The Intelligence Advantage

Welcome to The Intelligence Advantage podcast.

In this episode, host Gary Miller sits down with the multi-talented investigator Nigel Iyer to uncover the fascinating journey that led Nigel from dreams of being a chef and musician to a career unraveling complex frauds, all shaped by family values and unique experiences. Listeners are taken through Nigel’s formative years, his father’s ethical stand against corruption in India, early encounters with fraud in Manchester, and the impact of dyslexia on his investigative powers.

They dive into cultural perspectives on fraud and trust, especially from Nigel’s time working in Scandinavia, and spotlights memorable investigations, including a dramatic case from Sweden that later inspired a Netflix documentary. Nigel shares candid stories about the realities, and risks, of fraud investigation, highlighting the importance of attention to detail and the drive to stay curious, inspired by industry legends like Mike Comer.
 
Timestamps:
00:00:00 Introduction
00:07:32 Upholding Integrity Against Bribery
00:13:01 Dentist Reviewer Turned Dance Teacher
00:15:57 From Rock Band to Accounting
00:23:06 Hitchhiking to Berlin Adventure
00:29:54 Blame Dynamics in Fraud
00:33:12 Job Offer Over Dinner
00:40:33 Corruption's Global Business Impact
00:48:02 Ethical Dilemma Under Pressure
00:52:36 Scandal Rumors Around Swedish Company
00:54:12 Fraud, Swedes, and Suspicion
01:00:28 Still in the Game
 
If you love stories that mix real-life drama, sharp insights, and inspiring journeys, this episode is for you! Don’t forget to subscribe to the Intelligence Advantage podcast for more fascinating discussions with industry leaders and to stay updated on future episodes!
 
Video Production & Editing: PodLab
https://www.podlab.agency/
 
#IntelligenceAdvantage #TheIntelligenceAdvantagePodcast #GaryMiller #IntelligencePodcast #FraudInvestigation #Whistleblowing #CorruptionAwareness #EthicsInBusiness #NordicCulture #Accountancy #DyslexicAdvantage #CreativeCareers #CareerJourney #TrueCrimePodcast #InvestigativeStories #TrustInBusiness #ScandinavianLife #PodcastInterview #NigelIyer

What is The Intelligence Advantage ?

An insight into the character, personality and passion of the leading figures in the Investigation and Intelligence industry who have shaped the way we gather, analyse and utilise information and intelligence.

What was the biggest thing you came away with after seeing Mike

and listening to him? Attention to detail. Now

you ask me, it's attention to detail, which was the slogan of

Mike's company at the time. But I didn't know that at the time. But it

was. If you see something and it

makes you think, I've got a bad feeling about this. Have a

look. When I was leaving the Ukraine, it was in 2003 at Boryspol

Airport. I was put into a room for an hour and they took my

passport, their phone and everything off me and just didn't. I

wasn't allowed to speak. It was nothing. I was just taking everything, my coat, my

bags, everything. They just put me in a room. There's a book called the Dyslexic

Advantage and I think quite a lot of dyslexics can actually.

So I can. I can read a page of numbers or text and see everything.

I can sort of. You sort of scan or photograph the page and I

think that's really helped with my fraud investigation skills. The Norwegian

culture's heavily, heavily, heavily based on trust.

I think that's the worst word that they would embrace. Of course, the problem

with that is it can also lead to.

Hello, and welcome to the Intelligence Advantage podcast where we talk

to the movers and shapers in the investigation and intelligence

space. My name is Gary Miller. I've been an investigative

lawyer for nearly half a century and I'm also the chairman of the

IfG, a network of international investigative and

asset recovery lawyers. I am super

excited to welcome an another dear friend of mine who has

excelled in everything that he has done in life so

far, apart from investigating, which would

include for this particular guest, accounting,

computer science, academy, founder,

lecturer, author, screenwriter,

and last but not least, actor. I am talking

about none other than Nigel Ayer. Welcome, Nigel.

Thank you very much, Gary. I have known you, Nigel, for

gosh nigh on 25 plus years.

Yeah, getting on to 30, actually. Get on for 30 years and we'll come on

to as we chat, one of the

most significant figures certainly in my life, and I

suspect probably yours, that connected us

both. But because I have read through so many

things and areas and skills that you've got, what I have to ask

you, first of all, is if you hadn't have been an

investigator, what would you have ended up doing?

Two things. I would have either been a chef, which was my

dream when I was 5 years old, or I would have

been a screenwriter,

which is what I did do later on when finally my parents Thought

I was old enough to not be a professional and I could do my

masters in screenwriting when I was 42 years old.

Excellent. So that tells you so much about the

human being, Nigel, one, that at 42, it took you

42 years to get the inner confidence to be able to

tell your parents, or to even ask me, your parents, maybe,

that could you do this degree. And secondly,

that you had these artistic

torrents and currents raging within you that

you have only barely managed to suppress over the years because

you look at the. The screenwriting and

the. The acting. We'll get on to the acting part in a minute,

but. So what was it? And is

it an obvious answer? My parents to the question, what?

Determined that you would not become a chef?

Which kind of disappears, certainly, in terms of your list of

skills. I do lots of cooking for the homeless in my SP

or things like that. So I do big meals. And

I think the last time was Christmas. 1,500 people. I ran a kitchen.

And this is just to let the viewers and the listeners in

on our secret. Your home is Oslo,

correct? Where there is surprisingly large amounts of homeless people.

Yes. Because most people have this. Well, a

lot of people have this perception that

Scandinavia, and Oslo in particular, because of the size of its

oil reserves, etcetera, is an incredibly affluent place. And I'm

sure, and I've been there a few times, so I know that it can be.

But from what you said, it's also got its rough side as well. Yeah. I

think any society has the people that just fall out.

And it's not because the government doesn't want to do anything about it. It's because

it just sometimes just can't. It just can't get round that many things.

Yeah. So coming back, coming back to the

youthful creature, Nigel, can you

remember that, that watershed moment where you were going

to go left chef, right accounting.

