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Jan Cameron charged over Bellamy’s stake

Alex DruceAAP
Jan Cameron founded Kathmandu.
Camera IconJan Cameron founded Kathmandu. Credit: Nikki Davis-Jones/News Corp Australia

The corporate watchdog has charged former Bellamy’s director Jan Cameron with masking what it alleges was her true stake in the infant formula business via a mysterious offshore associate.

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission said on Friday it was charging the Tasmanian businesswoman, 67, with failing to disclose 14 million Bellamy’s shares she owned via Curacao-domiciled firm the Black Prince Foundation, when the Launceston-based formula company went public in August 2014.

ASIC said Ms Cameron’s 14.74 per cent stake was nearly triple the 5 per cent threshold that dictates — in the Corporations Act — when a person must lodge a substantial holder notice.

The watchdog also alleges Ms Cameron — following an acrimonious boardroom battle in early 2017 — lodged with Bellamy’s an initial substantial holder notice that was also misleading, on the basis that it failed to properly disclose her true and complete relationship with Black Prince, and the basis upon which she held her interest in the company.

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Ms Cameron was revealed as the controlling power behind Black Prince amid the 2017 shareholder revolt, which resulted in the removal of Bellamy’s chief executive Laura McBain.

Black Prince was also accused of trying to roll the board and install directors aligned with Ms Cameron after the company’s share price plunged on Chinese market setbacks.

Ms Cameron, the founder of outdoor apparel brand Kathmandu, faces a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment for the charges.

The case is being prosecuted by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions and a hearing is listed for a mention in the Hobart Magistrates Court on March 12.

Bellamy’s was sold to the China Mengniu Dairy Company last year in a deal that netted Ms Cameron a reported $300 million.

Ms Cameron did not publicly state whether she supported or opposed the takeover but offloaded a chunk of shares in the lead-up to the deal.

This was taken as a sign by onlookers that she would not stand in the way of the sale.

AAP

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