The Corporate Enforcement Authority (CEA) has published its first annual report covering a period from July 2022 to December 2023. Click here for the CEA press statement .The annual report provides a comprehensive account of the steps taken to establish the CEA's presence amongst its stakeholders, and of the work undertaken to establish the organisation's operational capability.
The report includes 17 case studies that illustrate the breadth of the CEA's impact and demonstrate a considered and graduated approach towards the deployment of the CEA’s enforcement powers. Case studies range from use of incorrect registered office address to incorrectly claiming audit and group exemptions and breach of director’s loan provisions.
There is also a case study on supervision of the implementation of the terms of a SCARP rescue plan. On SCARP generally the annual report writes that a process advisor must submit their final report, that is, after developing a rescue plan, to the CEA. Unlike auditors’ indictable offence reports, which by their nature identify potential offences, process advisors’ reports are submitted to the CEA for information on the rescue process and plan. If a report indicates potential wrongdoing or other issues, the CEA can investigate as considered necessary or appropriate. The CEA wrote that it received 51 reports in the period and each report is examined.