A British grandmother falls for a smooth-talking Kenyan
foreigner on holiday and ends up handing over her life savings to him.
The
divorced parish councillor met Ovi Elias, who told her he lived in
London, on a dating website and thought she had found her soulmate. More after the cut..
They began a relationship and got married three
years later, after Mr Elias moved into Mrs Stillwell’s home in
Ashington, West Sussex.
But
she later discovered that her husband, who made frequent trips abroad
for what he claimed was ‘urgent business’, had 47 other lovers across
the world.
She
gave him around £25,000 from her savings to fund his expenses, and now
believes she was the victim of an elaborate scam. Mr Elias, who told Mrs
Stillwell he was 62, had claimed to be a 47-year-old called Steve when
chatting to other women as far away as Australia.
Mrs
Stillwell said: ‘While I believed him when he said he was flying to
Dubai to do property deals, I have now discovered he was actually flying
all over the world meeting other women who funded his lifestyle, just
like me.
‘I
thought we had a genuine relationship and I’d met my soulmate. But the
reality is Ovi – or Steve as he was also known – seems to be making a
good living out of women like me.
He meets them on a website, says he is
in love and then after coming out with various sob stories, gets them
to pay for his bed, board, and travel.’
Mrs
Stillwell, who worked in a primary school and has two grown-up children
and one grandchild, met Mr Elias on a UK dating website.
She said: ‘He was completely different from any man I’d ever met and I was intrigued.’
He
told her he had come to the UK 20 years ago as a student and now owned a
flat in London. He claimed he was a retired accountant, and was in the
process of buying a property in Dubai.
They
first met in 2009, and Mr Elias later moved into her three-bed
bungalow. The couple wed in Brighton in August 2012, with Mrs Stillwell
changing her name to Mrs Elias.
She
said: ‘After our wedding I paid for us to visit his relatives in Kenya
for a blessing, staying in one cramped room with other relatives.
‘I
was so moved by the dilapidated state of the house his father lived in,
I paid out thousands to have water and electric showers connected plus
other essential repairs.’
On
return to the UK, Mrs Stillwell gave her husband £10,000 to help with
legal fees for his Dubai property venture. She said: ‘I should have
realised something was wrong as he would say he was going there for a
week and then end up staying there months.
‘But he always came up with reasons – for example there was extra legal red tape.’
In February this year, he left again for what his wife believed was another trip to Dubai.
‘But two days later I was updating my computer when I noticed his e-ticket,’ she said.
‘I was shocked – because it was a ticket to Australia.
‘He claimed he’d gone on a detour to Dubai via Australia with a business friend.’
But three weeks later Mrs Stillwell received a message from a woman in Australia.
‘She
said Steve had used her laptop but not closed his emails down properly.
And she’d found a list of 47 women, including us, dotted around the
world. She’d even contacted some of them – a woman in the States, a
“Roz” in Tasmania, another woman in the Philippines and so on.
‘Apparently
he met them all on dating websites and using the story about a property
in Dubai, got them to pay his air fares all around the world.
‘Then
he stayed for weeks at a time living with each woman, spinning her the
same line.’ In April, Mr Elias returned briefly to West Sussex.
Mrs
Stillwell said: ‘I knew by then I was part of an elaborate scam and
told him to leave. Overall I’ve given him around £25,000 . I’ve not seen
him since.’
She
said police have told her there is nothing they can do as her husband
did not break any laws. She added: ‘My only hope is telling my story
warns other women to beware.’
Daily mail
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