It was very simple. My parents are Indians originally. And like

I always say, like most Indian parents, they want their kids to

become a doctor or a lawyer, something respectable. I wasn't

able to meet that, so I. Chartered

accountancy came quite high on the list because my mum felt it had the word

chartered in it and it meant the Queen would give me some sort of award

or something. So that was. That was okay. But then I had a bit of

a moment when I actually was playing in a rock band. I was

going to join a rock band and I got. I got the invitation to do

a scholarship at the Royal Northern College of Music, or to. To do a. To

basically, I was given this chance to get a scholarship at the Royal Northern College.

I got this fantastic letter and it was just before my 16th,

17th birthday and my dad knew I wanted to play in the school

rock band, but I didn't have a keyboard and he

basically suggested, he bought me an amazing

far Feasa organ that I could be in the rock band and be the cool

guy in the school if I ripped up the letter.

So it was just a wonderful bribe. I just ripped up the letter straight away

and joined the rock band and then became a chartered accountant

a long time after that. Yeah, go figure. I mean, I guess we could

spend quite a bit of time just talking about that little unwrapping,

that little bunch of facts. But let's, if you don't mind,

let's look a little bit at the, the

parenting and the way that you were brought up. You've got us. To

me as a born and bred Londoner, you've got a slight northern accent.

Yeah. So where does that come from? Manchester.

Manchester. Manchester. My parents,

they made a couple of trips. They came very early to the UK

and then my mum, they lived in Glasgow, which is where I should have been

brought up. My dad was one of the first orthodontists in

Glasgow, setting up things for the National Health Service because he was trained

at Harvard School of Dentistry with us and so he became an orthodontist. But

my mum said Britain was far too primitive. After a while they wanted

to go back to India, so they went back and then my mom

started. Hold on, hold on, give me a time context here, Nigel. We're

talking early 50s Harvard,

mid-50s Glasgow, back to India late at the

end of the Beginning of the 60s, three years, my dad was.

Set up the orthodontic department in this, in the, in, in, in Bombay, at the

dental school. Ah, so that's where it all starts, does it? And it all

starts there. When he. In India, they had a very

interesting system which was after independence, which was

people from the more deprived parts of society

without money, without education, would be given reserved

places, as at medical schools, universities,

dental schools. So all of a sudden all the rich people

who's expected their kids to become doctors and dentists and all those sort of things

were not getting places anymore. And that was the rules and that was

the law and my dad wanted to uphold it. So he

told me the story when I was quite young. He said that he was

being offered vast amounts of bribes to take in. People knew there was other

frauds going on with equipment at the, at the Dental school, right? So

he went to his good friend and boss at the time and

said, you know, I don't think we should take these bribes on behalf because it's

all breaking the rules and it's, it'll mess up the system. And his friend said,

no, no, no, you don't have to take the bribes. You're like a sort of

glorified collection agency that collects them on behalf of us who've been here for a

long time. He had spotted so much fraud going on. So in other words,

you haven't been here long enough to even think about keeping a bribe. Right.

You get a little bit. You get a little bit, mister. But the funny

thing about it is he, he left and

he, there was a guy, they were desperate for

dentists and doctors in the National Health Service in the early 60s, so

fantastic job in Sheffield and then moved to

Manchester, which is where I ended up. But he told me the story

and I think that is what actually shaped me because

even when I became an accountant, I started finding fraud

all the time because my dad spent all his time when he was in

the National Health Service trying to stop fraud and other

inefficiencies because he said, that just messes up the system. I love

it. So you really were

formed in terms of your philosophy and your

ethical values as a

direct result of what you forget about being

taught, what you saw in and what you absorbed and how

you, yes. How you saw your dad behaving in terms of,

I'm not going to participate in this corrupt

system. Therefore, was that the, or a motivator

for leaving India? Yeah, he left almost

on, he left almost on the day because they told him, you, you know,

you haven't really got a, you haven't really got a job here if you don't,

if you. Don'T do as we do, if you don't do this. Okay, but he,

he was very good. I mean, I've seen incidents later on. I was born after

he moved back the second time, but in Sheffield. But

after, after that, I do remember incidents where, when

the National Health Service was going through a sort of dentist and doctors can do

some private sessions, that was really opening the floodgates to people

doing their private sessions at the National Health Hospital. And I remember

one of his best friends had been doing this really

blatantly. He warned him twice and he said, look,

you cannot do this. And when the guy just

carried on, he made an anonymous report to, he

actually, and his friend got into trouble. But you read my mind because what

I was going to say is, it wouldn't take

a lot for somebody like your dad in India to have

come across that system and then said, not only am I not

participating, but I'm going to make an anonymous report.

But at that stage he didn't. In India, there was absolutely no

point. No point. Amazing. I went back to that same

dental hospital. It's the biggest government dental hospital in Mumbai

called St. George's and I went back there three weeks,

three, no, eight weeks ago. And

it's incredible, but there is a plaque put up in the orthodontic

department with a picture of my dad on it. And the people all know

the story. And Bombay is. Mumbai is one of the cities

where they really have tried to fight corruption. My goodness. And

they really try to work that because the city thinks of it like it's

a bit like New York. It's very collaborative. People have realized that corruption

destroys everyone's lives. Right. So they've been really fighting about

corruption in health, corruption in infrastructure. I was teaching

a course on fraud there. But when did, when did, when did your dad, how

old were you when your dad first told you this story about

not taking the golden, you know, the golden

bribe, as it were? Well, it was, I think I was seven years old.

I was flying from Bombay to, to London

on the first ever Air India 747. And I was so

excited about that, flying on the 747 for the first time. And

then someone comes up to. I was with my mom and someone comes up to

my mom and says, hello and nice to see you. And the guy was very

nice. And then he said, you know, you. And I was your dad's boss. When

I went back home, I said to dad, I met this really nice guy who

said he was your boss at the dental hospital. And then my dad took me

on a walk and he told me a story and that was the first time

at the age of seven. Now, what about other mini,

Mini Nigels? Do you have brothers and sisters and if so, what's

happened to them? Well, my sister is nine years older than me.

She's an awesome person. She became a dentist, which my dad

was very, very pleased with. But then she worked for the, the

dentalist, the, the authorities which investigate corrupt dentists

for 10 years. Oh, my God. So it really did.

