Lawfluencer declared bankrupt

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By Legal Cheek on

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Alice Stephenson criticises liquidators after £666k director’s loan leads to bankruptcy


A legal influencer has revealed that she has been declared bankrupt due to a “mountain of personal debt,” just a day after announcing the sale of her now-liquidated law firm to another legal business.

Alice Stephenson’s firm, Stephenson Law, went into liquidation in November 2023 with debts at the time exceeding £1.5 million — more than half of which was owed to HMRC in unpaid tax — before transferring its assets to a new outfit, Plume.

At the time, Stephenson told her sizeable LinkedIn following (now nearly 68,000 strong) that HMRC had decided to “call the whole debt in,” forcing the firm into liquidation. While she emphasised that no staff, clients, or client funds were affected, there remained the rather significant issue of a director’s loan of over £666,000 made out to “A Stephenson,” the value of which was marked as “uncertain” in a liquidation document.

Fast forward to last week on LinkedIn and Stephenson shared the good news that Plume had been acquired by the “global law company” Elevate, reassuring Plume’s clients that it would be “business as usual” with the “same friendly faces”.

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However, in a follow-up post just 24 hours later — and in a noticeably less positive tone — Stephenson addressed the sizeable directors loan, revealing that it had ultimately led to her being declared bankrupt.

She explains how she “fucked up” and found herself facing a “mountain of personal debt” in the form of the director’s loan that she had “no realistic way of repaying in full”. She adds that this was “because the money had long since gone on living costs”.

“I didn’t have a house to sell or savings to fall back on,” she continues. “Everything I owned fit into a few boxes. So, I did what I could: I started paying what I could, stayed transparent, responsive, and hopeful that I would be treated fairly.”

Stephenson goes on to attack the liquidators of her law firm, Forvis Mazars, accusing them of “bullying”, “misleading” and “weaponising their authority against someone who was cooperating in good faith”.

“Even then,” she continues, “I still didn’t believe they’d actually make me bankrupt,” noting that she had no assets from which the money could be recovered and knew that “bankruptcy would devastate my career as a solicitor and destroy my ability to keep Plume going.”

“It wasn’t a rational decision,” she continues. “It felt punitive. Cruel for the sake of being cruel.”

Rounding off her lengthy post, Stephenson — now sales director at Elevate — reflects that while the experience “has broken me open,” it “hasn’t broken me down.”

“I’m still here,” she continues. “And I refuse to feel like a fraud. Because integrity isn’t something others grant you — it’s something you choose to keep, no matter the cost.”

Forvis Mazars was approached for comment.

8 Comments

Zzz

Sounds like they just did their job as Liquidators of the Company.

It is hard being a Flamingo

One has to question all the people liking her LinkedIn post and posting positive comments. Would really question their judgment.

It is still never her fault

Unfortunately I was quite surprised to discover a few people posting that I know professionally. Very concerning.

Brava

Contrary to what Stephenson is claiming, it is _not_ a purely vindictive exercise to declare someone bankrupt – it is an essential step that helps a creditor obtain proceeds from sale of the borrower’s assets, prevent further dissipation of assets, obtain an income protection order etc. All very clearly summarised all over the internet, e.g. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/guide-to-bankruptcy/guide-to-bankruptcy#payments-from-your-income

So Forvis Mazars are probably even obliged as part of their duties to the company, to declare its debtors insolvent and to seek to obtain as much repayment as possible.

Nigel

I despair, how can you run up so much tax debt without noticing. HMRC are not a mindless state stazi. They collect tax for us plebs. Your life is in ruins and yet you have another job.

Anonymous

Perhaps the SRA should be looking into Alice and her potential breaches here? Oh no because that would require actual work, instead of the low-hanging fruit the SRA get worked up about.

Questions questions

Even without loss to creditors, how is it ok for a director to take £666k as loans, spend it on “living expenses” and have absolutely no plan or means to repay it? Is HMRC cool with this definitely being not taxable income and with the company not being liable for employer contributions in respect of it? More importantly, how did she satisfy herself that making these payments to herself was in the best interest of the company?

Add to this the loss to creditors – over £800k due to HMRC and £500k due to ordinary unsecured creditors – and this looks really, really bad.

Then to say that the liquidators are “bullying” her by making her bankrupt because she is *checks notes* on her own admission unable to pay her debts…. Sorry but it is massively inappropriate for a regulated individual to make a personal attack on fellow professionals in this way.

The silver lining is that being bankrupt, she is no longer able to practice as a solicitor (while bankrupt). So hopefully the public will be somewhat protected.

Anon

She messed up and has been punished. It’s a sad story. Now time to move on. She deserves the right to start again.

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