It is our belief that the direction of the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church is controlled by the Hales family and their closest allies through an entity called the Global Advisory Panel, known within the PBCC as GAP. While the PBCC publicly denies any formal hierarchy or leadership structure, GAP operates as precisely that: an executive board with global reach, approving expenditure, directing the Ecosystem and setting the course of the organisation from the top down.

Company Registration and the ATO Raid

GAP also exists as an incorporated Australian company: GAP Global Pty Ltd. Its registered address is at the Sydney Olympic Park precinct, the same premises as UBT, the central business support hub for all PBCC-linked operations. These premises were the subject of a raid by the Australian Tax Office in March 2024. Since that raid, eight of the company's thirteen directors have resigned. Whether they have left the actual advisory panel, or simply removed their names from the public record, is a question we cannot definitively answer.

We have evidence that GAP is responsible for approving expenditure across PBCC charities — decisions as granular as resurfacing a meeting room car park or approving planning applications for new halls. We believe GAP had significant input in the recent closure of UBT Accountants in Australia and the forthcoming closure of Campus & Co, the Brethren-only retail operation. It does exactly what it says: it is the Global Advisory Panel, and it functions as the executive board of what is, in every practical sense, a commercial corporation.

Director Changes: Before and After the ATO Raid

At the start of 2024, GAP Global Pty Ltd had 13 directors, all of whom had served since 2016. In the 18 months that followed the March 2024 ATO raid, 8 of those directors resigned and 2 new appointments were made. The timing is notable.

Directors — 1 January 2024
Philip McNaughtonAUS
Lloyd ChirnsideAUS
Jim HazellUK
Greg MasonNZ
Mick StrangeUSA
Logan CurrieNZ
Dean HalesAUS
Cameron HalesAUS
Caleb HallNZ
Rod DiplockUSA
Jonathan HubbardAUS
Brent ScottCAN
John RichUK
Directors — 1 July 2025
Caleb HallNZ
Rod DiplockUSA
Jonathan HubbardAUS
Brent ScottCAN
John RichUK
Glen StaceyUKNew
Jerome JoyceAUSNew

The addition of Glen Stacey and Jeremy Joyce is significant. We were aware of their business interests within the PBCC network but had not previously identified them as holding positions at this level of the hierarchy. Their appointments suggest either a deliberate restructuring of who holds formal positions, or a replacement of those who stepped back following the ATO scrutiny.

Director Profiles

Collectively, the current and former directors of GAP Global run companies with combined revenues likely running into the billions. Their geographic spread, spanning Australia, New Zealand, the UK, the USA and Canada, strongly suggests they represent the PBCC's senior leadership in each of their respective countries.

