Charity Drops COVID-19 Fundraiser Captain Sir Tom Moore’s Name

The change comes just over two months after a damning watchdog report found ‘repeated’ misconduct and mismanagement by his daughter and son-in-law.
Charity Drops COVID-19 Fundraiser Captain Sir Tom Moore’s Name
Captain Sir Tom Moore pictured walking laps at his home in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire, on April 16, 2020. Joe Giddens/PA
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Renowned charity fundraiser Captain Sir Tom Moore’s name has been dropped from the foundation set up in his honour.

The Captain Tom Foundation is now known as the 1189808 Foundation, reflecting the organisation’s charity number.

The update this week comes just over two months after the charities watchdog found there had been “repeated” misconduct and mismanagement on the part of Moore’s daughter and her husband in their running of the foundation.

The Charity Commission’s report found a “repeated pattern of behaviour” which saw Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin make private gains and which the regulator said will have left the public feeling “misled.”

The report found that a £1.4 million book deal and an £18,000 awards ceremony appearance fee were among the financial benefits the Ingram-Moores enjoyed through their family links to the Captain Tom Foundation.

At the time of the commission’s report in November, a spokesperson for the foundation said it was “imploring the Ingram-Moores to rectify matters by returning the funds due” to the charity.

The Ingram-Moores argued it was a “breach of privacy” for the book deal to have been disclosed by the Charity Commission and said “significant fees” had been paid to the literary agent, legal, and PR professionals, as well as some money having “supported” the foundation.

The Ingram-Moores had already been banned last year from being charity trustees, with Hannah Ingram-Moore prohibited from being a trustee or holding a senior management role in any charity in England and Wales for 10 years, and Colin Ingram-Moore for eight years.

He resigned as director of the foundation in June last year, while Hannah Ingram-Moore quit in 2021.

Last week Club Nook, a company of which the Ingram-Moores are directors, filed company accounts showing the value of its assets had plunged to just £149 in the year to April 2024, down from £336,300 in the previous 12 months.

A lawyer for the Ingram-Moores indicated back in 2023 that the Captain Tom Foundation might shut down, and the charity stopped taking donations that summer.

The millions raised by the late Moore and donated to NHS Charities Together before the foundation was formed were not part of the commission’s inquiry.