Yeah. And she absolutely loved it. She got lots of dentists

struck off. Struck off. But then they changed the system

to a tick box system. So instead of sending qualified

dentists out to observe dentists in their

practices, they did a system of like, people sending this,

oh, I'm an okay person, code of conduct thing. And then the whole thing

became bureaucracy. So she took early retirement, I think, at

the age of, I think 56 or something, and

became a fully fledged dance teacher on cruise boats.

Oh, my God. I was just about to say don't tell me. She became an

actress, but not far different. So you both have got

this artistic. Not just streak, this

artistic skill set. And did you

see I can't dance to save my life. She's brilliant. But

I'm an. Absolutely. Can you. Can you sing? Can you sing? That's the

question. I think the two things I can do is I can play instruments.

So I can. Okay. I mean, I played in street bands, rock

bands. I still play stuff. Piano and flute.

I can sing really badly in choirs. Excellent. That's

a skill. But I think it's writing. It's creative writing, which was

my. I was. I could. Only it wasn't really my parents who

stopped me. It was when I was at school. I went to like a sort

of public school. It was a mixed public school, like Hogwarts in Manchester. Yeah. In

Cheadle Hume. It was in the south of Manchester. And it was. Beautiful thing,

castle and grounds, really. It's like Hogwarts. But one of the teachers told

me, told my parents at a parents meeting, do you speak

two languages at home? And they said, no, we just speak English because

we don't actually speak each other's Indian language. So they spoke English to each other.

They went to English schools. They said, because

it's very important that you don't teach him that because

he could either stammer and don't put him into sort of creative writing types

of things. And that teacher, in a

sense, colored my whole desire to do creative writing,

which I did in my spare time. So what was she alluding

to in terms of different writings? I was the only

foreign in the school, and she didn't know anything. She was a lovely teacher. She

was very nice to me, but she didn't. She was trying to sort of take

care of me in a sense, without realizing that I was actually just

a bit dyslexic. Oh, I see. So you. You did have something

that wasn't quite that she noticed that was different from the other kids.

Yeah. And she thought it might be something to do with not adjusting

to the English language. Correct. Actually, what

you were doing is you were starting to develop your artistic

writing skills. Yeah, I mean, I would say, you

know, going right long down the line. Fraud investigation is an art.

So I, I think all the way along I was very lucky to be

nudged into that via

accountancy. Of course. I was about to say, so you've got this

creative skill

and this creative urge and clearly you've got it in

music. You're playing in a rock band. I

can't wait for you to find a great photo of you

with, you know, your kipper Thai and your. And

I hope you had blue and red hair, but

had red hair. Once you. Then you then go from

that side into now. You're going to have to forgive me and I'll

probably get lots of complaints about this once

the podcast goes live. But apart from being a lawyer,

you could not have chosen a more boring profession and a

more rigid profession than accounting. So what on

earth did you fall on your head at that stage? What happened?

Well, actually when I was like 16 and then sort of band

stage and all that, my dad was very nice. He said, why don't you try

it out and see what it's like? And this was really interesting.

This is like 1980 in Manchester. You can imagine it was a pretty

grimy city at that time. Right. And it actually had

clothing factories like they have on Coronation Street. And

I was able to do summer jobs and sometimes at Easter for

his. My dad's. One of his good friends was a partner in a medium sized

firm. He was the senior partner in a firm called Joseph Crossley and Sons.

And it was a beautiful thing. We weren't even allowed to use calculators.

We were sent out and I was like a junior sent out on an audit.

So I was doing audits and things and I was very,

very driven and excited to do this. It was like. And how old were you?

I was 16 and a half or so. Okay, all right, 16.

And then I got sent out to do an audit with this, with this

senior who was called Ian and he must have been about 23. And.

And it was like of a clothing factory in Manchester where 300. It was

so amazing. It was like archetypal. What,

Coronation Street, 300 ladies working there and one guy in charge.

And I think I fell over a box in the room where

they put the auditors and underneath that box were all these wage

books for a night shift between something

like eight o' clock at night and four in the morning. And then when we

looked at the names, they were the illegal immigrant population,

Bangladeshis, Indians, Pakistan. Now this

is cliche, beyond cliche. I know. You actually

stumbled physically across the

evidence of some naughtiness. Correct. Well, I didn't really

stumble when it's the sort of thing that true. Well, you know, when

they put the auditors in a place to order. Anyone who's an auditor, who's from

my, my generation, they didn't actually have computers. You had to go and sit there

in the place. They would put them in the worst, most rat infested room possible.

But you had no idea. You were 16, you had no idea where to look.

You were walking around. Oh yeah, I had no idea. And you just fell over

something. So I was just using that example of where lots of people

might say, you know, I stumbled across this particular fraud.

But you physically stumbled, confronted and stumbled

this. And I love it. But I want to know why were you not doing

your work experience at your dad's surgery?

Oh, I did that on Saturday mornings. He had a private. He had a

practice on Saturday mornings as well. But I, I

didn't really find dentistry that exciting. My sister did.

My mother wanted me to do law, but I was dyslexic, so I couldn't read

long sentences at that time. Well, they didn't know. I mean, there

are a lot of people I know a lot. There are people I know who

went into law. But at that stage, maybe particularly in

Manchester, you just didn't come across people that knew how to deal with

dyslexia. Did they actually diagnose, if that's

the right word, dyslexia at that stage, I. Was diagnosed with mild

dyslexia. But I had a wonderful art cluster teacher when I

was 11 and she happened to be the art teacher teacher at the school. And

she said my handwriting's all over the place. So then she taught me

calligraphy and then my handwriting improved dramatically. Right.

And the only I. There's a book called the Dyslexic Advantage and I

think quite a lot of dyslexics can actually. So I can, I

can read a page of numbers or text and see everything. I can sort

of. You sort of scan or photograph the page. And I think that's

really helped with my fraud investigation skills is you can just

see massive amounts of things and then pick out the interesting things. I don't

think my dyslexia is really that obstructive

to normal life. Well, so people listening and watching

that, they'll get comfort from that. That doesn't really matter how you

start and what difficulties you have, particularly if it is

dyslexia, you can overcome them and you can give expression to

your, both your creative and your

fraud. Uncovering skill sets?

