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・ Stephen Wiggins
・ Stephen Wight
・ Stephen Wilcox
・ Stephen Wild
・ Stephen Wildman
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・ Stephen van Rensselaer I
・ Stephen van Rensselaer II
・ Stephen Varcoe
・ Stephen Vargo
・ Stephen Varzaly
・ Stephen Vasciannie
・ Stephen Vaughan
・ Stephen Vaughan (merchant)
・ Stephen Vaughan, Jr.
Stephen Vaughan, Sr.
・ Stephen Veljanovski
・ Stephen Venables
・ Stephen Venard
・ Stephen Venner
・ Stephen Verney
・ Stephen Victor Graham
・ Stephen Victor Wilson
・ Stephen VII Báthory
・ Stephen VIII Báthory
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・ Stephen Viscusi
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Stephen Vaughan, Sr. : ウィキペディア英語版
Stephen Vaughan, Sr.

Stephen Vaughan (born c. 1962〔Rossington, Ben; 11 January 2008; (Soccer chief Stephen Vaughan on fraud charges ) ''Liverpool Echo''; Accessed 21 February 2008〕) is an English businessman from Liverpool. Through his ownership of Vaughan Promotions, originally a boxing promotion and management company, he has owned the Barrow and Chester City football clubs, serving as chairman of both.〔Conn.D (2001) (David Conn: Barrow's case exposes hole in ownership rule ), ''The Independent'', 23 November 2001. Retrieved 2011-05-01.〕 During his time as chairman of the two clubs, both clubs initially saw success on the pitch, but his tenure at both ended due to Vaughan's involvement in criminal investigations.〔(Chester City fans rally round to build future out of ruins of the past ) ''The Guardian'' 24 March 2010. Accessed 25 March 2010〕 Vaughan has also been involved with Droylsden F.C.,〔(Barrow's hate figure moves in at Chester ) Conn, David. ''The Independent'' 2 November 2001. Accessed 25 February 2010〕 and has been chairman of the Widnes Vikings rugby league team.
==Barrow==
Vaughan contested 77 amateur boxing bouts. He formed Vaughan Promotions in 1990 to promote professional boxing promotions in the United Kingdom.〔 His company purchased Barrow in 1995, and Vaughan invested heavily in the club, building a new 1200 seat grandstand. His investments led to Barrow winning the Unibond Premier League title in the 1997–98 season. However, during that season Vaughan resigned as chairman due to a money laundering investigation by HM Customs and Excise.〔Murphy, Graham; (''The Road to Obilivion'' ) Accessed 23 February 2008〕 Vaughan's links to gangster Curtis Warren also became public; in Warren's biography, he relates an incident where he flew over Barrow's Holker Street field and commented, "I own that".〔Barnes, Tony; Elias, Richard and Walsh, Peter; 2001; (''Cocky: The Rise and Fall of Curtis Warren, Britain's Biggest Drugs Baron'' ) Milo Books; ISBN 0-9530847-7-9〕 Nothing came of the Customs and Excise investigation, and Vaughan reinstated himself as chairman.
Vaughan had been using his own money to fund the club; when he left Barrow permanently in November 1998, his departure resulted in financial difficulties for the club. Furthermore, it was discovered that Vaughan had transferred Holker Street to his company, Vaughan Promotions, in return for his investment.〔 Barrow were removed from the Football Conference for improper administration. A lengthy dispute over the ownership of Holker Street followed, during which time Barrow was readmitted to play in the Northern Premier League in September 1999. Vaughan remained the major shareholder in the old company, but day-to-day running of the club had been taken over by the newly formed ''Barrow AFC (1999)''. Eventually, it was ruled that the club legally owned Holker Street, and was allowed to sell the asset to pay off the first charge on the stadium to Cherrytree finance.〔(Chester City’s Administration & Stephen Vaughan ) ''Twohundredpercent''. 18 May 2009. Accessed 25 February 2010〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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