📰 Kinnara Investors Furious Over Alleged Misuse of Funds as Villas Remain Unbuilt
A growing number of Kinnara investors are reportedly furious after discovering that millions of dollars allegedly collected for the construction of their villas were never transferred to the developer, Lux Property, while Kinnara’s CEO, Adrian Campbell, is accused of spending large sums of investor money on luxury helicopter travel and media intermediaries instead of construction.
According to information provided by Lux Property and investors who have come forward, Kinnara collected funds from clients on the basis that their villas would be built within the Marina Bay City project in Lombok, Indonesia.
However, Lux states that only a fraction of those funds were ever passed on for construction, making it impossible to build the villas that Kinnara’s clients are still waiting for.
💰 Funds Collected — But Not Transferred
Lux Property maintains that the situation is straightforward:
• Kinnara collected money from its clients
• Lux did not receive most of those funds
• Without funding, construction cannot legally or practically commence
Lux says this has left dozens of investors believing they own villas that were never funded for construction.
🚁 Helicopter Spending Sparks Investor Anger
At the same time, investors are expressing outrage over what they describe as extravagant and unnecessary spending by Kinnara’s management.
One of the most controversial examples is the alleged use of investor funds for helicopter trips to Marina Bay City — a project Kinnara was bought out of by Lux Property in October last year.
According to multiple accounts:
• Helicopter transfers are said to cost up to AUD $10,000 per return trip
• A standard public ferry to the same destination costs approximately AUD $32
For many investors, this contrast has become a powerful symbol of what they see as reckless financial priorities.
“We paid to have our villas built, not to fund helicopter joy rides,”
one angry investor said.
“How can they say there’s no money for construction when they can spend $10,000 on a single trip that costs $32 by ferry?”
📺 Media Campaigns vs Construction
Investors are also raising concerns that significant portions of their money are allegedly being spent on:
• Media intermediaries
• Public relations campaigns
• Corporate attacks aimed at Lux Property
— rather than being used to:
• Pay builders
• Purchase materials
• Commence construction
• Deliver the villas investors paid for
Lux states it has repeatedly warned that it cannot and will not build villas that have not been paid for.
🧱 Lux: “This Is Not a Construction Dispute”
Lux Property says responsibility is clear:
• Kinnara collected the funds
• Kinnara must transfer those funds to the developer
• Only then can villas be built
Instead, Lux alleges Kinnara is attempting to pressure Lux into building villas without receiving payment, something Lux describes as commercially, legally, and ethically impossible.
“This is not a construction dispute,”
a Lux spokesperson said.
“It is a funding dispute. You cannot build villas without being paid. Helicopter flights and media attacks don’t pour concrete or pay workers.”
🔍 What Investors Now Believe Their Money Is Being Used For
For many Kinnara investors, the optics are deeply disturbing.
They now believe their funds may be allegedly used for:
🚁 Luxury helicopter transfers
📣 Paying intermediaries
⚔️ Corporate attacks and destabilisation campaigns
Instead of:
🏗️ Paying builders
🧱 Purchasing materials
📐 Commencing construction
🏡 Delivering their villas
📑 Growing Demands for Transparency
Some investors have reportedly begun demanding formal accounting transparency, including:
• Full bank statements
• A breakdown of how their funds were spent
• Proof of payments made to Lux Property
• Evidence of any remaining funds allocated to their villa construction
Others are now considering legal action, stating they no longer trust that their money is being handled in good faith.
“What we are seeing doesn’t look like mismanagement,”
another investor said.
“It looks like our money is being used to fight corporate battles and fund a luxury lifestyle, while we’re left with nothing but promises.”
🧭 Conclusion
As pressure continues to mount, the situation has become a critical test of accountability for Kinnara’s management.
Investors say they do not want:
❌ Excuses
❌ Media narratives
❌ Blame-shifting
They want one thing only:



















