Brendan Montague
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THE WOMAN at the centre of Britain’s biggest divorce case was the victim of a harrowing robbery in which she was tied up and £300,000 worth of jewellery was stolen, it emerged last night.
Beverley Charman was faced with a raider wearing a balaclava and brandishing a gun at her £3m home on the outskirts of Sevenoaks in Kent on Friday. The white male forced her to open a safe and then tied her up and made his escape.
The 54-year-old “housewife” is locked in a bitter High Court battle with her former husband, the insurance tycoon John Charman, who is challenging a £48m settlement made last year, which was the largest divorce payment in British legal history.
Kent police believe the high profile of the case may have inspired the lone attacker to target the large family home situated down a gated private road, one of the most expensive in southeast England.
Friends of Charman last night confirmed she was suffering severe shock but had not been physically harmed. She was discovered by one of her sons when he returned home 20 minutes after the attack.
A police spokeswoman said: “Several hundred thousand pounds of jewellery was stolen in the incident and a safe was targeted.”
Charman was awarded £48m by the courts after she turned down a £20m settlement. However, the legal wrangle continued when her former husband challenged the payout in the Court of Appeal.
John Charman, 54, was said to be worth £113m at the time of their break up. He is known as the “king of the insurance market” after creating the international firm Axis. He now has a new girlfriend and lives in the US and Bermuda.
The burglary came days after Charman told the appeal court her former husband was seeking “one rule for the rich and one law for the poor” and their 27-year marriage should be considered by the court as a “partnership of equals.”
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Ms Charman has had the full trappings of unwanted fame including the attention of the media, which can bring these vile intruders to her door. Wonder if the media feel guilt or any responsiblity?
She has earned every penny she has obtained from the divorce settlement. I expect she would prefer to turn the clock back fifteen years to keep her family together, even if she were financially poorer.
Mike W, Wolverhampton,
Is there no honour amongst thieves?
Howard, Milton Keynes, UK
The man who stole from her didn't earn or pay for her jewellery. And we call him a thief.
But then again neither did she.
Laura Roberts, London, UK
Oh dear. How sad. Never mind.
Colin Soames, Londonistan,
This was not a surprise to me as Miss Charman has had her name and the amount of money she wns on the news recently so she was a target for theft.
Rachel, Bath,