Not sure he'll benefit from Helens estate at all now. It would be proceeds of crime wouldn't it?
Unless you mean if he had his own share of it?
I don't know if this is allowed, but suffocation is something that I thought about when I read about his 1st wife's sudden unexpected death.
No, he won't get a penny, unless of course he is found not guilty:
The Estates of Deceased Persons (Forfeiture Rule and Law of Succession) Act 2011 (c. 7) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom altering the rules on inheritance in England and Wales.
The Act originates in a 2000 case, when a man murdered his parents. The court determined that not just the murderer but also his son should be disinherited. The Law Commission took the matter into consideration, and published a Consultation Paper in October 2003 followed by a Final Report on 27 July 2005, which became the basis for this Act.[1]
It came into force on 1 February 2012. Source: Wiki
Gosh I just feel so incredibly sad and angry for her reading all this.
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[COLOR=#141414][FONT="][h=3]Stewart 'did not answer questions on arrest'[/h]The court has been told that when Stewart was arrested he provided no response to police.
But in December a defence statement was handed to prosecutors.
In the statement Stewart asserts that two men named ‘Joe and Nick’ were responsible for the murder and disposal of Helen’s body.
Mr Trimmer continues: “The Crown say simply this was a long planned deliberate killing, a cynically executed murder that had money as its driving motive.”
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/helen-bailey-murder-trial-latest-9595054
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Ah Joe and Nick .......... interestingly, I read, elsewhere, a theory that someone put up which was not dissimilar to this. Are we going down the drugs route ?
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[COLOR=#141414][FONT="][h=3]Author made a will in 2014, naming Stewart as the beneficiary[/h]The prosecution state that on the event of her death, Stewart would benefit from £1.8million in addition to the value of the main Royston house and the second home in Broadstairs. Helen Bailey made a will in 2014 - she was apparently concerned that Stewart might be financially vulnerable if she died.
She expressly provided that her marriage to Stewart would not automatically revoke her will, as would otherwise have been the case. A Power of Attorney was registered in May 2015, giving control of her affairs in favour of the defendant and her brother John Bailey should she become unfit to administer her own affairs.
http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/cambridge-news/live-day-one-murder-trial-12427078
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