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My sister splurged our £475k inheritance & bought a Porsche as I grieved mum’s death – I sued but doubt I’ll see a penny

SITTING on the pew in front of her late mother’s coffin, Olivia Wright felt angry on her behalf.

Her older sister Emma Parfrement had turned up at the last minute, dressed in a less-than-sombre outfit of metallic cowboy boots, pink trousers and a fluffy top.

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Olivia Wright sued her sister who took control of their mother’s finances in 2017 when she became mentally fragile[/caption]
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When Angela Wright died, Olivia was cut out of the inheritance, and went to court to sue her sister[/caption]
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Olivia says Emma Parfrement, pictured with her ex-husband Neil, suddenly returned to the fold upon learning their mother had dementia[/caption]

“It was ridiculous,” recalls Olivia, 49, from Upminster, Essex.

“She sat at the back bawling her eyes out with a friend and then disappeared straight after the service, without attending the wake I’d organised and paid for.

“Dressing like that for your own mum’s funeral spoke volumes to me.”

But Emma’s behaviour in the years prior to Angela Wright’s death in November 2019 had already rung alarm bells with her sister.

After being estranging from her relatives for four years, she suddenly returned to the fold when Olivia informed her Angela had dementia.

She quickly secured sole power of attorney and put her mum in a care home.

She used this unfettered access to quietly siphon off the widow’s life savings, blowing it on a Porsche and allowing her ex-husband, Neil, to make risky investments.

Her actions left Olivia without a penny of inheritance and led to a costly four-year court battle to get to the truth.

While her sister’s actions were brazen, disputes over wills are increasingly common, with an estimated 10,000 per year in England and Wales.

Specialist solicitors say the passing of the property-rich boomer generation and a rise in dementia diagnoses are fuelling the financially ruinous and emotionally exhausting legal battles.

‘Been to hell and back’

“I believed her intentions were dishonourable even before Mum died but no one wanted to listen,” says Olivia, a special needs teacher who is married to carpenter Kirk, 60

“I’ve been to hell and back fighting for justice, spending all my savings. But I don’t expect to get a penny back — it’s all gone.

“If she’d stolen that money from a shop or a business, she’d be in prison. It’s not right.”

The warring sisters grew up in Chipstead, Surrey, and their parents, Norman — who died in 2004 aged 74 — and Angela, worked hard to give them a good life.

“Emma was three-and-a-half years older and we were very different,” Olivia says “I always felt she was embarrassed by me as a child.

“We got on better in our twenties and socialised together with our partners. Her then husband Neil was houseproud, the type to follow you round with a dust buster.

“They sent their kids to private school and had the best of everything. I felt like they looked down at me because I earned less and lived in a semi-detached house.”

Out of the blue in 2013, Olivia received a shock email from Emma, cutting all contact.

If she’d stolen that money from a shop or a business, she’d be in prison. It’s not right

“Emma and Mum always had a strained relationship, I think because they were quite similar,” she says. “Being the eldest, she was probably pushed harder to succeed.

“Emma decided she didn’t want to know Mum any more — and that meant me too.

“Mum turned up at her house a couple of times, desperate to see her grandsons, but Neil wouldn’t let her in. She was very upset.

“I’d had my daughter Elana, now 14, by that time and it hurt me that she couldn’t have a relationship with her cousins. But I respected Emma’s decision and life moved on.”

The rift continued until July 2017 when Olivia became concerned about their mother’s health and suspected she had dementia.

What is lasting power of attorney?

THIS is a way of giving someone you trust the legal authority to make decisions on your behalf if you are no longer able to.

There are two types – one for financial decisions and one for health and care – and you can set up lasting power of attorneys for both.

You can only create one if you have the mental capacity to do so and have not been put under pressure, but it is not necessarily permanent.

LPAs for health can only be used if you lose mental capacity, but financial ones can kick in sooner, if you prefer.

The system is overseen by the Office of the Public Guardian and you do not need a solicitor to draw one up.

Out of courtesy, she wrote to her estranged sister — who swooped in and took Angela to stay with her.

