Naomi Campbell has been disqualified from being a trustee after the Charity Commission found serious mismanagement of finances at charity Fashion for Relief. The supermodel, 54, was one of the charity’s three trustees who have been disqualified following a regulator’s probe. The disqualification will be effective for five years.
During the inquiry, the charity Commission discovered that between April 2016 and July 2022, 8.5% of the charity’s overall expenditure was on charitable grants. There was also evidence discovered that showed unreasonable fundraising expenditure.
Among the findings was 9,400 euros (£7,800) being spent on a three-night stay at a five-star hotel in Cannes, France, for Campbell. In addition, the regulator found that charity money had been held on its behalf by solicitors and accountants instead of being run through a dedicated bank account in the charity’s name. According to the regulator, it recovered over £344,000 and protected a further £98,000 of charitable funds.
Fashion for Relief has been removed from the register of charities and was initially set up as a way to provide poverty relief and advance health and education. It was supposed to do so by making grants to charities or other organisations and by providing resources directly to those affected. Lawyer Bianka Hellmich and businesswoman Veronica Chou were also disqualified from being trustee, for nine years and four years respectively.
After the findings were released, Charity Commiss.