TV WAG Lizzie Cundy is being hunted for unpaid bills by a private healthcare company and a luxury car group
TV WAG Lizzie Cundy is being hounded over unpaid bills by a major private healthcare company and luxury car group BMW, The Mail on Sunday has revealed.
A series of charges have been placed on his £1.2m home in a leafy village in Hampshire after he failed to pay off debts.
Ms Cundy may also be declared bankrupt by her former agent this week after she defaulted on a legal demand for just over £23,000.
Head of public relations Dermot McNamara said yesterday: ‘I have known Lizzie for a number of years and have recently started working with her. She agreed to pay me a 20 percent commission on any deal she landed, but she hasn’t paid me.
‘The next step is to file for bankruptcy, which I will do this week. Lizzie constantly talks about how her ex-friend Meghan Markle cheated on her, yet she continues to ignore her debts.
Bills: TV WAG Lizzie Cundy is being hunted for unpaid bills by a leading private healthcare company and luxury car group BMW
Ms Cundy denies that she owes Mr McNamara any money.
BMW obtained a provisional collection order on his home in 2021, while BMI Healthcare obtained a collection order on the property in 2018 after what is believed to be cosmetic surgery at Princess Margaret Hospital in Windsor. There is also a charge recorded on the property in 2014 by billionaire businessman and philanthropist John Caudwell.
A collection order secures a debt against your property, which means that if you sell or remortgage your home before the debt is paid off, the collection order will be paid from the proceeds.
Problem: A series of charges have been placed on his £1.2m home in a leafy village in Hampshire after he failed to pay off the debts.
Cundy, 54 and a mother of two, was married to Chelsea and Tottenham footballer Jason Cundy for 16 years until 2010.
He regularly appears on shows like Good Morning Britain to comment on WAG stories and events. Last year, the Archerfield Partners law firm took her to court for nearly £50,000 in unpaid fees. In court documents dated June 27, 2022, she was ordered to pay the full sum, as well as an additional £5,000 to cover her own costs.
Cundy declined to comment.