Scottish Daily Mail

Janner gave his children deeds to his £2m home at height of abuse probe

- By Sam Greenhill

LORD Janner signed over the deeds of his £2million home to his children at the height of the police paedophile case against him.

It puts the luxury apartment out of reach for potential child abuse victims suing the peer for compensati­on.

His flat, in a gated community near Hampstead Heath, north London, was transferre­d free of charge to his two daughters and son in March last year – the same month that police raided his Westminste­r office, and three months after they had swooped on his home.

The revelation follows an outcry over the decision not to prosecute the former Labour MP for child abuse.

Victims and leading politician­s accused Director of Public Prosecutio­ns Alison Saunders of ‘damaging public confidence’ in the justice system with her ruling that Lord Janner’s dementia made him unfit to stand trial – despite a tide of evidence against the 86-year-old.

But his mental health did not seem to

‘Sufficient mental capacity’

stand in the way of him signing legal documents to transfer ownership of the flat.

Last night, Liz Dux, a solicitor from Slater and Gordon representi­ng several of the peer’s alleged victims, said: ‘They will be asking how a man who lacks the mental capacity to stand trial has sufficient capacity to give valid instructio­ns to transfer his assets.

‘It will be of great concern to them to see what may be their last opportunit­y to achieve any sort of justice deliberate­ly obstructed.

‘The court would be asked to look at any transactio­ns undertaken i n recent months which could constitute efforts to defraud potential creditors.’

Peter Garsden, a solicitor representi­ng two other alleged victims, said: ‘Obviously it puts obstacles in the way … There must be suspicions about the intention of the transfer.’

Lord Janner’s duplex apartment over ground and basement floors, with private off- street parking, is likely to have been his most valuable asset. A neighbouri­ng flat was recently on sale for £1.99million.

In 2013, paedophile BBC presenter Stuart Hall signed over the deeds of his £2million house to his wife just before he was jailed – then offered those he had abused as little as £2,000 to prevent them claiming compensati­on.

Civil cases are being prepared to force Lord Janner to pay sizeable compensati­on to his alleged victims. His flat had been owned solely by him since June 1988, Land Registry documents show. Police raided the property in December 2013 as part of Operation Enamel into historic claims he molested a string of youngsters. Ownership was transferre­d to his children, Daniel Janner, Marion Janner and Laura Janner-Klausner, on March 26 last year.

A Land Registry official confirmed the mortgage-free flat had not been sold, quoting from a transfer document that said: ‘The transfer is not for money and not for anything that has a monetary value.’

Any solicitor assisting with the conveyanci­ng process would have had to be sure Lord Janner was of sound mind. Since he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2009, the former Labour MP has claimed more than £100,000 in parliament­ary expenses and allowances. On April 9, he was fit enough to sign a letter saying he wanted to remain in the House of Lords.

A week later, the Crown Prosecutio­n Service decided Lord Janner would not be tried over child sex allegation­s as he was suffering so much from Alzheimer’s disease that he could not understand any charges, let alone answer them.

This was despite the fact it ruled there was enough evidence to charge him with 22 sex offences against children from 1969 to 1988.

Victims have accused authoritie­s of helping to cover up the crimes of a once powerful man and destroying any hope they had of justice. Campaigner­s, MPs, police and victims have vowed to challenge the decision in the courts.

Lord Janner is accused of preying on boys at care homes around his former Leicester West constituen­cy. He was first investigat­ed over abuse claims in 1991 but no further action was taken.

Last night, a spokesman for the Janner family would not comment.

 ??  ?? Transfer: The luxury property housing the apartment formerly owned by Lord Janner, inset
Transfer: The luxury property housing the apartment formerly owned by Lord Janner, inset

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom