logo
Coroner orders mental health reports over death of mother who fell from building while in bitter legal fight with her antique dealer fiance about ownership of £2.7m London property

Coroner orders mental health reports over death of mother who fell from building while in bitter legal fight with her antique dealer fiance about ownership of £2.7m London property

Daily Mail​22-07-2025
A coroner today asked for mental health reports on a mother who fell to her death while embroiled in a bitter legal fight with her fiancé over their £2.7million London home.
Rachel O'Hare, founder of a charity which helps women in domestic violence refuges, was found next to a city centre apartment block last month.
The 49-year-old divorcee was suing her ex–lover, celebrity antiques dealer Owen Pacey, 60, for ownership of a five–storey Georgian mansion, in the trendy area of Spitalfields, East London, before she died.
Ms O'Hare, whose charity Elle for Elle aimed to support women in need by offering them basic toiletries and beauty products, was pronounced dead outside Victoria House, Ancoats, on the edge of Manchester city centre, on June 30.
The mother-of-three was described by friends as a 'kind, energetic woman who put others before herself'.
Area coroner for Manchester Mr Paul Appleton – opening the inquest this morning – asked for details of any mental health treatment Ms O'Hare may have received.
Mr Appleton said: 'I am conducting the opening of the inquest of the sudden and sad death of Rachel O'Hare.
'I have been provided with a witness statement by police coroner's officer Elizabeth Davies.
'Officer Davies described the circumstances of that to be as follows. On June 30, 2025, Rachel was found deceased outside Victoria House on Great Ancoats Street, Manchester.
'Police attended the scene and sadly pronounced her life to be extinct based upon Rachel having injuries which were deemed to be incompatible with life.'
The inquest – held at Manchester Coroner's Court – heard how Ms O'Hare, an interior designer, was formally identified by her passport, and the clothing and jewellery she was wearing, as described by her daughter.
A preliminary cause of death provided by Dr Martin Swali was multiple traumatic injuries.
Mr Appleton added: 'A witness statement is to be provided by Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust as to any relevant contact, care or treatment provided to Rachel.'
A witness statement is to be provided by Rachel's general practitioner and or the surgery.
The coroner went on: 'The full file from Greater Manchester Police is to be provided once complete and the results of post-mortem toxicology analysis are to be provided in due course.'
A date for the hearing is expected to be confirmed later in the year.
According to court documents seen by the Mail, she claims she paid for the London property and it was rightfully hers.
Ms O'Hare alleged that Mr Pacey, a former squatter and self–made antique fireplace expert who counts Mick Jagger, Naomi Campbell, Kate Winslet and Orlando Bloom among his clients, had locked her out of the luxury home.
She says he stopped her from collecting her belongings, refused to pay any bills and threatened to 'trash' the interior, which is packed with beautiful artwork, ornate Italian chandeliers and expensive designer furniture.
The couple, who split acrimoniously in May last year, were due to go head to head over the property at a High Court trial in the next few months.
But just four days after the most recent hearing in the case, at Leeds Combined Court, on June 26, Ms O'Hare was found dead.
The five–storey Georgian mansion in west London that was the centre of Ms O'Hare and Mr Pacey's court battle
In a statement to the court in Leeds, Ms O'Hare claimed Mr Pacey persuaded her to buy the elegant 18th Century house, in Wilkes Street, east London, in their joint names, in June 2021.
She took out a loan and also used the proceeds of her divorce settlement from ex–husband, Steve O'Hare, 50, a Cheshire–based millionaire investment manager, with whom she had three teenage children, to pay for it.
At that time, she and Mr Pacey had been together for less than a year following a whirlwind romance after meeting at his high–end fireplace showroom, Renaissance, which is based in a former Victorian pub, in Shoreditch, east London.
Legal papers seen by MailOnline show that when the former couple bought the house together in 2021, they both signed an agreement specifying that if one of them were to die, ownership of the house would pass to the surviving partner
The documents, drawn up by the solicitors who had handled the purchase of the historic Spitalfields house, had offered Mr Pacey and Ms O'Hare two options: they could either each own a specified proportion of the whole property or they could jointly own the whole with full ownership reverting to the surviving partner if the other predeceased them.
