Lord Richard Dannatt, the former head of the British army, has been found to have broken rules four times since 2022 after using his peerage to open doors for business interests.
Dannatt was awarded a peerage by David Cameron in 2011 and received the Queen's House at the Tower of London as part of his role as constable of the Tower of London. He has used these roles to introduce companies, including one from Sierra Leone that was seeking permission for a Β£500m hydroelectric dam project, to ministers and officials.
However, Dannatt has also been accused of using his position to facilitate conversations between companies and government officials in exchange for payments.
In 2012, two undercover journalists from the Sunday Times secretly filmed Dannatt as he suggested joining their advisory board to promote a new defence product in exchange for Β£100,000 per year.
The House of Lords committee has ruled that Dannatt's actions were breaches of the rules and have imposed a four-month suspension on him. The decision was made after an investigation found that Dannatt had broken the code of conduct by offering his services as a paid member of a fake company's advisory board and by attempting to influence a criminal investigation into a group that attacked a factory owned by a US defence contractor.
Dannatt has accepted the sanction and expressed regret for his actions, stating that he hopes people will place them in the context of his 56 years' public service.
Dannatt was awarded a peerage by David Cameron in 2011 and received the Queen's House at the Tower of London as part of his role as constable of the Tower of London. He has used these roles to introduce companies, including one from Sierra Leone that was seeking permission for a Β£500m hydroelectric dam project, to ministers and officials.
However, Dannatt has also been accused of using his position to facilitate conversations between companies and government officials in exchange for payments.
In 2012, two undercover journalists from the Sunday Times secretly filmed Dannatt as he suggested joining their advisory board to promote a new defence product in exchange for Β£100,000 per year.
The House of Lords committee has ruled that Dannatt's actions were breaches of the rules and have imposed a four-month suspension on him. The decision was made after an investigation found that Dannatt had broken the code of conduct by offering his services as a paid member of a fake company's advisory board and by attempting to influence a criminal investigation into a group that attacked a factory owned by a US defence contractor.
Dannatt has accepted the sanction and expressed regret for his actions, stating that he hopes people will place them in the context of his 56 years' public service.