. It’s one of the main warnings associated with that class of medication, and any doctor prescribing them would have considered that (or I should hope so). It’s possible that he did not seem to be at risk for suicide but it’s impossible to predict that for certain even for the most conscientious doctor.

  6. Blogger says:

    Where did the money go? Was the bad debt due to high interest to loan sharks? That’s a lot of money needing to be accounted for.

  7. Tis True Tis True says:

    A reminder that suicide is usually a very bad moment on a very bad day during a period where it feels like all you’re having are very bad days. The time from decision to action is usually less than 15 minutes.

    That said, coming from a background like the foreign office can give you the knowledge to run a successful finance business, but not the street sense needed to deal with that level of risk.

  8. Alteya says:

    I remember reading she’d moved back in with her parents before this, and their apartment/ townhouse was on the market or sold. That’s why he was at his parents house in the country.

  9. Arhus says:

    High risk… says it all. Can make you really rich or lose it all.
    Man lots of ‘rich’ people with high levels of debt. Makes you realize how much of it is smoke and mirrors. And how much of a mental strain it can take on you. I’ll stay poor and happy thanks.

  10. martha says:

    Poor dear soul.

    He seems to have been a remarkable person who flourished in very stressful situations for the foreign office, but was absolutely incapable of handling the stress of business and finance. I imagine his heart wasn’t really in it.

    Rest in Peace.

  11. sevenblue says:

    It is weird that they won’t leave this man to rest in peace, just because Will used his death to take attention from his non-attendance to a royal funeral. I hope, the media stops speculating about why’s. A lot of aristo people have debts, they have little cash. It is their connections making it possible for them to fail upwards. I don’t see anything about his business that different from other royal adjacent people. Kate’s brother failed how many businesses?

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