Insolvency Service鈥檚 decision follows two similar disqualifications for other bosses
The former chief executive of Carillion has been banned from being a director for eight years for his conduct at the helm of the doomed contractor.
Carillion had been the UK鈥檚 second biggest contractor and was working on 420 public sector contracts when it went bust in January 2018.
Richard Howson, 55, led Carillion between 2011 and 2017.
A statement released by the Insolvency Service said Howson caused the firm to report its financial statements 鈥渋n a way which he ought to have known falsified and concealed the reality of the deterioration of the major contracts which in fact became loss-making鈥.
, the service said Howson had 鈥渨rongly reported鈥 certain payments as profits in breach of accounting standards, resulting in a 拢39m overstatement of profit and an understatement of net debt by 拢41m.
鈥淢r Howson ought to have known of the false accounting, of the profit overstatement and of the net debt understatement and of the concealment from the auditors of the true picture regarding Carillion鈥檚 obligation to make repayments to Wipro,鈥 the Insolvency Service said.
Howson鈥檚 ban follows two other disqualifications issued by the Insolvency Service to former Carillion directors in the summer.
Former finance chief Zafar Khan was disqualified for 11 months, while former group finance director Richard Adam was given a 12-and-a-half-year ban.
Litigation against the remaining directors of the firm is ongoing, with a trial set to commence the week of 16 October.
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