Covid hero Captain Tom Moore’s disgraced daughter has been spotted driving a £140,000 Mercedes just days after top brands ditched her for cashing in on her father’s legacy.
Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin are now known to have earned up to £1.5million from deals involving the pandemic hero, who raised millions for the NHS.
A damning Charity Commission report found the couple guilty of misconduct and warned the public had been ‘misled’ when buying items they thought would benefit the Captain Tom Foundation (CFT).
The 54-year-old bought the top-of-the-range German SUV two years ago, The Sun understands, after she was seen using it for a shopping trip close to her Bedfordshire mansion.
The Ingram-Moores’ biggest payday came from the ‘misleading’ suggestion that the proceeds from a £1.4 million book deal would go to the organisation.
The commission revealed they had been asked to ‘rectify matters by making a donation to the charity in line with their original intentions as understood by those involved’ but they had ‘declined to do so’.
Capt Moore, who died aged 100 in February 2021, became an international sensation after he began walking around the yard of the family mansion in Marston Moretaine raising money during the Covid crisis.
Ms Ingram-Moore was still trying to cash in on her father’s legacy as yesterday she was still flogging £3,500 life-coach packages, The Sun reports.
Hannah Ingram-Moore (pictured) and her husband Colin are now known to have earned up to £1.5million from deals involving the pandemic hero, who raised millions for the NHS
The 54-year-old bought the top-of-the-range German SUV two years ago, The Sun understands, after she was seen using it for a shopping trip close to her Bedfordshire mansion
The £140,000 Mercedes SUV could be seen parked outside her home after the report emerged
The Ingram-Moores’ biggest payday came from the ‘misleading’ suggestion that the proceeds from a £1.4 million book deal would go to the organisation. Oictured: With Captain Tom after completing the 100th length of his back garden in 2020
The PR expert’s online business is still being promoted with a picture of a father with coaching packages for ale between £1450 and £3500 saying they offer ‘intuitive guidance’.
The package promises: ‘Hannah can help you move past the challenges you’re facing in your life and achieve the goals that have felt out of reach’.
It comes as MailOnline visited the family’s Bedfordshire home yesterday — the site of the demolished £200,000 back garden spa the couple became notorious for building.
We found locals who once worshipped the intrepid military veteran have been left incensed by the way Mrs Ingram-Moore has tarnished his legacy.
Lisa Shaw said: ‘Captain Tom would have been so unhappy about this – he must be turning in his grave.’
The Marston Moretaine-based waitress added: ‘His fundraising efforts raised a lot of attention and helped a lot of people. I’m sure this is not how he would’ve wanted it to be seen.’
Another neighbour Marilyn Wright, 74, whose bungalow backs onto the Moore mansion, said: ‘It is a disgrace.
‘All those millions were raised and now it has been made to look a bit tacky with this report.
Hannah Ingram-Moore pictured with her late father Captain Tom Moore in the garden of his home near Milton Keynes in April 2020
Ms Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin (pictured together) were found to have benefited ‘significantly’ through their association with the high-profile charity
‘We need to be told exactly where the money went and how. I know that Tom had a book in his name and that raised a lot of money, but I understand the royalties didn’t go to the charity. It’s also mucky.’
Also living nearby is Barbara Clack, 68, who said: ‘What was a very good foundation is now being dragged through the mud.
‘I know the spa has been torn down and to be honest it wasn’t a good look. There was a big breeze block wall which you could see from outside. My friend who has a bungalow there complained about it.’
But she added :’They are getting a bad press but we do need to hear their side of it.’
Mani Singh, a carpenter from the village, said: ‘What was a great charity has gone wrong.’
Mrs Ingram-Moore, who put the house for sale for £2.25 million, has apparently yet to find a buyer.
She was believed to be at home today but declined to answer her video doorbell.
The family had obtained planning permission from local officials for an L-shaped building in 2021, but instead built a larger £200,000 C-shaped one containing a spa pool.
The home of Ms Ingram-Moore and her husband (left) next to their unauthorised home spa (right) in their garden, which has been demolished after a planning row
It added to the controversy over the near £39 million fund which was raised generally through public donations during the Covid pandemic.
Reform UK MP Lee Anderson said the couple’s behaviour was ‘despicable’, adding: ‘They need to hand it [the money] over.
‘They should hang their heads in shame. They’ve profited out of the good work that Captain Tom did.’
Mr Anderson also called for a criminal investigation ‘for misleading the public’.
Lord Foulkes of Cumnock, who sat on the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities, had already called for a police to look into ‘misappropriated’ funds.
Asked yesterday if he thought the Ingram-Moores should return the money, he said: ‘Yes, I do. That’s the honourable thing to do.’
The commission report found Mrs Ingram-Moore, 54, made disingenuous statements over the six-figure sum she wanted to become CFT chairman and pocketed £18,000 for appearing at an awards ceremony which should have gone to the foundation.
She and her 67-year-old husband also caused potential losses to the charity over confusion of intellectual property rights and used the foundation’s name in a planning application for a luxury spa.
They failed to respond to a request for a comment yesterday.
But in a response to the commission’s report, they said previously of the book deal: ‘The publisher paid Captain Sir Tom a fee, it was his and he decided what to do with it.’
The CFT said: ‘We join the Charity Commission in imploring the Ingram-Moores to rectify matters by returning the funds due to the foundation.