The Daily Telegraph

Heir to £230m pie fortune is charged with best friend’s murder

Grandson of Peter’s Pies tycoon accused of stabbing housemate, 23, found on Christmas Eve in Cardiff

- By Jamie Bullen and Alex Barton

A MAN charged with murdering his best friend in Cardiff is the heir to a £230 million pie company fortune.

Dylan Thomas, 23, is accused of fatally stabbing William Bush, who was found dead in a car park next to Llandaff Cathedral on Christmas Eve.

Mr Thomas is the grandson of Sir Stanley Thomas, a Welsh business tycoon whose empire included Peter’s Pies, described as one of the country’s “most iconic products”.

He appeared at Cardiff magistrate­s’ court on Dec 28 and is expected in the city’s Crown Court on Feb 2.

Mr Thomas, a computer programmer, is reported to have been best friends with Bush, 23, with the men both attending the same private school in Cardiff. According to The Sun, the friends shared a terraced house owned by Mr Thomas’s grandparen­ts and Sir Gareth Edwards, the Welsh rugby legend. It is understood Bush was a keen sportsman who worked as a surveyor with a local commercial property firm.

In a statement released through South Wales Police following his death, his family said: “This week our beloved Will was taken away from us in such a cruel and indescriba­ble way.

“Will was such a loyal, funny and caring son, brother and boyfriend. We are absolutely devastated and as a family request that our privacy is respected at this difficult time.”

Mr Thomas’s great grandfathe­r is Sir Stanley Thomas, who died aged 98 in 2015. He founded a catering venture, Thomas Pies, in the 1950s selling sausage rolls, pies and pasties. His two sons, Stanley and Peter, later joined the business, which was sold for £175,000 in 1965 to the Avana Group. Using the proceeds from the sale, the Thomas family started Peter’s Savoury Products, which was sold to Grand Metropolit­an for £75 million in 1988. The family ended its commercial interest in the business there. It subsequent­ly changed hands several times and last year had a turnover of £57 million. The company was famed for supplying baked staples including pies, pasties, sausage rolls and slices into retail, catering and hospitalit­y outlets across the UK.

In 1983, the founder of Thomas Pies, nicknamed Stan, was awarded an MBE for services to the food industry and charitable work. He died in 2015 aged 98. At the time of his death, his son Sir Stanley, who was knighted in 2006 for his charity work and services to business, told BBC Wales: “He was a man of great vision, very astute and terrifical­ly hard-working.

“Hours meant nothing to him and that’s the way he brought myself, my brother and sister up. His vision for the meat pie industry was to automate it and he was the first.”

In 2013, Sir Stanley was reported to have an estimated net worth of £230million with his brother Peter, according to The Sunday Times. His family also owned a share of the TBI group, which owned several airports, including Cardiff. Peter Thomas died in March last year aged 79 after being diagnosed with cancer in 2021.

Having played for Cardiff RFC in the 1960s, he invested in the club in 1994 and was chairman for more than two decades before stepping down in 2018. He was appointed CBE for services to business, sport and charitable work in Wales in 2012. After his death, Cardiff Rugby said: “Peter leaves an immeasurab­le legacy at his beloved club, which would not exist if not for his vast and unwavering generosity and support.”

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 ?? ?? Dylan Thomas, right, with his mother, reportedly shared a house with William Bush
Dylan Thomas, right, with his mother, reportedly shared a house with William Bush

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