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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Hopes remain that Burleighs Gin will still be bought out of administration as scale of debts revealed

Newly released documents show Burleighs was £1.58m in the red when it went under at the start of December

Burleighs Marilyn Monroe Pink Gin

Administrators for Burleighs Gin still hope a buyer can be found, more than a month after being called in.

It comes as newly released documents show Burleighs was £1.58 million in the red when it went under at the start of December.

Administrators at Begbies Traynor said following the collapse they still hoped a new owner would step in and today gave an update saying “the company is not going to be liquidated”.

Back in mid-December they had said a preferred buyer had been found for the distillery, which is based in the Charnwood Forest in north Leicestershire.

They also said they hoped a deal would be concluded by Christmas. That deadline has passed, but a Begbies Traynor spokesman said “the sale of the business as a going concern is ongoing.”

It comes as a statement of affairs for Burleighs Gin Ltd uploaded to Companies House suggested the total assets of the business available to its creditors – from machinery, furniture and less than £15,000 cash in the bank – stood at less than £20,000 on December 5.

Meanwhile the documents show the distiller owed almost £268,000 to the FSE Group for a loan issued on behalf of the Midlands Engine Investment Fund (MEIF), and more than £852,000 to a company called Autarky Ventures Ltd, the previous name for Burleighs Holdings Ltd.

Burleighs Gin owed a further £294,500 to HMRC. Other creditors included Leicester City Football Club, which was owed more than £5,000, Leicester Tigers, owed more than £4,200, and Leicestershire County Council, which was owed almost £6,300.