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Kantor Foundation Investigation Concludes, £1.3m Redistributed to Good Causes

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Summary

The Charity Commission concluded statutory inquiries into the Kantor Foundation and Kantor Charitable Foundation, finding both charities no longer viable after their founder Dr Vitacheslav Kantor was designated as a 'designated person' under the UK's Russia Sanctions regime in April 2022. The inquiries found Dr Kantor responsible for misconduct and/or mismanagement for failing to proactively resign following designation and for non-cooperation with the regulator. Interim Managers distributed £1,388,000 to charitable causes and recovered a violin worth £150,810 for gifting to a registered charity promoting musical education. Both charities have been wound up and removed from the Register of Charities.

“Once designated, an individual cannot legally act as a trustee. Dr Kantor's failure to step down immediately, his decision to ignore the Commission and failure to cooperate, amounted to misconduct and/or mismanagement.”

Why this matters

Trustees and connected parties of charities operating in the UK should understand that designation under the UK's Russia Sanctions regime triggers automatic disqualification from acting as a trustee — the Commission treats failure to promptly step down following designation and non-cooperation with investigations as misconduct. This case illustrates how the interaction between sanctions law and charity governance creates personal liability risk for trustees who remain in office following designation.

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What changed

The Charity Commission's statutory inquiries into the Kantor Foundation and Kantor Charitable Foundation concluded in June 2023 that both charities should be wound up and dissolved. The inquiries determined that Dr Kantor, as sole donor and primary funder, made future funding unlikely following his designation under UK Russia Sanctions. With no remaining trustees and reputational damage from the designation, neither charity was viable. Dr Kantor was found responsible for misconduct and/or mismanagement for failing to proactively resign after designation and for non-cooperation with the regulator's investigation. Interim Managers distributed £1,388,000 in remaining funds via charitable grants and recovered a violin valued at £150,810 for gifting to a registered charity.\n\nCharity trustees and connected parties should note that designation under the UK's Russia Sanctions regime triggers automatic disqualification from acting as a trustee. The Commission treats failure to promptly step down following designation and non-cooperation with regulatory investigations as misconduct and/or mismanagement, even absent other financial irregularities. Charities with trustees facing potential sanctions designation should seek independent legal advice regarding succession planning and trustee succession.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Press release

Investigation into charities run by designated person results in over £1.3m redistributed to good causes

The Charity Commission has concluded its statutory inquiries into the Kantor Foundation and Kantor Charitable Foundation, finding neither charity remained viable after the designation of the charities’ founder, Dr Vitacheslav Kantor.

From: The Charity Commission Published 22 April 2026

Both charities were set up to provide grants to projects and causes in any part of the world as long as they were exclusively charitable. The charities shared a sole corporate trustee, which was a private limited company known as Kantor Trustees. One of the company’s directors, sole member, and the charities’ primary funder was Dr Kantor.

Background

In April 2022, the UK Government named Dr Kantor as a ‘designated person’ under the UK’s Russia Sanctions regime. This meant that it was now a criminal offence for funds or economic resources in the UK to be made available to Dr Kantor.

In the same month, the Commission opened inquiries into charities connected to Dr Kantor, these were: the Kantor Charitable Foundation (KCF), Kantor Foundation (KF) and the World Holocaust Forum Foundation (WHFF). The regulator froze charity bank accounts and prevented the trustee from parting with any of the charity’s property without the Commission’s prior consent. In May 2022, the regulator removed Dr Kantor as a trustee of WHFF meaning he was automatically disqualified from being a trustee and ceased to be a director of Kantor Trustees.

Findings

In June 2023, the inquiries concluded that the Kantor Foundation and Kantor Charitable Foundation were no longer viable and that they should be wound up and dissolved. The inquiries reached this view having taken into consideration that Dr Kantor was the sole donor and it would be unlikely that either charity could secure future funding. There were also no trustees to run the charities following Dr Kantor’s designation and subsequent resignation of the other directors from the Kantor Trustees company.

The inquiries also determined that reputational damage arising from the designation, meant that it would be unlikely that the charities could resolve these matters through fundraising or recruitment.

The inquiries found that Dr Kantor was responsible for misconduct and/or mismanagement in the administration of both charities for failing to proactively resign following his designation.

Dr Kantor’s failure to cooperate with the regulator’s investigation also amounted to misconduct and/or mismanagement.

Recovery of funds

In May 2022, the regulator appointed Interim Managers to both charities as there were no longer any trustees running the charity. As part of their work to wind up the charities, they identified a number of outstanding Gift Aid claims were owed. After settling the charities’ liabilities, the Interim Managers distributed the remaining funds via charitable grants to several organisations, in line with the charities’ purposes. The total figure distributed to support charitable causes amounts to £1,388,000.00.

The Interim Managers also recovered a violin made by Italian violin maker, Riccardo Antoniazzi, which had been on loan from the Kantor Foundation. The violin – valued by the Foundation in 2019 as being worth £150,810 – has since been gifted to a registered charity. The terms of the gift stipulates that the violin must be used to promote musical education for the public benefit.

The charities have both been wound up and have since been removed from the public Register of Charities.

Joshua Farbridge, Head of compliance and visits and inspections at the Charity Commission, said:

Once designated, an individual cannot legally act as a trustee. Dr Kantor’s failure to step down immediately, his decision to ignore the Commission and failure to cooperate, amounted to misconduct and/or mismanagement.

It also fell below our expectations of trustees. As a result of our investigations, we have now wound up both charities.

We are pleased some good can come to other charities and causes as a result of our intervention. Instead of assets lying dormant, or owed Gift Aid lost, we’ve been able to see a much-needed boost of over £1.3m into the sector, and a culturally significant musical instrument gifted to a charity furthering musical education.

Ends

Notes to editors:

  1. The Charity Commission is the independent, non-ministerial government department that registers and regulates charities in England and Wales. Its ambition is to be an expert regulator that is fair, balanced, and independent so that charity can thrive. This ambition will help to create and sustain an environment where charities further build public trust and ultimately fulfil their essential role in enhancing lives and strengthening society. More information is available on gov.uk.
  2. On 7 April 2022, the Commission opened statutory inquiries into the Kantor Foundation and Kantor Charitable Foundation under section 46 of the Charities Act 2011.
  3. The full report into the Kantor Foundation and Kantor Charitable Foundation is available on gov.uk.
  4. The Commission concluded its inquiry into the World Holocaust Forum Foundation in December 2023. The full report is on gov.uk.
  5. More information on the UK’s Russia Sanctions regime, and what this sets out in law, can be found here: The Russia (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019 Press office

Email pressenquiries@charitycommission.gov.uk

Out of hours press office contact number: 07785 748787

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Charity Commission
Filed
April 22nd, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Nonprofits Legal professionals
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Sanctions compliance Charity investigation Charity winding up
Geographic scope
United Kingdom GB

Taxonomy

Primary area
Sanctions
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
OFAC Sanctions
Topics
Civil Rights Government Contracting

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