“Mum had been confused and paranoid for a few months, so the doctor had referred her to a memory clinic,” says Olivia.

“I was surprised when Emma said she wanted to help and give me a break.

“But she kept calling to say what a nightmare Mum was and then put her into a care home for four weeks’ respite. She never left.”

The home was near Emma and a two-hour round trip for Olivia, making it hard to visit.

“It all happened very quickly and in hindsight, I think she was keeping Mum close in order to manipulate things,” says Olivia.

“I suggested we get power of attorney but offered to do it alone if she didn’t want to be involved. Emma insisted it should be shared — then I got a letter to say it had been granted to her solely. I was furious.

“Why would you want to come back and manage someone’s finances if you’d cut them out for four years?

I had sleepless nights and times of pure anger

“I later found out she told people, including our mum’s financial advisor and care home staff, that I’d had a nervous breakdown. I think she was trying to paint a picture that she was the best person for the job.”

Olivia was assured by Emma that the care home fees were being covered by her mum’s savings.

But what she did not know is that her sister was also cashing in Angela’s ISAs and transferring large chunks of cash into her own current account, before giving the money to her now ex-husband to invest.

The former spouses had secretly drawn up an agreement that he would keep 50 per cent of any profits made.

Emma, 53, also sold Angela’s home, where the sisters had grown up, with Neil’s help, informing her sister by email.

“She treated me with such contempt, I had no say in anything,” says Olivia. “I was told to collect what I wanted and the rest would be disposed of.

“I didn’t want much, just my childhood things and the piano.” Within a year of going into care, Angela deteriorated so badly, she had to be moved to a secure dementia unit, before her death, aged 86.

To Olivia’s eternal regret, she arrived 15 minutes too late to say goodbye — and only Emma had been present.

“When she saw me come in, she looked flustered, gave me a hug and disappeared into the night,” she recalls. “I was very upset but she didn’t want to talk to me.”

The oddness continued as Olivia planned the funeral.

“We only had one phone conversation and Emma said: ‘I will pay for the funeral but I will not pay for a wake’.

“It was an odd choice of phrase because I expected Mum’s estate to cover it. This was not Emma’s money.

“In the end I paid for it and I wasn’t even sure if Emma would show up, until she appeared in her brightly coloured outfit.”

The situation soon started to unravel as Olivia pushed Emma about applying for probate — the legal right to manage someone’s property and possessions when they die — and her sister was evasive.

“I’d had my suspicions for a while and had already complained to the Office of the Public Guardian that her intentions were dishonourable regarding the power of attorney,” she says.

“They didn’t want to know and once Mum died, they said it was out of their hands.

“I sent Emma a letter by recorded delivery to find out what was going on. She returned it without accepting it. It set off alarm bells.”

I’ve had to put my grief to one side the last five years to fight this

Determined to right the wrong, Olivia launched a legal battle that would take four years, cost her £38,000 of her savings and even land her in hospital.

“We couldn’t find the will but luckily, I had a copy of our dad’s one that showed Mum made hers on the same day.

“The judge accepted that it would’ve been along the same lines and they were able to reconstruct it in February 2022.”

Finally, in July this year, Olivia faced down her sister and former brother-in-law at Central London County Court.

“I had sleepless nights and times of pure anger,” says Olivia.

“The day before the hearing, I was so unwell, I had to go to hospital and needed an MRI scan to rule out a mini stroke. Doctors suspected it was stress-related.”

After years demanding answers, Olivia felt vindicated when Judge Nigel Gerald ordered Emma and Neil to pay back £475,000 to the estate, plus around £200,000 interest.

‘Virtually no money left’

He said that, as a result of their reckless actions, there was “virtually no money left”.

Bank statements showed Emma had transferred nearly all the money to Neil, a former advertising agency boss, which he wasted on spread betting.

He returned around £144,000 to her but she splurged it on luxury items, including a Porsche 4×4. Despite the ruling, Olivia doubts she will see any compensation.

“Emma was living in a five-bedroom house in Surrey but is pleading poverty and claims she cannot pay,” she says.

