
Teen died in London fall from luxury apartments, parents fear foul play
The parents of a teen who plunged to his death from a luxury apartment insist he wasn't suicidal and the police should have done more. Zac Brettler had emailed his mum the night before the incident about booking a driving test
The Met Police is facing mounting criticism over its handling of the mysterious death of a 19-year-old public schoolboy, who plunged from a luxury riverside apartment across from MI6 HQ.
Zac Brettler, a pupil at the £30,000-a-year Mill Hill School in north London, died in 2019 after falling from the Riverwalk apartment complex on the banks of the Thames. The MI6 building's CCTV captured his fall.
The teenager, who was said to be oligarch-obsessed, had spun wild stories about being a Kazakh millionaire, a friend of Virgil van Dijk, and the son of a dead Russian oligarch. He was found dead with 'drowning and multiple injuries', according to the coroner. His jaw was broken, but the cause of that injury remains unexplained.
Now, grieving parents Rochelle and Matthew Brettler, both 61, are demanding answers, accusing detectives of showing 'no curiosity' and failing to pursue critical evidence, The Times reports.
Zac's father told The Sunday Times: 'I knew Zac and it just wasn't right, the overnight bag he'd taken, the messages he'd sent, the plans we'd made. It didn't sit well with anybody, not out of any stigma issue, but it didn't. Also, who commits suicide in front of someone else?'
Scotland Yard originally treated Zac's death as suicide, reportedly not even attending the flat until four days later. It's reported that forensic opportunities were missed, including blood-like smears in the bathroom and bedroom, and a wiped section of glass on the balcony from which Zac is believed to have fallen. None of it was tested, the family says.
Zac's grieving parents say he was trying to escape from whatever was inside the room, not attempting to end his own life. On the night he died, Zac had even emailed his mum about booking a driving test and packed an overnight bag with clothes for several days.
Zac's final night was spent with two men: Dave 'Indian Dave' Sharma, 55, a known gangster with a heroin-smuggling past, and Akbar Shamji, 52, a cryptocurrency trader and son of a wealthy Tory donor.
Both men were in a financial dispute with Zac. They were arrested on suspicion of murder but never charged. In a sinister twist, Sharma was later found dead in the same flat in 2020, from what was reported as a drug overdose.
Two days before his death, Zac told a friend his family had been threatened, and he had searched online for information about witness protection, according to The Times.
Text messages from the day Zac died appear to paint a chilling picture. At 4.30 pm, Sharma wrote: 'He's not allowed to run away now.' Six hours later, a string of disturbing messages followed: 'Heating up knives and cleaning the blood,' Sharma texted.,=
In a voice note, he added: 'Come to f*** ing Pimlico and pick up this f* ** ing car and drop me home, bro. I don't wanna drive right now. And give me the f***ing pill when you get here, man, s***t's about to go wrong. Wrong!'
Zac, also known by the name Zac Ismailov, had become fascinated by wealth and power during his time at Mill Hill, where many students were the children of Russian elites. He claimed to be the heir to a fortune blocked by his mum in Dubai.
According to one report, he hoped to go into business with Sharma, who had been previously arrested in 2002 for heroin smuggling, and was later linked to a gangland murder in 2003. Sharma fled to France to avoid capture, dodging a Europol manhunt, and later returned to London without being arrested, leading Zac's father to question if Sharma had become an informant.
In response to mounting criticism, a Met Police spokesperson said: 'Our sincere condolences remain with Zac Brettler's family, and we understand the uncertainty about how their son died must continue to be the cause of unimaginable pain.
'Whenever someone dies unexpectedly in London, we have established policing protocols to follow, and the investigation into Zac's death was led by an experienced detective.
'The team worked hard to explore every possible hypothesis, which were shared with Zac's family, but ultimately we were not able to provide fuller answers. The case was also reviewed by specialist homicide detectives to ensure every line of enquiry had been exhausted.
'As with any case, we would always encourage anyone who believes they have additional information or evidence to contact police. Any new information will be examined on its own merit by a team led by experienced detectives.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
NATO jets scrambled to intercept Russian spyplane as Kremlin threatens ‘direct' response to military buildup on border
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) GERMAN fighter jets were dramatically scrambled to intercept a Russian spy plane over the Baltic Sea. It came just hours before the Kremlin warned of a 'direct' response to NATO's growing presence on its doorstep. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 8 German fighter jets were scrambled to intercept a Russian Il-20 spy plane over the Baltic Sea (stock picture) Credit: AP:Associated Press 8 It came after Putin's Kremlin threatened a 'direct' response to military buildup on border Credit: Getty 8 Two Eurofighters (stock picture) roared into action after NATO radar spotted the Russian spy plane Credit: PA 8 Two Eurofighters roared into action on Friday after NATO radar spotted a Russian Il-20 with its transponder switched off. The plane had taken off from Kaliningrad and was heading west toward Poland and Germany, according to Bild and The Kyiv Independent. Germany's quick reaction team made visual contact about 100km off the coast. They snapped a photo before the lumbering Russian aircraft turned north, skirting just 40km from the Baltic island of Usedom but staying out of German airspace. It's the ninth time this year German jets have been scrambled to shadow Moscow's snoopers. NATO says the Kremlin is using these flights to test alliance defences and gather intel on troop positions as the Ukraine war drags on. The airborne drama came as Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov slammed Estonia's willingness to host NATO aircraft armed with nuclear weapons, branding it a 'direct' danger to Moscow. 'Directly, of course,' he said, when asked if such a move posed a threat, Russian news agency TASS reported. Peskov sneered that Baltic leaders often make 'absurd' statements, and added icy relations could scarcely get any worse: 'It is very difficult to do anything worse.' Humiliation for Putin as £37m jets destroyed in strike before vengeful tyrant kills two in blitz on Ukraine tower block Tallinn's Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur had earlier revealed Estonia is ready to welcome NATO jets capable of carrying tactical nuclear bombs — pointing to recent visits by US F-35s that could soon be guarding the tiny nation's skies again. It comes amid mounting alarm that Vladimir Putin is readying Russia for a showdown with NATO itself. Bruno Kahl, head of Germany's foreign intelligence service, recently warned 'Ukraine is only a step on the journey westward,' adding: 'We have intelligence showing it.' NATO chief Mark Rutte piled on the pressure, saying the alliance must brace for the possibility of a Russian attack by 2030. Putin's forces have already begun amassing hardware and troops close to Finland, just 35 miles from the border, according to satellite snaps showing activity at four Russian bases — Kamenka, Petrozavodsk, Severomorsk-2 and Olenya. Defence experts fear Moscow may attempt to provoke NATO into a limited clash, testing the alliance's Article 5 pledge of mutual defence without triggering full-scale war. Meanwhile on the battlefield, Putin's summer push in Ukraine is grinding on at a snail's pace, with Kyiv's fierce drone attacks bogging down Russian advances. After 448 days of fighting in Chasiv Yar in Donetsk, Moscow's troops reportedly control just half the city — clawing back land at a rate so slow that even snails would outpace them. But with an estimated 125,000 Russian soldiers massing along Ukraine's Sumy and Kharkiv borders, Kyiv is bracing for what could be Putin's last big gamble to seize ground before negotiating a ceasefire. Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky said his forces had managed to pin down a 50,000-strong Russian assault near Sumy, stabilising the lines for now. 8 Bruno Kahl, head of Berlin's Federal Intelligence Service, said his team have intel suggesting Russia is plotting to test the resolve of Nato in the coming years Credit: Alamy 8 A Russian drone strike on Kyiv overnight left dozens of residential buildings crumbling Credit: AP 8 Ukraine is often left battling Putin's continued drone attacks Credit: Getty Back in Germany, Chancellor Friedrich Merz poured more cold water on any thaw with Moscow, telling Süddeutsche Zeitung he won't pick up the phone to Putin given Russia's relentless bombing of Ukraine. His predecessor Olaf Scholz had broken ranks last year by speaking with the Kremlin tyrant — but Merz insisted the time for friendly calls is over. As Putin's bombers continue to pound Kyiv and Odesa with hundreds of drones and missiles every night, NATO eyes remain fixed on the Baltic and beyond — wary that Moscow's next gambit could spark the very clash the world fears most. It comes after Ukraine landed another humiliating blow on Vlad's war machine — blitzing two of Russia's prized Su-34 fighter jets in a daring long-range drone strike. Kyiv's forces targeted the Marinovka military airfield in the Volgograd region, flying drones 200 miles to smash four of the £37million jets. Two were destroyed outright, while the other pair were damaged, sending pro-war Russian Telegram channels into meltdown over the 'multi-billion dollar' losses. Furious Kremlin cheerleaders raged the attack 'could and should have been prevented.' Ukraine's SBU boasted the strike sparked a fire in critical infrastructure used to prep and repair Russian warplanes. Putin lashed out in brutal revenge. Overnight, Russia flattened a 21-storey tower block in Odesa, killing a married couple and wounding at least 14 others — including three children.