I think so. I think. For example, I read that Greta Thunberg calls her

autism her superpower. I see. Okay,

Okay, I get it. And we've

talked not one jot yet about a particular fraud

case, which, when I look at the time, I'm thinking, my God, your

history and your mixture of things that were

happening and guiding you is really

interesting because my life was relatively boring

in comparison. Comparison. But let's skip over

this wonderful dichotomy

between being Mr. Chef and Mr.

Screenwriter to going into accounting

fundamentally, or at least to a certain extent to keep Mum and

Dad happy. And you

leave school, you go to uni. I think you qualify

as a chartered accountant. Is that right? Well, I did Computer science is my degree.

That's right. Computer science. At which uni?

Manchester. At Manchester. So you. That's an interesting thing in itself.

Why didn't you want to go somewhere outside of Manchester

in 1982? The best

course that I could find, because it was. It was all about algorithms

and actually finding stuff and doing stuff, was at Manchester. And they were the biggest.

They were set up by Alan Turing. And I found out later, okay,

you can't cheat. And tell me that that's why you went there, because you realized

Turing had. Had set it up. No. Never mind.

Professors were his students. Did you live at home during

uni? No. No, I moved out straight away. My parents

wanted me to have a full university life, so I didn't.

It's just my home trip was a lot shorter than anyone else's.

Okay, now, before we are going to get to. I promise everyone,

you're gonna. We're gonna get to Nigel's unbelievably

varied experience and talent uncovering frauds. But

before I do, tell me something that you did,

like breaking into the headmasters or the senior

principal's office and stealing the exam papers. Tell me something that you

did that nobody else knows. And this is going to be a

revelation now for what you did at uni. I think

it was not really what we did at uni, because that was all quite

interesting and fun. But the craziest thing I did was there was a TV program,

and it showed about the collective scenes in Berlin.

And one morning I decided it was a good idea with a friend

to hitchhike all the way from Manchester to Berlin.

And this is like when the Wall was up and everything. But that was not

the interesting bit. The interesting bit is that I decided to go into the

East. This is where it got really interesting. I decided to go into the east

with a friend. And then we thought, because we were both street musicians at the

time, we thought, wouldn't it be nice if they heard some music that they'd never

heard before? But not in the area where you're supposed to go. But we actually

took an intercity TR towards Magdeburg, which was way in the

DDR, and we went there. How did you get in? How did they let you

in? Well, you can get in through the. You're allowed to go for the day

and then you spend a lot of money and you have to. They give you

a little map in a very small region of East Berlin. I see, okay. And

we thought, well, no one's checking. And I could speak some bad German, so let's

take it into city, train all the way out. We went to Potsdam and we

were playing and everyone ran away from us. And then one

guy came up to us and with a. He had a violin case and he

actually was a violinist. And he said, said, are you not

from here? And we said, no. He said, I play in an

orchestra in Halle in eastern Germany, and I speak not the Halle

in Manchester, but in actually the city of Halle. And he said, I speak

English. What are you doing here? And we said, we just kind of came

to see what it's like. He said, you're not allowed to be here. He will

arrest you and they'll throw you in jail as spies

because you have come here completely illegally. He said, have you eaten them? We said,

well, we're going to buy some. He said, don't buy any food. Have my food.

Go back, you've got a return ticket. Get back. And do not speak to

each other. And if anyone comes near you make up a language.

Excellent. But you were there completely lawfully or had you

strayed into a deeper part that you didn't have access rayed into the

DDR? What I learned about it was one thing.

I learned that everyone at that time was basically encouraged to blow the

whistle on each other. And that's why I'm not today

a huge fan of whistleblower cultures, because I think I've

seen the worst, the most, I would say the most

absurd a whistleblower culture can get, which was the DDR

towards the middle and end of the 80s. Right. And I would say that

I don't agree with huge whistleblower cultures. That's

why everything is about find the frauds before the poor sod has

to actually blow the whistle. Right. That's

interesting. And okay, so that's a really

interesting. It's not something that necessarily would have got you kicked out of

uni, but it would have been a bit embarrassing had you had to have

telephoned home and said, mum and dad, I'm now in an East German

prison. That's where I'm going to finish my degree from.

So that still classifies as pretty interesting. So

you've left uni, you've managed not to get either

recruited by the. By the German

East German intelligence. You are looking

for your first job. Where was that? In a pretty run of the

mill accounting firm in Manchester. One of the big four today.

Working in the big four accountancy firm. And when you walked in for your interview,

tell me this, do you remember what you were wearing? Let's just go with clothes

for the moment. I was wearing a silver gray, a gray suit, which was one

of these cheapo suits that you get which shines a little bit. Okay,

excellent. And you were living at home at the time, or had

you moved out. That was already living at uni. You, you go for the interviews?

Of course. You go before you've left. Okay, so

when you had that interview, did the person,

do you remember who it was that interviewed you? Oh, yes,

Lovely guy called Richard Dyson who became head of the president

of the Institute of Charter Counselor and he was known by his nickname was

Bomber. And. Yeah. Do you

remember the name? I don't, but I'm thinking of, of course, Mr. Dyson with

the com of the home appliance

skills. But I don't think this is the same one. No, he wasn't.

Awesome guy. And I don't know why I got on well with him. He seemed

like a guy who would get things done and he did. And he just gave

me the job on the spot, basically. And did you share with him

that you had this innate. You had this

innate ability to discover frauds? I don't think I told him I

had the natability because I had simply just fallen over a few before. I

told him I had this passion to do it. And he said two

things. He said, we actually want people like that. And he said, you've got a

computer science degree. No one else has got one of those. You can actually look

at all the transactions in an audit. This is what we're trying to do

and we'd like you to find. And we're very happy if you find stuff. And

he never went away from that. Excellent.

And how long were you at this big Four, four, four, four,

four. Three and a half years. Okay. I did

my chartered accountancy, qualified everything first time Mum and Dad were really happy.

I'm sure they were. And then I suddenly felt the need

to leave. Right. Because.

