Paul Bloomfield

Paul Bloomfield (February 1946 – April 2016) was a British property investor known as "Boom-boom" Bloomfield.

Paul Bloomfield

Career

Bloomfield was involved with a string of high-profile deals during the 1980s and was known as the man that sourced the deals that made Tony Clegg's Mountleigh a stock market favourite in 1986-87.

In 1989, it emerged that he was the joint owner of the Alton Towers theme park and a leisure venture at Battersea Power Station after he formed a joint venture, Alton International, with John Broome of Alton Group. Broome was struggling to complete the Battersea project.[1]

He became bankrupt during the 1990s property crash. He later moved to Russia where he made successful deals in the former Soviet states. He helped to raise the finance for the redevelopment of Wembley Stadium.[2][3][4][5]

gollark: I have a rough idea.
gollark: Which is ironic given that it was originally designed to not do much.
gollark: The federal government does a lot, so I think there's decent consistency in *laws*.
gollark: I already said that. You are reusing my jokes. CEASE.
gollark: No, it's obviously Rankine.

See also

References

  1. "Bloomfield Emerges as Co-owner of Alton Group", Paul Cheeseright, The Financial Times, 31 May 1989, p. 13.
  2. Bilton, Richard. "HMRC failed to prosecute tycoon over tax evasion". BBC News. Retrieved 2016-06-26.
  3. Powell, Tom (2015-02-16). "British multi-millionaire property investor who avoided tax for 24 years could be in Spain | Olive Press News Spain". Theolivepress.es. Retrieved 2016-06-26.
  4. "Cloth that was cut too close | Business". The Guardian. 2000-02-12. Retrieved 2016-06-26.
  5. Alexi Mostrous (2016-06-11). "Prince and oligarch's mansion deal | News | The Times & The Sunday Times". Thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-06-26.


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