Decorator stole £30k watches from Duke of Westminster

PA Media Matthew TurnerPA Media
Two of the stolen watches have never been recovered

A decorator who stole three watches worth more than £30,000 from the Duke of Westminster's home has been spared jail "by the skin of his teeth".

Matthew Turner was given a 20-month sentence, suspended for two years, at Chester Crown Court after he admitted the burglary.

Turner stole them from Hugh Grosvenor's bedroom while carrying out renovation work at Eaton Hall in August 2022.

The duke, one of the UK's richest men, is godfather to Prince George.

The court heard Turner, who was addicted to cocaine at the time, took a Cartier London Tank JC watch, bought for £18,000, a Panerai Luminor Marina watch, worth £7,000, and a Breitling watch, bought for the duke for his 21st birthday by his late father and his mother and worth about £7,000.

The burglary was only revealed when Harry Fane, who had sold the Cartier watch to the duke, spotted it for sale on an auction site in November that year in what was described in court as an "astonishing coincidence".

The other two watches have never been recovered.

Getty Images Hugh Grosvenor, Duke of Westminster on September 22, 2018Getty Images
The Duke of Westminster, pictured in 2018, said the items were of "huge sentimental value"

In a victim impact statement the duke said: "They are of huge sentimental value, beyond their financial worth."

He added: "My bedroom is a private, extremely personal space within my home, I feel very uncomfortable knowing someone who is trusted to do a job has entered my room and stolen my personal possessions."

Sentencing, Honorary Recorder of Chester Judge Steven Everett told Turner: "You have escaped prison by the skin of your teeth."

He said it was clear Turner, 24, had declined to tell police where the other two watches were.

The judge said: "You made that decision not to, suggesting at least one of the watches went to your drug dealer."

Turner was employed by a firm which had worked on the duke's estate on the outskirts of Chester, for more than 50 years and were "well and truly trusted" by the family, the court heard.

Geograph/Jeff Buck Eaton HallGeograph/Jeff Buck
Turner was working at Eaton Hall when he stole from the duke

The 32-year-old duke took over his family's £1bn fortune and estate when his father Gerald died in 2016.

Myles Wilson, defending, said Turner had been spending hundreds of pounds on cocaine.

He said: "It's a typical scenario where his debts increase, his dealers become more desperate, he becomes more desperate and he's committed crime and really self-destructed."

Peter Hussey, prosecuting, said Turner had admitted a separate offence of theft after stealing £60 from a colleagues wallet while working at Top Gear Tyres in Ellesmere Port in December 2022.

Judge Everett said although the financial backgrounds of both victims were "entirely different" the end result was the same.

Turner was told he must complete 200 hours of unpaid work and 30 days of rehabilitation activity.

The judge said no order he could make could "possibly compensate" for the loss to the duke.

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