Simply because auditing isn't about finding fraud, even though they

say it. And there are some people who want it. There were definitely some partners

like Bomber Dyson, another brilliant guy called John Dixon, who's had a

national comp. They supported, you know, this, let's do

proper auditing and find stuff. But there was a huge wave in the

profession to not find stuff. So

this audit function, which you and I have seen

in various different times of our career,

was not designed to find fraud. It was designed to employ

people and to keep the money flowing. Is that it? I

discovered on a, on a, on a, on a major audit, quite a big hole

in the balance sheet, let's say. And one of the managers, I remember taking me

out for a very nice lunch and after I was not allowed to be in

the closing meeting and that wasn't taken forward. And he simply said, you're doing

very well, you're very good at your top of your grade, but you have

to stop finding fraud on every audit. Because the purpose of an audit

is to check that things are okay. And then he let

loose with the other one is. And it pisses our clients

off. And it's not always something we

have to find. And nobody else in your grade

finds these things like you do. And I explained, well, I use a computer and

I look at the transactions and they laughed. And

then at that point I realized that was the, that was the,

that was the mood. It wasn't these two or three people who I thought were

fantastic, the mood in the whole profession was let's not find

stuff. Yes. And we both know,

sadly, even in this day and

age, and of course it's a human business

dynamic that is not peculiar to any one

society or to any one time in society, which

is if you find a fraud,

somebody is going to have to take the rap for it. Even if they weren't

the person necessarily responsible for doing it.

They were or possibly were the person that should have spotted it.

So they don't want you to dig up any dirt. Secondly,

it could very well have an impact on the finances of the company

and make it difficult to sustain salaries or

whatever it is, certainly their profit. And thirdly,

it could have a direct impact on,

on their ability to carry on doing the job and the

company's ability to survive. So I'm sure there are others, but

that hasn't changed to this day and age. And that's why

you And I see, I guess lots of cases with IPOs in particular,

that the auditors and the accountants get sued

because they haven't been looking for the real or

they haven't been disclosing what they found. Yeah, I think it's a

mixture. Sometimes they find stuff by accident and then

don't disclose it. But most of the time today nobody

looks. In the old days when I was auditing, we'd go to factories, we'd go

to banks, we'd look around. I'd walk around the trading floor listening to

conversations. Sometimes I'd be a bit, as they told me, I was a bit too

enthusiastic that I'd stay late and I'd not log my hours. But

I'd look at people's expenses and go through their desks a little bit or what's

on the top of the desks and things. I was a bit too driven for

it. But it's just that business today, nobody looks

these days. They tick boxes. So it's like these terms

and conditions we're supposed to read, but we tick an electronic box and the

whole world has become so electronic that nobody reads

anymore. So I think it's got a lot worse.

And these poor auditors and even lawyers that have to do due

diligence or they haven't got a chance, they've got

no chance. And of course nobody wants them to look either.

Nobody says, oh, by the way, would you like to have a tour on a

Saturday of the whole building and go through everything you want? We'll happily open

up everything. It's all about data rooms and documents

that are supplied in nice, you know, gift wrap packages which are perfect

to audit. Yes. And they've been scrutinized and sanitized

before they enter the data room. So it's, it's, it's

the, whatever it is, it's not a true and faithful record

of, of the entire picture of the

way in which a company operates. Yeah, I think it's the difference between

accounting, which is all the little details are, and the numbers and

the documents and accounts. People think they're the same thing. Whereas

accounts are the sanitized version. Yes. So you

leave the big four having realized that maybe the,

the culture is not necessarily one that

you feel comfortable in. And you go, where? What's your first job?

Well, my first job was again by accident. I happened to

meet the head of internal audit of Norway's largest

company, 40,000 people, industrial, a bit of

financial chemicals, oil, fertilizers all around the world. And

he meets one of the partners at EY that knows me really well

and says to. And, and they. And he says, I've got a job, a guy

who'll just fit your bill. And this guy's into fraud

investigations, stuff involving Mark Rich, the metals trader.

And he just meets me and he meets me in a Lebanese restaurant in London

because I was working in London at the time, right? And he takes me to

dinner and essentially offers me a job on the spot

and then says, well, you've got to come to Norway to meet a couple of

the big wigs. Which, all right, they just offered me a job and,

and I was so in love with the Scandinavian

culture because I traveled there as a musician and played a bit of jazz there

and things. And I just thought, what a lovely part of the world

I'll live in any of the cities. I even live in Helsinki. But the language

is too difficult, right? So I promised I'd learn the language and I'd go to

either Stockholm. Oslo or Copenhagen's nice, but it's not got mountains, so.

And that's what you did? You picked up and you left?

Yep. What did mum and dad think about that?

Well, they, they were to blame because my dad's. One

of my dad's best friends is an orthodontist in, in, in Norway

and they'd taken me many times as a child on holiday. We got on holidays

and then I started going on my own. So they kind of went, well, we

introduced you to this God forsaken place which they loved. So we

can't really hate the fact that you're moving there. Plus there's lots of flights there

because Norwegians are absolutely crazy about football. So there are lots of flights

from Oslo to Manchester. And did I understand or hear

you correctly that you offered, did they

ask you to learn Norwegian or you had to in order to take that job?

No, I offered. I offered. I did a lingophone course

before I came. Of course it was about 40 years out of date, so

they said some of the things you say sound like someone who's about 50

years older than us at the moment. But you, you mastered it,

so you are fluent. I mean, I know you live there. No, no, I,

I mean I, I started the work there on day one, but I

didn't understand Norwegian well enough to understand all the different dialects. So I actually

rudely asked someone with a dialect to speak proper Norwegian. Police.

That's not done over there. Because they're not over here. Because in Norway

people, they celebrate dialects. But you didn't just so That I can

get this straight. You didn't actually need. They didn't say to

you can have this job, but you need to speak Norwegian. They were quite

happy for an English speaking dude to come out and to help them.

Yeah, they said the corporate language is English. The only thing is that when you

get into the meetings at that time in 89, the corporate, the language

that everyone spoke was Norwegian. And I think it was just. It's an easy language

to learn. It's a very beautiful language. So it's that easy to learn. It means

that you can also understand Swedish, Danish and that's it really.

But it's pretty good. And now you are totally fluent. I imagine

having lived there so long. If my daughter's watching, I cannot admit to be

totally fluent, but I think I'm totally fluent.

Excellent, excellent. So you're working for this

company and culturally, do you learn anything

about the different approach

that different cultures have towards fraud, dishonesty,

whistleblowing? What do you learn about humanity and cultures when

you're in, when you're in Oslo? Well, the beauty

about my job was I traveled most places, lots of places in the world with

North Skydra in the seven years I worked there. But the Norwegian cultures,

heavily, heavily, heavily based on trust, I think

that's the word that they would embrace. Of course the problem with

that is it can also lead to false trust or naivety.