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Strictly star injured in horror London street phone robbery
Strictly Come Dancing star Michelle Tsiakkas has taken to social media to reveal she was the victim of a startling mobile phone robbery while out in London in broad daylight Strictly Come Dancing professional Michelle Tsiakkas has recounted being mugged for her phone in the streets of London. The 29-year-old dance expert has appeared on the hit BBC show since 2022. She was paired with EastEnders star Jamie Borthwick in the 2024 contest where they landed in seventh place. Taking to social media at the end of the week, the TV star shared a haunting account of being mugged in broad daylight. She told fans in a video message shared on her main grid: "This was a couple of days ago and I've just about mentally recovered from that. It was quite traumatising on the day. "It wasted my whole day and made me feel awful, scared, helpless and I don't want the same to happen to you. My phone got stolen. My phone got stolen. "I mean I see it happening all the time but it's just one of those things that you just never think it's gonna happen to you. And then it does." She went on to explain that she was simply going about her day when a criminal whizzed past her on an electric bike and snatched her phone from her hand. She recalled: "So it was early morning. I was on my way to the dentist in London. "It was around Covent Garden so the streets were really quiet. I think I was just the only person around so maybe I was an easy target and I whipped out my phone to have a look at the directions to see where my dentist was. "I was on the actual street of the dentist and what happens? A man comes on a bike behind me, sweeps past me and grabs my phone." Revealing she was injured in the incident, Michelle continued: "So he's grabbed my phone. He's on an electric bike and my heart just sank. I tried to I think like reach for it and that made me fall on my knees on the floor and graze my knee. "I think my reflex was just to swear and then scream give me back my phone and clearly you know that didn't work. He just left. He was wearing a mask so there was no way that I could have seen what he looked like and he was going really fast on that electric bike so there was no way on earth I could have caught up with him." She added: "Thankfully there were two really lovely and helpful women there and they'd seen that I was a bit distressed." Unsettled Londoners have been left in disbelief as mobile phone theft has increased at a horrifying rate. New statistics release this weekend have revealed that 231,000 phone thefts and robberies were recorded over the past four years in the city. Analysis by The Times revealed hotspots in London include St James's Park, where Piccadilly and Haymarket meet Pall Mall and Clarence House as well as parts of the West End. Figures released by Scotland Yard figures show a 20 per cent year-on-year increase in robberies - with 81,256 mobile phone crimes were recorded in 2023. The stats also showed that roughly 37 people have their phone snatched on the streets of the capital every day.


Scottish Sun
3 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Locals fear Brit mum's murder in French village was professional hit as children break silence on unsolved killing
It comes two months after she was found in a pool of blood by her secret lover CHATEAU MYSTERY Locals fear Brit mum's murder in French village was professional hit as children break silence on unsolved killing FEARS are growing that Brit mum Karen Carter was killed in a professional hit - as the unsolved killing continues to stump police. Her children have now broken their silence for the first time since she was stabbed to death in a "frenzied attack" two months ago outside her home in France. Advertisement 11 Fears are growing that Brit mum Karen Carter was killed in a professional hit Credit: Not known, clear with picture desk 11 Karen Carter pictured with her husband Alan Carter Credit: Facebook 11 She was found in a pool of blood outside her home in Trémolat Police investigating her death in the sleepy village of Trémolat, Dordogne, said her brutal murder was "planned and exceptionally violent". Cops suspect that Karen's killer may have harboured a grudge against her, or taken issue with the secret affair she had struck up with local villager Jean-Francois Guerrier, 74 They also identified a love triangle including another local named Marie Laure Autefort - who was reportedly "madly in love" with Guerrier. Guerrier and Autefort were previously arrested by police and questioned - but both of them were released without charge. Advertisement Karen had also been married to Alan Carter, 65, for 30 years, further complicating the love triangle. But the married couple had been estranged and Alan was living in South Africa at the time her death. Autefort's brother Philippe Monribot admitted his sister had fallen in love with Guerrier, whom she called "the tall one", but insisted she was innocent. He is convinced the murder was a "professional hit", and said that police were "wasting their time" by interrogating him for four hours last week, The Times reported. Advertisement Karen was found by Guerrier dying from multiple stab wounds in her driveway at 10pm on April 29. She was a beloved member of the local community and a married mum-of-four. Moment Brit mum is seen dancing with secret lover months was stabbed to death Guerrier had followed Karen home at a discreet distance after hosting a wine-tasting at his Trémolat farmhouse - just a 10 minute drive from the Brit mum's property. He then found Karen on the floor by her car and desperately tried to save her - but it was too late. Advertisement After prosecutors confirmed that Karen's affair was the focus of the