“I only got to this stage because I had lawyers working pro bono to help. I’ve had to put my grief to one side the last five years to fight this. I haven’t even put Mum’s name on her gravestone yet.

“I still feel badly let down by the institutions that should have protected Mum.

“This wasn’t a fallout over the family silver. I feel like my mum’s memory and inheritance has been stolen from me, and my sister and her ex should face proper justice.”

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How pub row led to Anthony Joshua threatening to ‘smash a f***ing chair’ over Daniel Dubois ahead of Wembley fight

ANTHONY JOSHUA’S summer of spite toward Daniel Dubois was sparked by a row down the pub.

The clean-cut, multimillionaire golden boy – who used to down Mad Dog 2020 alcopops en route to nightclubs as an unknown teen – keeps in touch with his community now by still dipping into the local haunts.

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Anthony Joshua challenges Daniel Dubois for the IBF heavyweight title at Wembley[/caption]
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The pair had to be separated by security and promoter Frank Warren during a heated sitdown face-off in June[/caption]
a group of men are standing around a table and one of them is wearing a white tank top
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An out-of-character AJ threatened to hit Dubois with a chair[/caption]
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AJ made the menacing threat a week after having to put a young upstart in his place during a trip to one of former boozers[/caption]

These days the 34-year-old reformed bad-boy bricklayer only does his fighting in the ring and conducts himself like a true ambassador of British sport.

But the week before the June 26 launch press conference for Saturday night’s IBF world title war, a local loudmouth tried to take a liberty and the old ‘Femi’ from the Meriden Estate, who once struck fear around North London, was forced into a comeback that Dubois will now face the full force of.

We were stunned when during their first media event, Joshua threatened to “smash this f***ing chair” over Dubois’ face, after he felt the 27-year-old disrespected him.

But it turned out the uncharacteristic threat of violence was a calculated move from the chess fan, after a row down the boozer brought out the beast.

In his funniest and most open chat with the British boxing media, the superstar reminded us that he’s still just the lad next door – who can really swing a bit.

Grinning widely, he explained: “I was in the pub the week before. Obviously I’m not around as much, there’s a new generation coming through.

“One little kid – well, I’m 35, he’s probably 30-something – thought he could say something.

“His mate tried to show him something, and he said: ‘I don’t give a f*** if AJ is here.’ I said: ‘What?! Don’t ever think you can talk like that.’

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AJ vs Dubois: Build up to the big fight

ANTHONY JOSHUA and Daniel Dubois go head-to-head at Wembley THIS Saturday.

Ahead of the all-British heavyweight showdown, here’s all the biggest stories and need-to-know information…

“You can’t let anyone think they can speak to you in a certain way.

“Because at the pub, there’s other people who are looking at this person talking to me like that.

“F*** boxing, you know who I am and you know what I’m about, so don’t ever think you can disrespect me – because it won’t end well for you.

“So, we draw a line under that. Then, the week after, Dubois tried to get mouthy!

“So, I’m still in the mindset where you don’t let anyone think that they can take an inch.

“So, ‘Dan, I’m gonna put a stop to you there, I will smash this f***ing chair across your face, and I’ll ram the f***ing pole down your throat!’

“You have to let someone know that you’re not f***ing about, and hopefully that will ripple out to everyone else.

“I don’t want any problems, but I’m in an industry where I’m fighting.

“I’m not in golf, I’m not playing tennis, I’m in a sport with men with testosterone – gladiators that will take any opportunity to try to belittle you and test your toughness.

“It was calculated, it all stemmed from the week before. It wasn’t sporadic.

“ I just realised: you can’t let anyone get an upper hand on you.”

When SunSport asked if the London 2012 icon stopped the incident escalating to protect a front page scandal, he laughed us off: “Me? Me, leave? No way!

“I’d get a call ‘AJ, I had a phone call from The Sun about this thing that happened in the pub.'”

Joshua spent time on remand in Reading prison before he turned his life around with a visit to Finchley ABC gym aged 18.

He has since barely raised his voice outside the ring, let alone his fists.

