Tuesday 9 June 2009


Gerald Ronson joined me for an interview and we spoke about his life and times.

When Ronson was fifteen, he left school and joined his father in the family furniture business, named Heron after his father Henry. In the mid-1960s Ronson brought the first self-service petrol retail outlets to the United Kingdom. Heron once controlled almost a thousand of them. Heron was also involved in property development, at first with small residential projects, later with commercial and office properties too. By 1967 the company was active in seven European countries and fifty-two British municipalities. By the early 1980s Heron was one of the largest private companies in the United Kingdom, with assets of over £1.5 billion, Ronson became known in the UK as one of the "Guinness Four" for his involvement in the Guinness share-trading fraud of the 1980s, along with Ernest Saunders and occasional business associates Jack Lyons and Anthony Parnes. He was convicted in August 1990 of one charge of conspiracy, two of false accounting, and one of theft, and was fined £5 million and given a one-year jail sentence, of which he served six months. In 2000 The European Court of Human Rights ruled that the 1990 trial had been unfair because there had been a violation of Article 6.1 of the European Convention on Human Rights

No comments:

Post a Comment