Rebuttal: “Integrity Cannot Be Claimed — It Must Be Proven”

Published following Jayne’s Baby Bank’s public video response, 6 October 2025


Carrie-Anne Ridsdale, trading as Jayne’s Baby Bank, has released a fifteen-minute video attempting to discredit the whistleblower investigation. Her statements fail to refute any evidence and instead confirm core aspects of the report while introducing new falsehoods — including claims about a “fake Ukraine appeal.”

1. Confirmation of Food Diversion

“You’re allowed to take 10% of Olio collections and Fareshare you’re allowed to take up to 20… The least they can do is have a crate full of food for themselves.”

This statement confirms that volunteers were instructed to retain food — a practice directly addressed in correspondence from Olio’s support team. Screenshots from Olio confirm that Carrie-Anne Ridsdale (using the account “Cerii”) was banned from the Food Waste Hero programme after multiple reports of misuse. The messages from Olio staff explicitly state that her collection privileges were revoked following complaints from participating stores and local volunteers.

Ridsdale’s attempt to justify her actions by citing a “10% rule” misrepresents Olio’s actual policy. While Food Waste Heroes may keep a small portion (up to 10%) of food for personal use, this rule applies only to authorised collectors operating within Olio’s active scheme. Once removed or banned, an individual is no longer permitted to collect or redistribute any food under Olio’s name.

Her additional claim of a “20% allowance” for FareShare is equally inaccurate. FareShare’s 20% reference concerns produce quality control — ensuring that no more than 20% of fruit or vegetables arriving at their depots show rot or mould. It is a safety measure, not an entitlement for any collector to keep food.

The combination of her confirmed Olio ban and her misrepresentation of FareShare’s internal inspection threshold further validates the whistleblower’s account of food diversion under false pretences.

2. Admission of Deceptive Branding

“You are aware that Jayne’s Baby Bank is the decoy… while we’re over here doing something else.”

“We decided to sacrifice that one because that’s the one they’re focused on while we’re over here doing something else.”

“It wouldn’t matter if I changed my name tomorrow to Sue Anne Fields Memorabilia and Prostitution Museum… People will still turn up and buy from me because I’ve got integrity.”

These remarks collectively amount to an unambiguous admission of deliberate misrepresentation. By describing Jayne’s Baby Bank as a “decoy,” Ridsdale confirms that the name functions as a shield brand — a distraction deployed to absorb scrutiny while other undisclosed activities continue elsewhere. Her further comment that the name was “sacrificed” reveals premeditation: the organisation was set up to be expendable once public attention intensified.

The notion of “doing something else” while the public focuses on the Baby Bank directly supports the documented pattern of parallel or successor operations such as Jarmani’s Charity Boutique, Second-Hand Land, and Community Shop One. Each has appeared after exposure or regulatory contact, featuring near-identical social media material, shop interiors, and staff, but under new branding. This pattern now stands confirmed in her own words.

Her additional quote — that she could rename the organisation to “Sue Anne Fields Memorabilia and Prostitution Museum” and still have people “turn up and buy” — goes further. It demonstrates open disregard for truthful representation and for the public’s right to know whom they are supporting. The statement implies that brand identity, honesty, and charitable status are irrelevant so long as sales continue. This directly contradicts her repeated public insistence on “integrity” and undermines claims of transparency or charitable motivation.

Taken together, these statements establish intent: Jayne’s Baby Bank is not an isolated project but a rotating trading identity used to preserve income and evade accountability. The language of “decoy,” “sacrifice,” and name-swapping confirms a pattern of concealment consistent with the rebrand trail already evidenced by public records, online archives, and whistleblower testimony.

3. Dismissal of Accountability

“Jayne’s Baby Bank is just the one you lot focused on while we’re over here doing something else.”

“It wouldn’t matter what I called it — people still come because we’ve got integrity.”

Such remarks reinforce her belief that brand identity and regulatory legitimacy are irrelevant. The admission that she can freely rename operations without consequence underlines a calculated evasion of accountability.

4. Justification of the “Volunteer Skim”

Recruitment material: “Volunteers can take 20% or a green tray full.”

This policy formalised diversion of donated or surplus food before recipients saw it, matching whistleblower testimony.

5. Deflection and Personal Attacks

Ridsdale avoids the evidence and targets individuals. Examples from the video include:

  • “You need lithium for a week… Stematel for a week or two.”
  • “90,000 of your followers are bots you made up.”
  • “You’re not right in the head… you’re spiralling.”
  • “We’ve taken you down, single-handedly.”
  • “You cannot buy integrity. People know we’re telling the truth.”
  • “Jayne’s Baby Bank is the decoy… we knew we’d have to go through this trial by fire with you.”
  • “I could change it tomorrow to Jerry McCann’s appreciation society and people would still buy from me.”
  • “We’ve shut two of you down and now two of you are under investigation.”
  • Unverified accusations aimed at named individuals and their family members.

Each of these statements reflects an escalating hostility and confirms a pattern of public intimidation, false superiority, and deliberate deception rather than factual rebuttal.

6. False Claims About “Donations”

“Minimum payment is, you know, a pound because that’s all a card machine will take.”

A compulsory £1 to obtain goods is a sale, not a donation. Donations are voluntary. Labelling mandatory payments as “donations” misleads consumers regarding cost and charitable status.

7. The False “Ukraine Appeal” Narrative

Ridsdale repeats a claim that former charity founder Nicola Williams conducted a “fake Ukraine appeal.” Evidence now published refutes this.

Nicola Williams, founder of registered charity Cwtch-Up (1194295), has provided documentation showing delivery of aid to refugees in Przemyśl, Poland, near the Medyka–Shehyni border. Video evidence confirms she crossed into Ukraine to deliver supplies to a midwife operating a Polish Red Cross ambulance evacuating patients.

This directly contradicts claims that the appeal “never took place.” Further supporting material includes:

  • Screenshots of Jayne’s Baby Bank posts alleging a “fake” appeal (January 2024 – September 2025).
  • Emails alleging unauthorised use of Cwtch-Up’s charity number to solicit donations.
  • Messages referencing a “second appeal” for Ukraine and later “Uganda,” which Nicola asserts were covers for hoarding or rebranding donations.

Video Evidence

Recorded at the refugee centre in Przemyśl, approximately 10 km from Ukraine, with subsequent aid handover across the border:

https://jaynesbabybank.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Cwtch_Ukraine.mp4

Historical Claims by Jayne’s Baby Bank

The newly released video evidence contradicts the above posts and confirms legitimate humanitarian delivery.

8. The Integrity Claim Revisited

“You cannot buy integrity. It’s earned.”

“We would have been shut down by now. We’re five years down the line, Sherlock.”

Integrity is demonstrated through transparency and lawful practice. Admissions of decoy operations, misuse of donation language, and false public allegations are incompatible with integrity. Rather than evidence of honesty, her continued operation despite multiple complaints and bans points to loophole exploitation, not legitimacy.

Conclusion

  • Admission of volunteer retention and distortion of FareShare’s 20% quality-control rule.
  • Admission that “Jayne’s Baby Bank” is a decoy brand.
  • Normalisation of identity changes to maintain sales.
  • Personal attacks replacing evidence.
  • False claims about a registered charity’s Ukraine appeal, now disproven by video.

These on-record statements and contradictions warrant review by relevant authorities and redistribution partners.


— Sherlock

⚖️ Legal Note

This report records statements, screenshots, emails, images, and direct quotes supplied to the investigation. It is not legal advice. Allegations remain unproven unless established by investigation or court process.