Naomi Campbell banned from being charity trustee spending £7,800 in funds on five-star hotel
British supermodel, Naomi Campbell has been disqualified as a trustee after an investigation into her Fashion For Relief charity uncovered ‘serious mismanagement’.
According to Mail Online, official accounts showed that it spent more than £1.6million on a glittering gala in Cannes, but gave just £5,000 to good causes over a 15-month period.
Back in April, the Charity Commission confirmed that it had removed the supermodel’s charity from the UK charity register while it continued its investigation into allegations of misconduct.
Today, the Commission published the report of its statutory inquiry into Fashion For Relief, concluding the charity was poorly governed and had inadequate financial management.
Campbell, 54, was disqualified from being a trustee for five years, former colleagues Bianka Hellmich for nine and Veronica Chou for four.The model founded the charity in 2005, saying she had been inspired by her friend Nelson Mandela telling her to ‘use [her] voice’ for good.
The organisation claimed to have raised more than £11million, mostly through glitzy fundraising events held all over the world, including in New York, Mumbai and Moscow
In 2021, concerns were raised about how much money was being passed on to people in need after the Mayor’s Fund for London lodged an official complaint, saying that it was owed £50,000 by the charity.
The Mayor’s Fund, which helps young Londoners from low-income backgrounds, filed a ‘serious incident’ report with the Charity Commission, which announced a statutory inquiry in November that year.
The commission said today that as a result of its investigation, more than £344,000 had been recovered and used to make donations to two other charities and settle Fashion For Relief’s outstanding liabilities.
The inquiry found that between April 2016 and July 2022, just 8.5 per cent of the charity’s overall spending was on charitable grants.
It also said it found some fundraising expenditure to be misconduct or mismanagement by the charity’s trustees.
This included a €14,800 (£12,300) flight from London to Nice in 2018 for transferring art and jewellery.
It also looked into the decision to spend €9,400 (£7,800) of charity funds on a three-night stay at a five-star hotel in Cannes, France, for Campbell.
In these cases, the trustees ‘failed to show how these were cost-effective and an appropriate use of the charity’s resources’, the Charity Commission said.
The inquiry saw no evidence trustees had reviewed the charity’s operating model to ensure fundraising methods were in the organisation’s best interest and that costs were reasonable relative to cash brought in.
It also found some of the charity’s fundraising expenditure was not reasonable.
The charity had held fundraising events for the Save the Children Fund and the Mayor’s Fund for London.
The inquiry found that the trustees of Fashion for Relief ‘failed to manage these partnership arrangements’.
The commission also said unauthorised payments totalling £290,000 for consultancy services had been made to trustee Ms Hellmich, which was in breach of the charity’s constitution.
And the charity’s funds were held and applied on its behalf by external professional advisors rather than in a dedicated bank account in Fashion For Relief’s name.
Tim Hopkins, the Charity Commission’s deputy director for specialist investigations and standards, said: ‘Trustees are legally required to make decisions that are in their charity’s best interests and to comply with their legal duties and responsibilities.
‘Our inquiry has found that the trustees of this charity failed to do so, which has resulted in our action to disqualify them.
‘This inquiry, and the work of the interim managers we appointed to run the charity in place of the trustees, has resulted in the recovery of £344,000 and protection of a further £98,000 charitable funds.
‘I am pleased that the inquiry has seen donations made to other charities which this charity has previously supported.’
The trustees were Ms Campbell, her key aide Ms Chou who is the heiress to a £2 billion textile fortune, and socialite and lawyer Ms Hellmich.
Ms Chou quit the charity days after the Commission launched its probe in 2021.