Because they chose the latter option, the documents signed on 1st August 2021 mean Owen Pacey became the sole owner of the £2.7 million 18th Century property in London following Rachel O'Hare's sudden death.
In a newspaper interview while they were still a couple, Mr Pacey claimed it was love at first sight when they first met.
'She bought a table,' he said. 'That was it, as soon as I saw her.'
Ms O'Hare said Mr Pacey, who was brought up in a council flat in gritty Bethnal Green and left school at 14 with no qualifications, promised to pay her his share of the four–bedroomed property within two years, once he had sold the £1.2million maisonette above the shop that he owned.
'The first defendant (Mr Pacey) said he had no money to contribute when the property was purchased but would be able to pay the claimant for his share in due course,' legal documents said.
To give her peace of mind, Ms O'Hare said Mr Pacey also agreed to put half of his fireplace business, worth around £5million, in her name until he secured the monies.
She also claimed they agreed to share the cost of renovating the house – they spent £14,000 on radiator valves alone – and, if he didn't pay his share or they split, it would revert back to her ownership.
Mr Pacey gave her paperwork to sign, which persuaded her he was arranging the legal formalities, and also sent her reassuring texts, saying: 'You are on the title deed either of the flat or shop,' she said.
Shortly before Christmas, in 2022, the couple got engaged and Mr Pacey did 'gift' Ms O'Hare a 50 per cent share in the three–bedroomed maisonette.
He moved into the newly renovated Wilkes Street property and told a journalist: 'I used to dream about living in Spitalfields. To actually live there now – I've never been so happy.'
But Ms O'Hare remained in Mere, Cheshire, with her three school–age children and 10 months later, in October 2023, the couple's 'turbulent' relationship started hitting the rocks.
Ms O'Hare discovered Mr Pacey had never formalised her 50 per cent stake in his business and they began arguing regularly over money.
She claimed she had ended up paying the lion's share of the house refurbishment when he failed to pay builders' fees.
She also alleged Mr Pacey was 'controlling' and instructed lawyers to begin legal action against him.
'The relationship between the claimant (Ms O'Hare) and the first defendant (Mr Pacey) was turbulent,' Ms O'Hare's claim said. 'Incidents led to temporary separations and there was a final and unequivocal parting in May 2024.
'The claimant contends that the cause of the breakdowns was the first defendant's controlling and abusive behaviour, which led to the involvement of the police.'
Mr Pacey was alleged to have promised to put half of his business in Ms O'Hare's name – only to never have done so
In a defence statement also submitted to the court, Mr Pacey denied persuading Ms O'Hare, a respected fundraiser who set up a domestic abuse charity providing toiletries for women living in refuges, to buy the house in their joint names.
He said she did so because they were 'in love' and there was no discussion or agreement about him eventually paying for half of the house or transferring over 50 per cent of his business.
'The parties (Ms O'Hare and Mr Pacey) were going to get married and there was just no discussion about who owned what,' his defence document said.
Mr Pacey, who once described being made homeless and forced to live in a squat in King's Cross after having his first flat repossessed in the 1980s as the 'most traumatic thing I've ever been through,' also denied being controlling.
He said they had only argued seriously twice – both times when Ms O'Hare had been drunk, in Rye, Kent, in the summer of 2023 and the night before they were departing to New York in May 2024.
He also denied not allowing Ms O'Hare access to the property, now estimated to be worth in excess of £3.2m, or not paying bills or threatening to trash it.
He claimed he paid £70,000 towards the house renovation and provided most of the furniture from his shop.
He had also installed six Italian marble fireplaces, worth £350,000, and claimed Ms O'Hare had organised glossy magazine features to show off and promote the 2,700sq ft house, which they planned to rent out for use in £1,000–a–day photo shoots.
According to his statement, dated February this year, he wanted to get the maisonette and the Georgian home valued, so that he could buy her out of both properties.
When approached by the Mail, Mr Pacey refused to discuss his legal dispute with his former fiancee except to say: 'I worshipped the ground Rachel walked on.'
He added that Ms O'Hare had been suffering from poor mental health in the weeks leading up to her death and had recently been treated in hospital.
Mr Pacey said: 'I'm suffering with my own mental health. I don't want to be here without her.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Region's knife robberies rise despite 'dedicated task force'
Region's knife robberies rise despite 'dedicated task force'

