Kinnara Fixates on $10,000 as Questions Mount Over $10 Million in Client Funds
Insiders say the latest legal posturing from Kinnara exposes a stark imbalance of priorities: intense scrutiny over a $10,000 internal payment, while around $10 million in client money paid to Kinnara for Marina Bay City remains largely unaccounted for.
The $10,000 in question was made by Marina Bay Investments, a private company owned and controlled by Lux, after Kinnara had already been bought out. Despite having no ownership, control, or legal standing in the company, Kinnara CEO Adrian Campbell has issued demands seeking explanations for that payment.
The response from the Lux founder has been unequivocal: he will repay or reverse the $10,000 immediately—once Kinnara returns the approximately $10 million in client funds paid directly to Kinnara for Marina Bay City villas and allegedly diverted into Kinnara-controlled bank accounts.
“The $10,000 is a private internal transaction in a company Kinnara no longer owns,” a Lux representative said. “The real issue is the millions of dollars clients paid to Kinnara for villas that were never funded.”
Financial reviews cited by Lux indicate that clients paid Kinnara more than $10 million AUD, yet only around $236,000 AUD was ever transferred onward to Lux to actually fund construction for those same clients. Observers say the disparity is impossible to ignore.
“If you’re chasing $10,000 with lawyers while sitting on $10 million of client money, it looks like deflection,” one industry source said.
As forensic accountants and legal advisers examine fund flows, investors are demanding answers: why construction stalled, where their money went, and why so little reached the developer tasked with building their homes.
The real danger now, investors warn, is that as the police investigation into the matter gathers momentum, the Kinnara CEO may attempt to flee with remaining investor funds before those monies are secured or placed into an independent trust.
That concern is heightened by past reporting in Australian media, which documented earlier matters involving Adrian Campbell. According to those reports, Campbell previously left Australia while on bail, travelling to Bali following allegations involving forged cheques and the theft of Telstra copper cables. Separate matters were also reported involving the Queensland Department of Fair Trading, where he was fined and charged hundreds of thousands of dollars, as well as another case reported in the Canberra Times and Brisbane Times, in which he was charged over the sale of an international product he allegedly did not hold the licence for, supported by forged documentation.
Investors now fear that the pattern described in those reports—raising funds, coming under scrutiny, and leaving jurisdictions—could repeat itself if immediate safeguards are not put in place.
The unanswered question confronting Kinnara is now unavoidable: will it place the remaining client funds into an independent, audited trust account to protect investors, or will it continue pursuing aggressive tactics aimed at destroying Lux, intimidating staff, and attempting to seize control of a company it has already sold—while the missing money remains unresolved?
Until those funds are properly accounted for and protected, the issue remains unchanged:
clients paid Kinnara for villas to be built—and the money required to build those villas is still missing.










