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Paul Baxendale-Walker

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(Redirected fromPaul BW Chaplin)
British lawyer, publisher and TV host
This article is about British media personality, author and former lawyer. For the American writer & comedian, seePaul Chaplin.

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Paul Baxendale-Walker
Paul Baxendale-Walker
Alma materHertford College, Oxford
Career
ShowRed Zone
StationEMTV
CountryUnited Kingdom
WebsiteOfficial website

Paul Baxendale-Walker, also known under the stage namePaul Chaplin,[1] is a British businessman who worked as asolicitor until being struck off in 2007.[2][3] He has since worked as a talk show host and pornographic film producer, director, and actor. He is, together with Andrew ThornhillQC, the author ofThe Law and Taxation of Remuneration Trusts[4] (Key Haven, 1997) and also thePurpose Trusts[5] (1999, 2009 [2nd ed.]).

Early life and education

Paul Baxendale-Walker was born of Anglo-Brazilian parents, but he was orphaned and grew up in Children's Homes. He read for a degree in law atHertford College, Oxford and subsequently qualified as abarrister and solicitor.

Career

Walker worked intaxation law at the Bar inLincoln's Inn and then in various City law firms andArthur Andersen, before establishing his "Baxendale Walker" practice inMayfair in 1994.

In 1994, Baxendale-Walker advised thetrustees on the taking of loans from a pension fund established for the benefit of employees. Unknown to him, the borrowers werefraudsters, and £2,135,000 went missing. In subsequentcivil proceedings, Mr. Justice Etherton dismissed the claim that Baxendale-Walker had givendishonest assistance in a breach of trust but held him liable for knowing receipt of the fees which he had received, saying that completing the transaction was "a gross error of professional judgment".[6][7] In the course of the civil trial, it came to light that he had given a reference for a non-existent persona of the fraudsters, a move that the judge said showed "breathtaking lack of professional judgement". As a consequence, in 2005, the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal suspended him as a solicitor for three years. The Court of Appeal upheld the decision in 2007.[8][9]

Baxendale-Walker was struck off the roll of solicitors by the Solicitors' Disciplinary Tribunal on 11 January 2007, on the grounds that he had aconflict of interest in advising his clients on his own tax schemes.[10] He subsequently claimed that theLaw Society and others had conspired to put him out of business. On 18 April 2011, his claim was struck out by the High Court on the basis that it had no real prospect of success, and on the grounds that the defendants were immune from civil suit and/or protected by privilege, regardless of whether they had committed any wrong.[11] He sued the Law Society in California Federal Court for millions of dollars, arising out of what he claims to have been unlawful interference by the Law Society in his US legal business, but the case was dismissed with prejudice, an action that was upheld on appeal in 2015.[12] Linked proceedings were issued in the Virginia Eastern District Court in February 2016, relating to the evidence relied on in the California case.[13]

He was the author of theEmployee Benefit Trust (EBT) tax strategy implemented byRangers football club which was, in April 2011, challenged by HMRC in a first tier tax tribunal.[14] In November 2012, on a split decision, the Tribunal upheld the legality and tax effectiveness of the EBT strategy.[15] HMRC appealed twice, first to the Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Division) which upheld the finding,[16] and then to the Scottish Court of Session which sided with HMRC, declaring that it was "obvious" that "payments to the various trusts and the application of the monies so paid amounted to a mere redirection of earnings which did not remove the liability of employees to income tax".[17] Rangers entered administration on 14 February 2012, and went into liquidation on 31 October 2012. The liquidators of Rangers have been[needs update] granted leave to appeal the decision of the Court of Session to the UK Supreme Court. Lord Carloway, one of the Court of Sessions judges who ruled on the case, said: "The Court is of the view that there is an arguable point in law of public interest which should allow the appeal to the UK Supreme Court to proceed."[18]

The High Court proceedings against the Law Society led to allegations of fraud and forgery against Baxendale-Walker. On Friday 15 April 2016 Baxendale-Walker pleaded guilty to one count of forgery. Five other counts of fraud willremain on file. He was fined £15,015 and ordered to pay £210,000 prosecution costs. Judge Moss said “Your intention in writing the letter was to lead the recipient to tell you things he would otherwise not have done. You determined by trick and underhand means to pursue an individual who was correctly employed by the SRA (Solicitors Regulatory Authority). Such people are entitled to be protected from the harassment you subjected them to.” The prosecution accepted that Mr Baxendale-Walker's motive in sending the letter was to obtain information about legal proceedings concerning him, and that there was no financial gain intended.