investigation, her husband Alan said his shock was compounded with a sense of betrayal. Karen's daughter Liz, an engineering student in the US, said: "I keep thinking about what her last moments would have been like. "The colour in my life has washed away." She added that her mum's killer was clearly a "deeply disturbed individual who had nothing going for them". Advertisement "They saw my mother's beautiful life and, for whatever reason, chose to extinguish her light," she said. Karen's other daughter Katy, 30, who lives in the UK, said her mum had been "so excited about her life in France and growing old in Trémolat". Meanwhile, her son from her first marriage Nick Sachs said of his mum's death: "It's a hole in our lives that we can't fill." 11 Karen is said top have had a secret relationship with Jean-Francois Guerrier, 74, who discovered her body Advertisement 11 Karen was found outside her rental property in the Dordgone, France Credit: Doug Seeburg 11 And his brother Jonathan, who works in Australia, said he felt "aimless" since his mum's murder and even prepared for the prospect that the killer would never be found. He said: "I've come to realise that there is a possibility that the culprit may never be identified and we as a family will need to learn and accept that." Advertisement The mayor of Trémolat Éric Chassagne was one of the last people to see Karen alive, as he had also been at the small gathering at Guerrier's property. Chassagne, who has been mayor for 30 years, feared that suspicion was "weighing on the village" of around 600 residents. He suggested the killer might still be in town. He said: "The most probable [lines of inquiry] involve people we know. It's the most obvious." Advertisement Since his release after questioning, Guerrier, originally from Paris, has kept a low profile. He previously spent some years working in England as an IT executive. The woman who had fallen in love with him, 69-year-old retired carer Autefort, has not been seen in Trémolat since her two days of questioning. 11 Alan Carter had been living in South Africa at the time of her death Credit: Facebook Advertisement 11 The Brit was a popular member of her local community 11 Footage showed Karen dancing with Guerrier at a party Credit: Facebook/Cafe Village Tremolat Karen also reportedly told fellow ex-pat pal Beverley Needham she was sealing a divorce from Alan - just one day before her murder. Beverley told The Telegraph that, over dinner the night before the murder, she asked Karen: "Have you served the papers?", to which she replied: "Yes, I gave him the papers." Advertisement The friend continued: '[Karen] told me the relationship was over and said: 'I'm done' [...] That was her words. She said: 'I'm done.'' Beverley, who was brokering the sale of a cottage to Karen, said the estranged couple saw each other only occasionally, but that the toll of the divorce seemed to weigh heavily on her friend. Alan was said to have denied that he and Karen were divorcing, but said his wife's secret romance with Guerrier left him with "a sense of betrayal". Karen was found in her driveway dying from eight injuries to her 'chest, groin, arm and leg'. Advertisement An autopsy revealed the mum was killed "as she tried to defend herself from a frenzied attack". Another theory amongst the village is that an escaped inmate from a prison 7.5 miles away, which houses mentally ill patients, could have randomly ambushed Karen. The cold-blooded murder has rocked the tight-knit village community - who all appear dumbfounded. 11 Police have cordoned off Karen's home for further investigations Credit: Doug Seeburg Advertisement 11 She is survived by her husband and four children Credit: Facebook Emma Rathbone, 45, said: 'She was absolutely lovely. She was at the centre of the village. Everybody knew her. "If you were new to the village she would be the first who would make you feel welcome. 'You can see how beautiful the village is. It's like heaven. You don't expect something like that to happen to somebody so lovely.' Advertisement Charity worker Adrian Carter, who has had a house in the village for a decade, said: 'She was really, really lovely. She was bubbly and a friendly to everyone - both French and English and any other nationalities who were here. 'I was shocked, really really shocked. Genuinely, you would say it's safe. 'Knowing that someone has now been arrested make me feel a little bit safer. 'It's such a sleepy place. It's not like a Midsomer Murders sort of place.' Advertisement Karen's husband Alan, who remains at the couple's home in East London, South Africa, expressed shock and surprise at revelations that his wife had "started a relationship" with another man. Karen and Alan had owned their holiday home in Trémolat for 15 years, splitting time between France and South Africa, where Alan still works. Speaking from their home in South Africa, Carter said he learned of his wife's death via a Facebook post read by a cousin who also lives in Trémolat. "She phoned me [...] to say she's sorry to tell me and that she thinks Karen has died. That was the first I heard about it," he said. Advertisement "No one had got in touch with me at all to let me know what had happened. I found out through my cousin who happened to see it on a Facebook page." The former London Stock Exchange worker, 65, described her as "such a decent, lovely person", and told of the family's shock. He said his wife of 30 years was an outgoing, friendly person who "wouldn't hurt a fly", and said her death has been "traumatic" for his family. Karen had lived in Trémolat for more than a decade, where she ran two holiday rental homes. Advertisement She volunteered at Village Café alongside Guerrier and Autefort, which now hangs a photograph of the late mum and wife while her killer remains at large.