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A Professionally Drawn Will May Save Your Estate from Fraudsters

A recent report by BBC News revealed a troubling case in which a Will had allegedly been forged in an attempt to steal from a deceased person’s estate.
Anne Wijayarathne
Anne Wijayarathne
Associate Solicitor
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In late 2023, sisters Lisa and Nicole believed their lives were about to change forever. They had been contacted by Anglia Research Services, a professional heir-finding firm, and informed that they were set to inherit a house worth nearly £1 million — the estate of their late aunt, who had passed away without leaving a Will. With no immediate family, Lisa and Nicole had been identified as her nieces and closest living relatives. The situation appeared straightforward — until it wasn’t.

A man, unknown to the deceased’s family, friends, or neighbours, came forward with a Will naming himself as the sole beneficiary of her estate.

This Will immediately raised serious concerns:

  • It was dated 2016, when the deceased was already housebound and disabled.
  • It excluded her husband and carer, who was still alive at the time (he died in 2020).
  • The deceased’s home address was misspelt, and the address listed for the named sole beneficiary did not exist in 2016 — it belonged to a building constructed in 2021.
  • There were no records of the supposed beneficiary ever visiting the deceased, including after she moved into a care home.

Despite these glaring inconsistencies and red flags, the authorities refused to investigate.

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