Entrepreneur Ajit Chambers (pictured), who designed a method ( with marker pens on the walls of his Clapham flat) to create £200 million by changing London’s abandoned ‘ghost’ tube stations into Tourist Attractions and Multipurpose Venues , has been asked to provide information to the Serious Fraud Office( SFO) after his first station – Brompton Road was bought for £50 million by Ukrainian Billionaire Dmytro Firtash. Firtash was then arrested by the FBI and is now on the UK Governments Sanctions List and Brompton Road ‘Ghost’ Station is being ‘seized’.
Chambers , who presented his ‘Commercially Protected’ Business Plan to Boris Johnson in City Hall along with £200 million proof of funds (captured in the 2011 Bloomberg article), is renowned for promising to give £193 million to Londoners and keep £7 million for his three years invested, stating that ‘’these ‘Ghost Stations’ are owned by every taxpayer and only managed by Transport for London—hence the money needs to go to Londoners’’.
In 2013 UK Prime Minister David Cameron met Chambers to discuss his valuable plans designed with coloured marker pens on his lounge wall in his Clapham flat. Chambers was then invited into no.10 Downing Street, and The UK Government’s Intellectual Property Advisor Mike Weatherly supported Chambers with an Early Day Motion in British Parliament.
Chambers’ story starts to get interesting when you realise that although Chambers’s plans started with Brompton Road, they include another £6 billion worth of ghost tube station sites across London also managed by Transport for London.
It all started to go wrong when Chambers appeared on Russian State TV and caught the attention of Ukrainian billionaire Dmytro Firtash who then suspiciously bought the station up from under him, attempting to use it as his private home in London instead of a publicly accessible tourist destination.
Mr. Chambers urged the UK Government to stop the fraudulent procurement process, organising the Defence Select Committee to write to the Secretary of State for Defence exposing the fraudulent sale, but was ignored.
In 2024 the United Kingdom’s new government placed their Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, David Lammy, in front of Brompton Road ‘Ghost Station,’ permitting the national press to report ‘Brompton Road Ghost Station Site’ and ‘Billionaire Dmytro Firtash’ as primary examples of the United Kingdom’s ability to seize assets acquired by fraud.
The billionaire who Chambers tried to stop stealing his first ‘ghost’ tube station is now ‘stopped’ and on the UK government sanctions list.
Chambers is providing vital information on the Brompton Road Sale to the Serious Fraud Office (SFO). It is possible that executives from Transport for London will be questioned in a ‘Ghost Station Procurement Fraud Case’ and may even be arrested and charged by the Met Police if the SFO finds that the Transport for London executives were knowingly part of this fraudulent transaction.
Speaking exclusively to EU Reporter, Mr. Ajit Chambers said:
‘The big picture is that if Transport for London has used the same procurement system they used on my ‘ghost stations project’ for their newly founded property arm, which handles a much larger taxpayer-owned property portfolio of six billion pounds, the individuals within Transport for London will face fraud charges, which include prison sentences, and are most likely to be used as an example of our new government’s objectives to clean up London.’