The emotional breakdown after the second Oleksandr Usyk defeat was a vulnerable human opening up, not lashing out.

But under the Hollywood smile and squeaky-clean reputation lies the fearless brawler whose hands still carry the giant callouses earned on cobbles, not canvas.

ANTHONY JOSHUA VS DANIEL DUBOIS: All the information you need ahead of huge world title fight at Wembley

“I’m a nice person,” he grinned. “But honestly, I’ll switch as well. So, you pick what side of the fence you want to sit on.

“Most people are alright with me, but I will definitely go to extremes that I don’t think they’re ready for.

“It’s up to them which way they wanna do it.”

Earlier in fight week, after the ultra-violent feng shui was shelved, Joshua gave twice-beaten Dubois credit.

Big Josh gave his rival a glowing comparison to Frank Bruno, whose tear-soaked 1995 Wembley world title win – at the fourth-time of trying – made him a national treasure.

But, when asked for his mirror image from that star-studded heavyweight golden era, he gave himself a far more menacing and dominant force who came within seconds of destroying his own legendary Wembley night in 2017.

“If he’s Frank Bruno,” he paused. “I’m Wladimir Klitschko: had a few setbacks, rebuilt, came back stronger, getting better with time, found a new trainer, went through different stages in my career – a learning process – to now being at uni.

“That’s what they say about Emmanuel Steward: it was like going to uni. So yeah, I feel like Wladimir Klitschko.”

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Daniel Dubois will be defending his IBF heavyweight strap against Anthony Joshua[/caption]
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GETTY
Joshua reckons Dubois will be able to handle the magnitude of the moment at Wembley[/caption]

It sounds like Dubois is in serious need of back-up.

But new trainer Don Charles – who got great comebacks out of the psychologically fragile hulk in the most recent wins over Jarrell Miller and Filip Hrgovic – has been missing all week.

The Pug Gym trainer is at war with Dubois’ overbearing father – and now official British Boxing Board of Control licensed manager – Stan.

Hall-of-Famer promoter Frank Warren is working hard to make sure his 6ft 5in, 17st knockout machine – with the timid demeanour of a polite boy – has proper support for the biggest fight of his life.

But AJ is again flowing with compliments as he says his old sparring partner will not crumble under the expectation of 96,000 fans and one pushy parent.

“I think he’s gonna be fine,” he said. “Honestly. He’ll be fine. You have no other choice but to rise to the occasion, unfortunately.

“You’ve come this far, he’s walked out at Tottenham, he’s walked out in Poland, he’ll walk out in Wembley.

“The thing is, once that first bell goes, you’re in the fight, and it doesn’t matter anymore about anything.”

Read More »

Coronation Street’s Betsy Swain reveals horrifying secret – but it could put Joel Deering behind bars

CORONATION Street’s Betsy Swain’s horrifying secret has been revealed – and she could be responsible for putting Joel Deering behind bars.

The teenager – who is played by actress Sydney Martin in the ITV soap – has been struggling since she discovered Lauren’s baby had survived an attempt on forcing an abortion.

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Joel Deering is finally facing the consequences of his vile actions[/caption]
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Betsy has exposed his sick actions towards Lauren and the baby[/caption]

But with baby Frankie facing a life-threatening situation, it became too much for her.

She broke down to Carla Connor

“Joel did it, he was the one that hurt him and he got me to help him,” Betsy told her mum.

“He tricked me mum. He gave me money to ring this private health clinic and made me say I needed an abortion so they’d give me the drugs.

“He lied to me, he said they were for a client and said she was young and vulnerable and that she needed my help. I wouldn’t have done it if I knew he was going to hurt someone.”

Lisa comforted her daughter and then told her she had to make a statement.

After that she went to collect Joel and arrested him for illegally administering a noxious substance with intent to cause harm.

Interrogating him, Lisa let Joel talk himself into a corner, denying ever having the drug or knowledge about it.

And then she dropped into it that she had a recording of the call where the order was made.

Playing it, Joel could be clearly heard coaching Betsy through the call and having it delivered to Dee Dee’s house.

