When Declan Taite first approached Myles Kirby and John Healy about joining forces, the proposition was a simple one. For almost a decade, Kirby and Healy had run Kirby Healy as a boutique insolvency and forensic accountancy practice. They had built it from the ground up, servicing government bodies, law firms, and corporates, and had earned a reputation for tenacity in complex insolvency and forensic work. The two accountants had worked on a host of complex, byzantine cases – from liquidating the online fundraising platform Ammado to investigating MUT 103 Ltd, an Irish investment vehicle used to funnel money into…
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