BBC News

time42 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Region's knife robberies rise despite 'dedicated task force'

Knife robberies have risen in Greater Manchester despite the creation of a special taskforce set up to combat the problem. The rise is relatively modest at 4%, but other areas considered knife robbery "hotspots" saw reductions, including a 25% drop in the West Midlands. The government announced the taskforce following a steep rise in knife crime in seven police force areas, and the scheme has led to a 6% drop nationally since July 2024. Deputy Mayor of Greater Manchester, Kate Green, said the continued rise in region was related mostly to business robberies, and that "personal robberies" were coming down. Greater Manchester Police has recorded 1,345 knife-enabled robberies in the past 12 months, up from 1,288 recorded between July 2023 and June Green said the figures showed the increase in robberies was also "slowing down". "There's certainly much more to do," she said. "It's why we have a whole lot of initiatives running over this summer, policing the hot spots, stop and search, stopping vehicles and identifying the habitual knife carriers." The statistics include robberies involving the threat of a knife even if a blade is not actually seen by the victim. Moss Side based anti-knife crime campaigner and youth worker Kemoy Walker, whose nephew Prince Walker-Ayeni was stabbed to death aged 17 in April last year, said young people believed "boredom" was a factor in some offending. He told BBC Radio Manchester: "Young people have called out for diversionary activities because what they're saying is the reason why a lot of these things are happening in the community is because they're bored and they've got nothing to do."So as youth workers we've come up with a bit of a plan to try and look at what we can do to support the young people and that's what we're doing locally."Between July 2023 and June 2024, Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, the West Midlands, Avon and Somerset, the Metropolitan Police and the British Transport Police areas accounted for 70% of knife robberies set up in those areas in July 2024 used tactics including drones, knife arches and detection dogs, with the seven forces also increasing visible patrols and the number of plain clothes officers on the Secretary Yvette Cooper said: "When we came to office, knife-enabled robbery was increasing at a concerning rate."We have now started to drive numbers of those offences down through the work of our dedicated taskforces, and as a result, we have also seen the first small reduction in overall knife crime for four years." Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 223

Openreach engineers trial panic alarms as incidents of abuse and assault soar
Openreach engineers trial panic alarms as incidents of abuse and assault soar

The Guardian

time42 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Openreach engineers trial panic alarms as incidents of abuse and assault soar

