
Major update on bust IT firm after more than 100 Scots workers axed
LEGAL WAR Major update on bust IT firm after more than 100 Scots workers axed
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A top law firm has launched a legal war on behalf of furious workers ditched without a penny by a collapsed Scots cyber security firm.
Thompsons Solicitors Scotland are now representing more than 100 ex- Adarma staff who were booted out the door with no pay, after the Edinburgh-based company plunged into administration last week.
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Adarma offered a wide range of security services, including thread detection, security operations, bespoke security and managed data analytics
Credit: PA:Press Association
Shell-shocked employees were initially told the firm was on the hunt for a new buyer — only to be left stunned just days later when bosses pulled the plug completely.
The Scottish Sun understands 173 axed workers across Scotland and England were then told they would not be getting their monthly salary or any of the other cash they were owed.
The firm employed 176 people from its Edinburgh and London hubs.
Now Thompsons — who've fought and won for hundreds of Scots dumped in similar sudden collapses — have stepped in to take on some of their cases, and are vowing to secure compensation.
The legal outfit has previously bagged payouts for staff at Fife's Tullis Russell paper mill, Glasgow's Watt Brothers department store and warehouse workers in Ayrshire infamously given just 15 minutes' notice by a firm owned by retail mogul Mike Ashley.
Paul Kissen, the top legal eagle heading up Thompsons' Protective Award Unit, blasted Adarma for the way they treated their workers.
He said: 'Yet again, loyal, hardworking employees have been led up the garden path by a company that knew it was in trouble, but told them nothing. They've been treated with utter contempt.
'These workers are entitled to compensation through a protective award — and I'll make damn sure they get it.
"Even staff who were only there a short time can expect several weeks' pay.'
One former employee, who asked not to be named, revealed the cloak-and-dagger tactics used in the run-up to the company's collapse.
Edinburgh Cybersecurity Giant Adarma Collapses with 173 Jobs Lost
He said: 'We were told management was looking for new owners, but we were under strict orders to keep clients in the dark and make sure they kept paying.
'Not long after, we were told the company was in administration - and we weren't getting paid. We were completely kept in the dark and then dumped without warning.
'As usual, it's the workers who suffer while the top brass walk away.'
Adarma, once a rising star in Scotland's booming tech scene, is now the latest high-profile casualty in the volatile IT sector.
Adarma offered a wide range of security services, including thread detection, security operations, bespoke security and managed data analytics.

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