Daily Mail

Fake ‘Lady’ who stole £3m from charity is hauled back to court ... by her own brother

Three decades after her story hit headlines...

- By Christian Gysin

A SELF-STYLED aristocrat infamous for stealing £2.7million from a charity almost 30 years ago is at the centre of a High Court battle after £110,000 ‘disappeare­d’ from her late father’s estate.

rosemary Cubbin, 58, who called herself Lady rosemary Aberdour, claiming to be worth £20million and descended from a Scottish Lord, was jailed for four years in 1992.

In reality she was a doctor’s daughter from Essex and earned £21,000 a year as a bookkeeper at the National Hospital Developmen­t Foundation, whose patron was Princess Diana.

The bogus Lady was finally caught after going on a three-year spree with the money she stole from the charity – which would be worth £5.8million today.

She lived a fantasy lifestyle in a £10,000-a-month penthouse overlookin­g the Thames in Battersea, south London, where party guests found lobsters in the bath waiting to be cooked.

The fraudster would turn up at the charity where she worked in a chauffeur-driven

Accused: Rosemary Cubbin and brother Robert Aberdour, inset Bentley, and sent the limousine now being sued at the High to Harrods to buy steak Court in London, accused of for her labrador, Jeeves. Cubbin misappropr­iating funds. even hired a car and driver Her brother, robert Aberdour, to take her dog from London asked Judge Stephen for a walk in Scotland. Lloyd to remove her as an

After she was caught out by executor of their father Dr a forged cheque, she fled to Kenneth Aberdour’s estate Brazil. But she was tracked due to her failure to explain down and returned to Britain where £90,000 in cash and to be jailed, serving half her items from their father’s four-year sentence. Cubbin is house had gone. The siblings were the only beneficiar­ies when their father died in 2018. Mr Aberdour’s barrister, Joshua Winfield, said Cubbin could ‘not account for a significan­t sum of money’.

She had power of attorney for their father before being removed in 2017.

The Public Guardian, which protects the interests of those who can no longer make decisions for themselves, investigat­ed her conduct.

Mr Winfield added: ‘ The conclusion was that she had to account to the estate for missing funds, household items and certain unsubstant­iated payments.

‘There is an ongoing police investigat­ion as well.’

The High Court heard that suspicions were raised about what was happening before the Office of the Public Guardian was called in.

Sums topping £ 156,000 between 2014 and 2016 had to be accounted for by Cubbin, who repaid more than £47,000 and produced receipts for some legitimate spending, leaving a shortfall of £89,000.

Along with items allegedly missing from the late Dr Aberdour’s home, the shortfall was £109,568. Mr Winfield said. However, Cubbin claimed the amount was closer to £30,000.

The siblings and their partners have now agreed to be replaced as executors of the estate by an independen­t solicitor. The case continues.

 ??  ?? Fantasy lifestyle: Cubbin as ‘Lady Aberdour’
Fantasy lifestyle: Cubbin as ‘Lady Aberdour’
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 ??  ?? From the Mail, March 28, 1992
From the Mail, March 28, 1992

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