So I would say that they were very open to finding things,

but what they were very good at was not having a blame culture.

They were a bit like the aircraft crash investigation industry where they said,

let's try to sort out what's the root cause. And the root cause

could be that someone got leaned on, someone got tempted.

So I found it very nice and refreshing from my

UK days where I felt there was, as you said,

someone needs to take the wrap. I felt there was an open

mindedness to sometimes people

make stupid mistakes and

let's try to work it all out together. So there was a very collab. I

felt the Scandinavian way of working on problems was very collaborative and I really,

really enjoyed that. But was there any, was there any

difference, having worked with many different cultures,

any difference in the way they thought about

levels of dishonesty? Were, were fiddling

your expenses? Were. Was there anything that

would have been strange somewhere else that was accepted in

Oslo? I think the thing that was strange

was they hadn't started it then, but the

Scandinavian countries all thought that they didn't have corruption and fraud.

So we had to sort of invent it in A way

that actually we have a massive oil industry and there's plenty of fraud and corruption

there. And that there's. So we had to sort of invent the term and the

top management were essentially Scandinavians. So.

But they were very open minded to. It does happen.

But we had to sort of. We had to. We had to. It

wasn't like a give. It wasn't like a, oh, there is fraud. Like there was

in the. In the uk, people just accepted it happened. I think Mike

Comer's favorite expression, shit happens and so does fraud,

wasn't the relevant expression. That was the biggest. Why explain to

me why would they have this almost

ostrich like attitude towards fraud. I

think it was because when I came to the country, people would leave their doors

open, people would leave their cars unlocked. And this is in the big cities. Right.

People have this high level of trust and.

But it started creeping in. I think the. I came in on the back of

a massive fraud involving Mark Rich and aluminum. And that was what

kind of woke up Norse Hydro, the big company that this

does happen. So. But I think it's like it doesn't happen on

our patch. Was a little bit of the mentality at that time. Right.

Changed quite quickly, though. And what was the most

interesting and if you can, the

most. And one of the largest

or most

complicated cases you worked on at Norse Hydro.

I probably can't speak about most of those, but

I suppose there was various different things that we worked on

all over the world. I'd say there was stuff in the oil industry

related to purchasing.

There was. The police got. The police got very savvy in investigating

corruption and fraud in the oil industry. And I would say. But I say

the most public one of them all was that the company was very

acquisitive and this one's public. So it acquired big

companies in different parts of the world. Yeah. And they acquired one that took

its business in the fertilizer industry stellar and it just took it

global and became a global player. But they had. They had inherited

a culture from one part of the world where people paid bribes all the time

to build businesses and then took some of it for themselves. And that

came to bite the company in the bum a few about 10 years later

after I'd left. But I remember we took it up with the management

and they went, yeah, but that's the way they do things down there. And

that was the big mistake to say, okay, if they're selling

big into Africa or if you're selling big into the Asia that's the way

they do business there. That is such a mistake

because your people will be taking some of that business, that money as

well. Absolutely. And of course you're exposing yourself to all sorts

of bribery which they then had to deal with later on. Not

surprising. So you do a few

years in Oslo and then you come across the lovely

Mike comer. Correct. In 1993 or something,

or 1992, I can't remember which year it was now exactly. But very, very early

on I came across Mike. Mike's teaching a three

day course. I get sent on it. Right. There's two guest lecturers who are

brilliant. One's called Martin Savachick and the other one's called Gary Miller. I

doubt it, but there you go. Anyway, so you were this thing and what did

you learn? What was the biggest thing you came away with after seeing

Mike and listening to him? Attention to detail.

Now you asked me. It's attention to detail, which was the

slogan of Mike's company at the time, but I didn't know that it was at

the time, but it was. If you see something

and it makes you think, I've got a bad feeling about this,

have a look, be curious. And I went back

after that course on Monday and I was doing

an audit of procurement in oil fields and I spotted things the

same day just because I had a different mindset. It was like

the course with Mike was like brainwashing, turn you into an investigator,

but also extremely enjoyable.

And you, you did, you did some very cool stuff about law as well. Which.

The bottom line is that Mike really, he,

he just energized

that, apart from energized the space around him, but

he energized and made

investigating fraud sexy in the sense of it

was fun, you could make a decent living out of it.

And it was something, as you

witness, that was not spoken about. And he

made it, he made it cool to be

a person that found out about other people's wrongdoing,

whereas there was probably part of that, oh, they're rats, they're

whistleblowers, they're whatever. Somebody that went in

deliberately and consciously to find out who was responsible for something

was becoming a really acceptable

and indeed a necessary part of business life.

Absolutely. I didn't even know anything like that existed.

And then my boss was fantastic and he eventually said to

me, look, it seems to me where your heart is. And I was

also reaching the point, the seven year point, where I was feeling that management

wanted to give me a job, but they wanted me to go but

don't keep looking for fraud. And I felt, here we go again.

So that was when I just ran. You're

obsessed with fraud. I love it. So did

you ever get into. And I found myself

in a very kind of tangential way, but did you ever

find yourself in a picture, in a position where somebody

actually suspected you of maybe helping out

the fraudsters or not coming clean fully?

Did you ever get that into that position where the people

either were so skeptical or there was something that they didn't feel

comfortable about what you were doing? No, I didn't. But

there was a moment where I didn't feel comfortable about what I was doing.

Okay. It was investigating.

This was when I moved out Mosk Hydro and became an investigator

partly for Network and then Mike Combs company and then a company called Hydas. And

it was during the Hybe stage where we. There was

a case with a whistleblower and it was in the Ukraine. And

it was clearly that. What seemed to have happened was the company that

our client had set up, the subsidiary had been actually

stolen from them and was put in a new name. So it was called.

