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Mystery over the death of a Ukrainian tycoon in England - They found him hanged in his mansion

The Ukrainian tycoon with his wife

The mystery covers the death of a Ukrainian tycoon, who built his fortune on oil and gas and was found dead in his mansion in Surrey, England.

Michael Watford’s death is considered “unexplained”, according to police, but not a suspect. According to “The Sun”, the tycoon was found hanged.

The Ukrainian tycoon was found dead in the garage of his home

The body of the 66-year-old Ukrainian tycoon was found in the garage of his luxury property on the Wedworth estate in Surrey, in an area where houses are worth up to £20m.

News of Watford’s death came on the day British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Parliament he would publish a full list of people linked to Vladimir Putin’s regime, a significant percentage of whom would face sanctions.

Police were called after the Ukrainian tycoon – who is not one of the oligarchs who have already received sanctions – was found dead at noon on Monday. Yesterday, her 41-year-old Estonian wife, Jane, posted a photo on social media showing her kissing her husband in the courtyard of her mansion.

The photo posted by his wife on Facebook

According to The Sun, a family friend said Watford’s state of mind may have been shaken by the war in Ukraine. “The timing of his death and the invasion of Ukraine were certainly not accidental,” the source told the newspaper. Another friend told The Sun that the Ukrainian tycoon’s death “raises questions” after other suspicious deaths of Russian citizens.

Who was Michael Watford?

Born Michael Tolstoy in 1955 in Ukraine, when it was part of the Soviet Union, Watford made a fortune in oil and gas before building a real estate empire in Britain.

He changed his name to Watford when he moved to the UK, where he bought real estate in a popular and expensive central London suburb, a $18 million mansion in Surrey and, more recently, several properties in Wentworth. In 2015 she complained about how difficult it was to find a “perfect” villa outside of London.

The Ukrainian tycoon's mansion

It was difficult to find the right villa.

Unable to find a house that met his strict standards, he decided to build his own villa as he wished, saying that the wrought-iron gates were made by the company that supplied Kensington Palace and the road, worth £56,000, which drive home. , was inspired by the outer square of King’s College, Cambridge. “I want perfection, nothing less,” he said.

“In London, in Mayfair, in Knightbridge, in Belgravia, you can find the best quality. But outside of London, no. They don’t even come close. It wouldn’t be right for me to say houses are cheap. I don’t want to sound rude, but wrong style, wrong finishes, not high quality. Not for me.” The Ukrainian tycoon claimed that his weakness for “premium quality” stemmed from building superyachts.

What the police say about the death of the Ukrainian tycoon

Regarding his death, the official police statement reads: “We were summoned around noon on February 28, following reports of a man’s body being found. An ambulance was called, but the man, who was in his 60s, was sadly dead. The circumstances of his death are being investigated, but no suspicious circumstances are believed to exist.”

source: iefi merida

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