From scissors being brandished as weapons to verbal abuse and being trapped during a home visit, the number of reported incidents of abuse and assault on telecoms engineers is on the rise. Openreach, the BT subsidiary that maintains the vast majority of the broadband network serving UK homes and businesses, recorded 450 reports of abuse and assault in the year to the end of March. The number of incidents involving Openreach employees was up 8% year-on-year, a 40% increase on 2022-23 and seven times the volume reported almost a decade ago. Abuse and assault has for the first time become the largest cause of injury to Openreach office staff and its 22,000 field engineers. Managers believe the number of incidents is even higher, as many cases are not reported by staff. 'I used to be worried about people falling off ladders, road traffic accidents or tripping over potholes,' said Adam Elsworth, health and safety director at Openreach. 'But actually we have seen a steady increase in violence and abuse. 'A quarter of all the accidents we record are now someone being attacked or abused, and it is continuing to rise. And when I look at these incidents I struggle to see the rationale behind the level of escalation.' Incidents reported by engineers include being shouted at, sworn at or spat it, the blocking of vehicles, being shaken off stepladders, or pushed down stairs while working at someone's home. There are also reports of racial abuse, inappropriate and threatening behaviour towards female engineers, homeowners preventing staff from leaving and specific incidents such as scissors being brandished like a weapon and a customer repeatedly slamming a vehicle door on an engineer's leg. For Openreach, around half of incidents are in public locations, 45% are at homes and the remainder occur at the company's yards or estate. Elsworth said Openreach was trialling a 'panic alarm' on engineers' mobile phones, which connects them in seconds to a monitoring centre that has the power to directly dispatch emergency services if required. 'If an engineer is at someone's home, that is quite a vulnerable space to be,' he said. 'Some of the incidents are quite disproportionate and have created a wariness among engineers. When someone has been attacked, they are then thinking every time they knock on a door what could be coming next. 'A number of these cases do get reported to police, particularly in the case of the more severe ones. It is difficult when there is a threat element.' While Openreach faces the largest number of incidents, it is also a growing issue for other telecoms operators. Virgin Media O2, which has around 4,000 employees working on its cable network and cell masts, reported 26 incidents last year covering physical encounters, verbal abuse and threatening behaviour. However, so far this year the reported number of incidents is up significantly, tracking at a rate that would mean the number doubling for the full year. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion 'Our frontline teams work tirelessly to provide reliable mobile and broadband services millions of customers rely on every day,' said a spokesperson. 'A single incident of abuse or threatening behaviour is one too many, and we're committed to ending workplace violence and keeping our people safe.' At Sky the number of incidents involving engineers in the field reached 99 last year, although the company said it was not seeing any upward trend this year. Sky said it was back to pre-Covid levels of incidents after an increase during the pandemic, with a peak of 392 reported incidents in 2021. The newly-formed VodafoneThree collated about 40 to 50 incidents, while BT-owned EE did not reveal numbers but said that the figure was low. Last month, the major telecoms companies were among 100 co-signatories of an open letter from the Institute of Customer Service (ICS) calling on the government to amend the crime and policing bill. The bill will make it a standalone offence for assault on a retail worker, the sector that has been the most vocal about the safety and security of staff. As it stands the bill does not offer any protection for customer-facing workers across other sectors – including telecoms and infrastructure – with the ICS estimating that about 60% of the UK workforce operates in some form of customer-facing role. 'You hear about the situation in sectors such as retail, trains, public transport but telecoms is a bit of a forgotten child in this,' said Elsworth. 'But when you are talking about engineers in someone's home, well that's quite a unique challenge.'

Danger driver attacked police after Bishop Auckland crash
Danger driver attacked police after Bishop Auckland crash

BBC News

time42 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Danger driver attacked police after Bishop Auckland crash

A dangerous driver who attacked a police officer after crashing during a drug-fuelled pursuit has been spared jail by a judge who said he had "turned his life around" in the Trotter, 38, reached 60mph in a 30mph zone, drove through red lights and into the path of oncoming traffic before crashing into a car in Bishop Auckland in March 2024, Durham Crown Court had driven to the area under the influence of heroin, crack cocaine and alcohol to go shoplifting, the court was was jailed for 18 months suspended for two years after admitting dangerous driving and assaulting an emergency worker. Believing Trotter was driving a Citroen C2 under the influence, a police officer in a marked car attempted to stop him near the shopping park at Tindale Crescent at about 21:00 GMT on 21 March last year, the court initially stopping, Trotter, who had passengers in the car, then sped away when the officer got out of his car, Judge Richard Bennett then followed a nearly two minute-long pursuit in which Trotter sped through a red light and caused other cars to have to get out of the way, the court ended when Trotter mounted a pavement and hit a car and electricity substation. 'Canny driving' Trotter then attempted to run away and pushed the police officer in the face, breaking the PC's glasses, before a passing off-duty officer stopped to help bring him under control, the judge admitted he had taken drugs and drink but denied being the driver, the court confronted with footage captured by the police car's dashcam, Trotter, of Stockton Road in Hartlepool, replied: "I think it's canny good driving."Judge Bennett said Trotter had bought the car for £150 to sleep in and had travelled to Barnard Castle from west Durham that day to go shoplifting, all while under the influence of drugs. The judge said the pursuit ended "not because of a change of heart" by Trotter but rather because he Judge Bennett added, the incident had been a turning point for Trotter who in the aftermath sought help for his drug addiction and moved to a new area to escape the influence of other judge said he often disbelieved such claims made by defendants in court, but there was evidence of "significant and positive changes" in Trotter's case, including a string of negative drug Bennett said it was an "extremely rare case where someone has turned their around", but warned Totter he would be jailed if he breached the suspended sentence who also admitted driving without a licence or insurance and failing to provide a specimen, was ordered to pay £500 compensation to the owner of the car he hit and £34.50 for new glasses for the must also comply with a six-month curfew and was banned from driving for two and half years. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store