It's the Russian word, riderstro, which is the theft of the

entire business. But the blame was being put on a

person who was the former finance director, who also sent

in all sorts of papers to the head of internal audit in

Ukrainians, saying, but I'm just a whistleblower, I'm trying to. And he was blaming the

head of the company. But the head of the company was one of our. One

of the boys, one of the people. He was an expat. They all

trusted him. Right. So I was asked by the head of the audit, can you

just have another look? And this has been. So I went down to the Ukraine

and the only way I could find this person was to pay some money

to someone who would make sure that they. When they. When his

mobile phone was switched on for a few seconds every day it was pinged and

he was way, way out in. In the sticks in Uman in the south, south

of Kiev. So went out there, found the guy,

paid a bribe. And the time I. It came back to me to haunt me

was when I was. And we found the story, we got the evidence, we

found what was the real issues. It was. It was a well done case by

the client. When I was leaving the Ukraine, it was in 2003 at Boris Pol

Airport, I was put into a room for an hour and they took my

passport, their phone and everything off me and just didn't I

wasn't allowed to speak. It was nothing. It was just taking everything, my coat, my

bags, everything. They just put me in a room and then I think five minutes

before the plane, they let me go. And the reason was, it was they were

giving me a warning that I had done something. In that

case, I'd messed around with some organized criminals who were involved in this, but which

I didn't know. But of course it came back to haunt me and it haunts

me ever because I did pay a bribe. Why? Just help

me here. Why did you need to pay a bribe? Because the person, he was

at the top of the criminal gang, as it were, he was inaccessible.

Is that it? Well, no, it was to find the whistleblower.

Had gone to find the whistleblower. He'd been beaten up and he'd gone into hiding

at some relative's house way south of Kiev, like

200 miles south. And, and our investigative

partner, who was an excellent guy, said, the only way we're going to be able

to find him is if I can lubricate the wheels so that the mobile

telephone company will actually find him.

And so in other words, I did something completely to break the

law. Right. Took a personal risk because,

and I keep telling myself, because I knew this guy was in trouble, I saw

all his paperwork, I realized he was the honest guy. I had to find him,

we had to have a sit down meeting, I had to see him in the

eyes. And then we eventually got him protection and help and everything.

But the thing that haunts me all the time is I broke the law

and I could have ended up back like East Germany. I could have ended up

stuck in, in the Ukraine in 2003 for a very long time.

You could have done. But I handed over an envelope with some dollars in it,

quite a lot. For people who, because you and I have got a

similar ethical framework for

people like us. You would have at the time,

and from what you said you did, you, you didn't characterize that at

the time as a bribe because it wasn't you paying

someone money in order for them ultimately

to benefit you. Well, I guess in a way it was so that you could

uncover you were on the, you were on the scent, weren't you? You could have

said, you could have said, look, I can't

solve this case by paying this because it would breach the

law in wherever I am and I've just got to go home and leave

things as they are. But you were so committed, you had to do

it, didn't you? You've got me. You see, for years I've been telling myself

the rationale that I did it to save this guy Maxim's life. Yes.

But I recently I've been teaching, we've been

teaching business ethics at the business schools and one of the master's students,

one of the things you do is you try to work out something you've done

where you really did realize you crossed the line. And this is one of them

where I actually just wanted to be the. Hero and everyone,

you know, you and I are, as my late

departed father said, old enough and ugly enough to be able to face

our little demons or even our big demons. And

everybody at some stage crosses a

line. And the question is the difference between

those that are, are doing crossing the line for

an ultimate

beneficial purpose for somebody else, for another company to

save a life, to uncover something wicked. There

is a difference there. And you can't justify it in

philosophical terms because two rights don't, two wrongs don't make a

right, etc. But a lot of people in the game that you and I are

in understand it because we are taking risks every

single day, aren't we? Well, yeah, if you do investigation,

which involves being on the ground and it involves meeting people, not this, not these

days. Investigations are done through paperwork. If you actually then,

then sometimes you are taking a risk. I mean, you take a risk when you

cross the road. So I, I, I think it's, I think

artists take risks. I don't think I've done stage diving, but

artists take risks by putting yourself on the

line. And I think this was a case where I put myself the line. I

don't regret what I did because it really led to a solution. But I like

to talk about it because I would like people who in the same situation to

think twice, which I didn't do. Well, I think that's wise advice.

But I think that even when you've thought once, twice and

thrice, there are certain times in life where

you've just got to be true to who you are.

And for me, that was one of your moments. Now we really have

moved faster than I thought. But what I do, I don't want to do is

miss out on another really

interesting case called the Trust 4 case.

Now, Trust or sorry, that shows you how well I know it.

I don't want you to name any of the law firms involved,

but what I would like you to do is tell me about your role in

uncovering it and what it was and how you played a

part in uncovering it and finding out where the money was.

Okay, this, the case is very interesting because it involves.

Involves a few interesting people. It involves a now deceased

ex British lord. I mean every good British story should involve a lord, whether it's

Luke. And this one was called Lord Mo and his name was Jonathan Guinness.

And he isn't the criminal in a sense.

Let's. Then what actually

happened was I was asked. We were asked. I was working in Network and I

was running Mike Coma's company Network. I was running Network

Scandinavian subsidiaries. So I'd gotten there and worked there for a while and then I

decided to set up their Scandinavian subsidiary with lots of support. So

myself and another super guy called Matt Gilliam were working there with others

and we were basically given a piece of referred

work which was a client of the law firm who

disliked intensely for some reason, a lawyer called Lindsay Smallbone,

who was a New Zealand lawyer, but he was. And he

wanted the law firm to employ investigators to find out

the dirt on this guy. Let's put it in simple terms. So

what we did is Network started doing their research on him and they found out

that amongst other business interests he was managing director of a company in

Sweden. And it was a big company,

but the managing director and they understood the cases

that actually he was only managing director because he'd been placed, placed

there by Lord Moyne, Jonathan Guinness, who had bought the company

and, and essentially bought a controlling stake of a stock

exchange listed company in Sweden. Now there were some

rumors going on that Lord Moyne was a bankrupt

lord and he didn't have a penny to his name. He was also, there was

rumors that he was an outcast from the Guinness family. And there were plenty of

rumors about Smallbone, Mr. Smallbone being a little bit of a dodgy person.

Anyway, we were asked to look into it and we went up to the company's

register because nothing was online those days. And we went up to the company's register

and asked a colleague to copy absolutely every single paper

that's been registered with the. With the company house in Sweden. In Sweden.