In 2023, HMRC's attempt to impose a £14 million penalty on Paul Baxendale-Walker collapsed after a tribunal ruled that the tax authority had made procedural errors, including missing a statutory deadline.[19] The case related to information notices served in 2022 as part of HMRCs long-standing efforts to hold Baxendale-Walker accountable for promoting tax avoidance schemes that the agency claims cost the UK over £1 billion in revenue.[20] Baxendale-Walker denied the allegations, calling the penalty a fiction.[21]

Media

He was the host of the TV discussion show Red Zone, which features political and media celebrities discussing randomly chosen subjects from "Devil Cards", without the usual time constraints of topical discussion shows. Red Zone debuted onEMTV (Sky channel 200) on 4 March 2009. His guests have includedBoy George,Neil and Christine Hamilton,Richard Digance,Robin Bextor,Vicki Michelle,Carole Malone,Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace,Garry Bushell,Lawrie McMenemy,Derek Laud,Ray Santilli, and others.

From 2005 to 2012, he owned the adult film company Bluebird Productions, and he has produced, directed and acted in a number ofadult films.[22] He sold Bluebird in 2012, making an estimated US$20 million.

On 26 November 2012,Loaded TV launched with an 8-hour programming schedule onControversial TV. Loaded TV provides general entertainment programmes, aimed at both young male and female audiences and a wider audience.

Publishing

In May 2012, he purchasedLoaded andSuperBike magazines,[1] and, in September 2012, he purchased thePaul Raymond Publications stable of magazines, includingMayfair,Men Only andClub International. Walker purchasedLoaded on behalf of Blue Media Publishing Group,[1] however Blue Publishing enteredadministration a year later.[23]

Baxendale-Walker writes a monthly Agony column for Loaded magazine. He also writes a monthly editorial and shoots a special photoset forMayfair magazine. He also ran a short lived, weekly spin-off magazine fromLoaded calledZip Magazine.

Published books

References

  1. ^abc"Loaded magazine snapped up by multimillionaire 'porn star'".Guardian.co.uk. 29 April 2012. Retrieved29 July 2013.
  2. ^"Rangers tax avoidance expert faces bankruptcy".The Herald. 18 April 2018. Retrieved17 February 2024.
  3. ^"Struck-off solicitor sentenced for impersonating HMRC officer".www.solicitorsjournal.com. 20 April 2016. Retrieved17 February 2024.
  4. ^Thornhill, Andrew Robert; Baxendale-Walker, Paul (30 October 1997).The Law and Taxation of Remuneration Trusts: Andrew Thornhill, Paul Baxendale-Walker: 9781870070935: Amazon.com: Books. Key Haven.ISBN 1870070933.
  5. ^Baxendale-Walker, Paul (1 September 2009).Purpose Trusts: Second Edition: Paul Baxendale-Walker: 9781845924843: Amazon.com: Books. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.ISBN 978-1845924843.
  6. ^"Dispersal of Funds".www.sfo.gov.uk. Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2011.
  7. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on 4 December 2010. Retrieved7 March 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^"Baxendale-Walker v The Law Society [2007] EWCA Civ 233 (15 March 2007)". Bailii.org. Retrieved24 July 2013.
  9. ^"Burton News | Burton on Trent News Headlines | Latest Burton Upon Trent Sports, Jobs & Business News". Burtonmail.co.uk. Retrieved24 July 2013.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^[1][dead link]
  11. ^"Baxendale- Walker v Middleton & Ors [2011] EWHC 998 (QB) (18 April 2011)". Bailii.org. Retrieved24 July 2013.
  12. ^"D.C. No. 2:12-cv-03861-JGB-MAN"(PDF). uscourts.gov. Retrieved19 March 2016.
  13. ^"Justia - Mireskandari et al v. Lees et al".
  14. ^"The unravelling of Rangers – Sport – The Scotsman". Scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com. 16 April 2011. Archived fromthe original on 23 April 2011. Retrieved24 July 2013.
  15. ^"BBC News – Former Rangers Football Club wins Big Tax Case appeal". Bbc.co.uk. 20 November 2012. Retrieved24 July 2013.
  16. ^"[2014] UKUT 0292(TCC)"(PDF). judiciary.gov.uk.
  17. ^"[2015] CSIH 77". scotcourts.gov.uk. Archived fromthe original on 18 March 2016. Retrieved19 March 2016.
  18. ^"BBC - BDO allowed to appeal Rangers tax case to Supreme Court".BBC News. 8 March 2016.
  19. ^"'Screwing it up': HMRC's £14m error lets tax avoidance specialist off…".TBIJ. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  20. ^"HMRC errors let a notorious tax avoider escape a £14m penalty".Tax Policy Associates. 19 June 2024. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  21. ^"'Screwing it up': HMRC's £14m error lets tax avoidance specialist off…".TBIJ. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  22. ^Gazette, Press."Loaded mag sold to adult film company".Press Gazette.
  23. ^Turvill, William (18 June 2013)."Loaded magazine publisher goes into administration".Press Gazette. Retrieved9 August 2013.

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