He tried to claim that Betsy was pregnant and the drugs were for her but it didn’t work.

And Lisa took great pleasure in informing Joel that he was being charged.

Coronation Street Spoilers: News & Cast Updates

The beloved British soap has been captivating audiences for decades.

The show follows the lives of the residents as they navigate love, loss, family drama, and community struggles.

Here’s the latest on:

“I quite like our chances, what with Lauren, Betsy and Ellie all prepared to give evidence in court, the recording from the health clinic…”

Joel demanded bail and he was told he had to hand over his passport before being released.

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Gary Lineker in talks with BBC over multi-year deal for Match of the Day after volunteering to take pay cut

GARY Lineker is in talks with the BBC over a multi-year deal for Match of the Day — after volunteering to take a pay cut.

The veteran presenter, 63, could agree to stay on for £1million a year — £350,000 less than his current salary.

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Gary Lineker is preparing to sign a new six-figure deal with the BBC after volunteering for a pay cut[/caption]
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Gary Lineker during his first MOTD appearance in 1999[/caption]

Lineker, who has hosted the BBC footie highlights show since 1999, is to meet executives next month over a potential deal lasting at least two or three years.

Talks are understood to have been briefly delayed following the recent Jermaine Jenas scandal.

The shamed former Spurs star, 41, who was reportedly in the running to replace Lineker, was sacked for inappropriately texting two women on The One Show.

A source said: “Gary is hugely popular with both fans and players alike. The sense is that, with so much uncertainty and scandal at the BBC, right now viewers are crying out for a safe pair of hands.

“Gary adores the BBC, and loves his job, and recognises what an honour it is to host television’s flagship football show, as well as international games.

“Gary has long maintained that the BBC provides excellent value for money – and has quite literally put his money where his mouth is, and offered to take a substantial pay cut.”

MotD2 host Mark Chapman, 50, has also been tipped to take over when Lineker’s contract expires at the end of the season.

Last year the former England striker was reprimanded by the BBC after a critical social media post about the Government’s asylum policy.

He was forced to miss a show but colleagues loyally refused to fill in for him, so only match highlights were shown instead.

The upcoming pay negotiations come as the BBC is under enormous pressure to reduce its wage bill.

Since 2021, it has laid off 1,800 employees and cut budgets across programmes.

BBC chiefs are also still trying to claw back £200,000 paid to disgraced newsreader Huw Edwards since his arrest last November over child sex abuse images.

BBC director-general Tim Davie said the crimes were “appalling”, adding: “We want the money back and we’ve asked for it back, and we’re waiting to hear back.”

A spokesman for Lineker declined to comment, as did the BBC.

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Getty Images - Getty
Lineker is to meet executives next month over a potential deal lasting at least two or three years[/caption]

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Royal Expert: Meghan Markle is “Well-suited” to Become the Next Oprah

Meghan Markle was a remarkable actress before she transitioned into a real-life princess. But before that, she was mostly widely known for her participation as Rachel Zane in the American legal drama Suits. She was a part of the show for seven seasons, but upon her marriage to Prince Harry, Markle retired from acting. However, […]

This post belongs to FandomWire and first appeared on FandomWire

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Watch Out Pixar: Bob Iger Must be Sweating after The Wild Robot Box Office Prediction Confirms DreamWorks is Playing to Win

The Wild Robot is slated to release in theaters later this month, with the Chris Sanders-directed movie generating plenty of hype before its release. Produced by DreamWorks Animation, the film is based on the Peter Brown novel of the same name and features an ensemble cast, including the voices of Lupita Nyong’o, Pedro Pascal, Kit […]

This post belongs to FandomWire and first appeared on FandomWire

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Attorney Addresses Report Diddy Is on Suicide Watch in Prison

Sean “Diddy” Combs’ lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, is clarifying recent reports that the disgraced music mogul has been placed on suicide watch in prison. This course of action is routine procedure for “new, high-profile inmates,” the attorney told Us Weekly in a statement on Friday, September 20. Diddy, 54, is “not at all suicidal,” Agnifilo added, […]

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