Christopher Joell-Deshields, CEO of Pride in London since 2021, has been dismissed following an investigation into allegations of misusing donated vouchers worth £7,125. The funds, intended for a raffle, were spent on personal luxury items including an Apple HomePod speaker, AirPods earphones, and high-end colognes like Creed Aventus, which starts at £165.
Allegations of Financial Mismanagement
Whistleblowers highlighted a pattern of purchases suggesting personal benefit rather than organizational use. Additional claims involved financial mismanagement and inadequate protection of volunteers from bullying. Joell-Deshields received his full £87,500 salary during his suspension before termination at the end of last month. He denies any wrongdoing.
Board’s Decision and Leadership Change
The Pride in London board confirmed Joell-Deshields is no longer employed or affiliated with London LGBT Community Pride, the group organizing the annual event. In September 2025, an independent investigation examined his conduct after his suspension on August 29, 2025. His appeal was reviewed and upheld by independent counsel.
Rebecca Paisis now serves as interim CEO. She emphasized delivering a safe, successful event while leading with integrity.
Ongoing Legal Disputes
Joell-Deshields faces a legal dispute after allegedly obstructing the investigation. In September 2025, a High Court judge issued an injunction requiring him to return control of operational systems, bank accounts, and work equipment, preventing him from representing Pride.
Companies House records indicate his company control ended on August 27, 2025. He appeared in court in January on contempt charges for non-compliance, admitting one count related to failing to provide a signed statement on returned property. His team explained a company laptop was not returned as it was purchased after his personal device was damaged during work use.
Lawyers for Pride returned to court on March 27, 2026, claiming property like a laptop remained unreturned after seven months. The High Court ordered a default judgment in Pride’s favor if no defense is filed within two weeks. Pride regained access to its systems and accounts.
Event Funding and Challenges
Pride in London, costing over £1 million annually, draws more than a million attendees. Corporate sponsors fund floats at up to £8,500 each, with £125,000 from the Greater London Authority supporting the parade.
Recent cutbacks in diversity, equality, and inclusion initiatives pose challenges. Liverpool Pride canceled last year due to finances, and Manchester Pride entered liquidation owing £70,000 to performers and £1.3 million to suppliers. Pro-Palestine activists protested last year’s event, throwing red paint on the lead float over sponsorship ties to firms linked to Israel’s Gaza actions.
The parade proceeds as planned in July.