Dean Hales
🇦🇺 Australia
Resigned post-ATO
Second son of Bruce Hales. Involved in numerous businesses including Ox Tools and 2San. Heavily linked to Covid-era contract awards. Reportedly coordinated PBCC involvement in the 2025 Australian federal election campaign.
Cameron Hales
🇦🇺 Australia
Resigned post-ATO
Nephew of Bruce Hales. Owner of Atlan Stormwater and director of All Pumps. Was until recently a director of UBT Holdings Ltd, the central holding vehicle for the Brethren Ecosystem.
Philip McNaughton
🇦🇺 Australia
Resigned post-ATO
Accountant and close ally of Bruce Hales. Was a director of UBT Accountants. His daughter is married to Gareth Hales, Bruce Hales' eldest son, placing him at the very centre of the Hales family circle.
Lloyd Chirnside
🇦🇺 Australia
Resigned post-ATO
Owner of Melbourne-based Criterion Industries and Entro Global. Described by some insiders as like a "fifth son" to Bruce Hales. Extensively involved in PBCC charities and businesses across multiple jurisdictions.
Caleb Hall
🇳🇿 New Zealand
Continuing director
Global CEO of UBT and director of a large number of UBT-linked companies including Campus & Co and Coshield Global. Also a director of Emma Janes Foods in New Zealand. One of the most senior operational figures in the Ecosystem.
Jonathan Hubbard
🇦🇺 Australia
Continuing director
Owner of New Zealand-based Numerik and Enable Consulting Group. Involved in the Brethren Vision investment fund as a director of Vision Invest and Vision Accelerator.
Rod Diplock
🇺🇸 United States
Continuing director
Owner of ControlTek. Interests span UBT, Coshield and the National Assistance Foundation. Serves as a PBCC representative in the United States. Also named in the Klondike Papers.
Brent Scott
🇨🇦 Canada
Continuing director
Owner of Saskarc Industries, Avro GSE and Axiom Equipment Group. Leads Safesmart Access in Canada, which is owned by Greg Hales, third son of Bruce Hales, underlining his closeness to the Hales family.
John Rich
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
Continuing director
Owner of Polarseal Tapes & Conversions and IST Scientific. Director of the PBCC Vision Investment Fund in the UK and of Events EUK alongside Jim Hazell.
Jim Hazell
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
Resigned post-ATO
Linked to the UK operations of Dean Hales' Ox Tools. Father of Anthony Hazell, who won a controversial Covid PPE contract, and brother of Bruce Hazell, the Charity Commission appeal spokesman for the PBCC.
Logan Currie
🇳🇿 New Zealand
Resigned post-ATO
Shareholder in Cubro, selling a 72% stake to Bunzl in 2024. Involved in a range of investment companies and was formerly the Managing Director of OneSchool Global, the PBCC's worldwide schools network.
Mick Strange
🇺🇸 United States
Resigned post-ATO
Australian-born, now based in the USA. Owner of Allfasteners and involved in the National Assistance Foundation. Featured in the Klondike Papers investigation into PBCC financial structures.
Greg Mason
🇳🇿 New Zealand
Resigned post-ATO
Business interests include Pump & Valve Specialities and Atlan Stormwater. Involved in Campus & Co via CTT Investments and the Vision Invest fund.
Glen Stacey
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
Newly appointed 2025
Owner of Enfield Safety Supplies. Director of OneSchool Global, the Bible & Gospel Trust and previously a director of both the PBCC and the Rapid Relief Team. His appointment signals continued UK representation at the top of the structure.
Jerome (Jeremy) Joyce
🇦🇺 Australia
Newly appointed 2025
Runs Tyremax with interests in Pennae Group, Jaybro, Safemould and Kallibr Group. The Joyce family have sold businesses for hundreds of millions. His appointment brings significant commercial weight to the post-ATO board.

"GAP acts as the executive board of a commercial corporation — one in which business acumen, networking and loyalty to the Chairman are the keys to success and progression."

Brethren Exposed Investigation — July 2025

What GAP Reveals About the PBCC's Real Structure

The PBCC is on public record denying that any hierarchy exists within the church. Local communities, it insists, are autonomous. There is no leader, no board, no rules. The Brethren are simply 55,000 people who share similar views.

The existence of GAP Global Pty Ltd, with its 15 identified directors drawn from the most senior business figures across five countries, all serving since 2016, directly contradicts that position. Consolidating the known businesses of current and former GAP directors would produce revenues in the billions. Their geographic spread — Australia, New Zealand, UK, USA, Canada — maps almost precisely to the countries where the PBCC has the largest concentrations of members and commercial interests.

It is also worth noting what happened after the ATO raid in March 2024. Within 18 months, eight directors resigned from the public company record. Among those who stepped back: Dean Hales and Cameron Hales from the Hales family itself, and Phil McNaughton, the accountant whose daughter is married into that family. We do not believe that resigning as a named company director means leaving the actual advisory panel. It means leaving the paper trail.

A Church or a Commercial Corporation?

We return, as we often do, to the same fundamental question: is the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church a genuine religious organisation, or is it a commercial corporation that uses the apparatus of religion as a control mechanism for those further down the pyramid?

The PBCC, as a named church, exists to provide legal protection, grant charitable status and generate public benefit credits that translate into millions in tax relief and regulatory favour. The actual organisation — with its rules, its hierarchy and its decision-making — operates through the commercial structure. GAP is, in our view, where that structure sits at the top.

We will continue to track the Global Advisory Panel and its directors. It is the heart of the brethren ecosystem, hiding in plain sight.