Okay. And I was then, because I read

Swedish, I was given the chance to actually, Matt said, you better look at

all these nudge. So I went through this pile of papers and in

fact the dyslexia comes in handy. So I'm flicking through the papers and I

noticed that the consideration, the amount of money that was paid

seemed to be in a. In a board meeting note paid to the major

controlling owner of the stock exchange company. After

six months or so A few months after the actual deal had been sealed

and the new owners had come in, which is for me is the wrong way

around, because you pay. The owner should be paid before. So then

we looked at it a bit more and then I looked at the. The newspaper

and found out, yes, this is really still a stock exchange listed company.

And I thought, based on what I know, dodgy lord,

dodgy lawyer company

with a lot. The other thing I noticed is in the accounts, there was a

massive amount of cash on the balance sheet. So I thought,

something doesn't add up here. I went over and I said he was showing

me how companies, Swedes, get defrauded because he said, they're a

bit naive. Rich Swedes get defrauded by overseas companies

that then ask you to invest and then they lose all the money. And I

asked him this naive question, what if the company was already on the Swedish

stock exchange? Now, he was a policeman who read body language

and language. So well, he shut the door and he said, nigel, you

need to tell me the name of this company. And I said, well, I can't

because we're working for lawyers and their lawyers are privileged to the client.

So then I think we rang the lawyers, the lawyers range the

client, and the client said, well, if this is going to make Smallbone look bad,

it's great for me, right? So we said, tell them everything.

So we did. And two weeks later they'd done a raid. They'd found out

that 650 million kroner or so been transferred to the

Cayman Islands by then, but not all of it. So they managed to

stop the rest of the fraud. They managed to file a case

which went reasonably well. They managed to find who was the main

perpetrator, which was a young Swedish guy called Joachim Posner,

who changed his name to Joe Falk and essentially got the

whole thing to work, got Moyne in place, got Smallburn in place, stolen the

money, wired it to the Cayman Islands via Barclays and then

what was. The sort of core of the fraud? Was he

just simply stealing the money and paying off people

not to pick it up, is that it? Yeah, paying off people to do their

work. So Smallbone got paid, Lord Moyne got paid. I see. And

then he stole the money. And essentially it's going to be in the

Netflix documentary that's coming out in about three months time. And he's

going to be the star of the documentary because he managed to stay away

from Sweden and not in hiding for 10 years. And this

is his name, is his. Current name Joachim Posner. And

he uses his current name, Joachim Posner. Unbelievable.

And he now lives a free man in Sweden. Yeah. And plays golf.

Golf. And, oh, his family play golf. Have you gone to meet

him and explain to him that you love to meet him? You would love

to. Well, let's hope that we can orchestrate a meeting between you.

And he actually did. Oh, no, he didn't do any time.

No, he didn't do any time. He was in. Sweden's a very lenient country. You

know, he did his 10 years in hiding or so and then when he came

back, he's living a free man. Didn't anyone sue him? You know,

in other countries people would kill him, but.

But nobody sued him, Nobody decided take action and

pursue him across the world? Couldn't after that? No. And no one could

find him. So he. Oh, I see. I was about to say, did anyone have

any idea where he was living or, or did he just disappear like Lord

Lucan? He disappeared like Lord Lucan and then

miraculously appeared some years, many years later. Later.

But you know, in, in many ways he showed what a

huge loophole there was because people allowed, allowed,

they allowed anyone to any company that to be bought by anyone.

All they needed to do was give him the right paperwork and the fact that

he was a lord as well made it all hunky dory. And he showed

a loophole. And I think there since then the defenses to

stop criminals seizing assets and

doing things like that have been so much improved, he has probably saved the

nation of Sweden hundreds of times more. Oh,

don't use that explanation because he'll come back as a hero. Nigel.

The question is that's what if we. No, but the thing is the Swedes were

brilliant. They learned from it. They had this, they had this full report to understand

what went wrong and why and then put in the control, put in the safeguards

in place, which I thought was the best bit. Well, I know

you are tight for time today, so we won't stretch as I

try and do with some of my fungible

guests. So I'm going to say what an amazing experience. You and

I had a pretty pre podcast chat

yesterday and even with that, we haven't

even scratched the surface of the life and

times of Nigel Aya. So I want to say thank you. Oh,

but before we do go, we do have to

just make a few comments about what

you're doing now because you are very much in the thick of

things. Yeah. About five years ago,

just before COVID I thought, I've developed tools I've got this

strange set of skills, which is educational skills, programming,

algorithm skills to find fraud. I always thought I was a genius at finding fraud.

And then I realized you can teach anyone to do it and everyone can be

a fraud detective. So I wrote a book called

Recipes for the Aspiring Fraud Detective. And then someone said, why didn't

you turn that into a product so that everyone can.

Because it's a bit like everyone can cook. I actually believe anyone

can cook. You just have to feel the confidence to do it. It's the same

thing with fraud detection. Anyone can detect fraud. You just have to want to. So

I created. We created a tool and the idea was based on that

whistle experience that you can't crowd the world with whistleblowers

because you're just creating a lot of people who are going to be

miserable. What you've got to do is find the fraud before the whistleblower.

Or as Mike would have, Mike Comer would have said, before the shit hits the

fan. I mean, Mike's phrase, which I like to quote him on, the

shit happens and so does fraud. But you don't have to let that hit the

fan. So we created a company called B4 with the

letters B4 for find fraud before it gets

out of control or, you know, find it. It's like they say in the

uk, transport, see it, say it sorted. So when

the company is called before. Or just before, I mean, we've got

some idiot decided to call it B4 investigate, which was me when we.

When we founded it. And I just feel that we're not really an investigation

company. We're a company that helps people build their resilience

by finding the stuff early. A bit like good tests,

medical tests. So you are still very much in the game,

Nigel. You are still developing, you're still creating,

and I'm looking forward to

another episode with you where we can talk about

some other cases that you did along the way and also some of the stuff

that you've been able to achieve while at B4.

So before you. Haha. Before

you get upset with me, I am going to say thank you very much.

I really appreciated your time and your energy

and I'm really looking forward to releasing this and I will let you

know when it goes. Live life. Thanks very much, Gary. I enjoyed it.

Yeah, take care, buddy. Cheers. Thank you for

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