Daily Mail

Lady Lucan’s bitter blast at her children from the grave

-

THE fugitive 7th Earl of Lucan’s wife, Veronica, refused to speak to her three children for more than 35 years.

Now, she has delivered her withering verdict on them from beyond the grave.

I can disclose that the Dowager Countess of Lucan, below, who died from a cocktail of drink and drugs last September after incorrectl­y diagnosing herself with Parkinson’s disease, has explained in her will why she refused to leave a penny of her £ 576,626 estate to her son, George, the 8th Earl of Lucan, or to his sisters, Lady Camilla Bloch, QC, and Lady Frances Bingham.

‘In view of the lack of good manners and reverence shown to me as their parent, I do not wish any of my three children to benefit from my death any more than they have to,’ she declared in the document, which has been released by the probate office.

Lady Lucan told me in 2015 that her son had bartered ‘the accidental privilege of his birth’ by abandoning her to live with his aunt and uncle.

She accused George — who was seven when his nanny, Sandra Rivett, 29, was beaten to death with a lead pipe at the family’s townhouse — of withholdin­g important belongings from her.

George and his sisters lived with their mother in Belgravia following Lucan’s disappeara­nce in 1974. Veronica was hurt in the attack and her husband was named as the murderer at Rivett’s inquest. Custody was transferre­d to Veronica’s sister, Christina Shand Kydd and her husband, Bill, eight years later after Lady Lucan reportedly became mentally ill. However, Veronica told me: ‘I did not suffer a mental breakdown. Custody of my children was transferre­d to the Shand Kydds because my son declared in an affidavit that he would find it much more congenial to live as part of the family of his aunt and uncle.’ George said he had no alternativ­e as he was only 14 and had to move, under the direction of his guardianin-law, the Official Solicitor. Veronica left her entire estate to the homelessne­ss charity Shelter. George, who married AnneSofie Foghsgaard, the daughter of a wealthy Danish industrial­ist, in 2016, said: ‘I applaud the decision.’ The size of her fortune will leave Lady Lucan’s friends bewildered as she did not own her mews house and lived in such squalor that the lavatory didn’t flush properly and her wallpaper was peeling. She said she needed the £50,000 she hoped to earn from her memoirs to buy a new kitchen.

 ??  ?? 8th Earl: George and Anne-Sofie
8th Earl: George and Anne-Sofie
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom