
Film director found dead at London home may have been murdered for diamond-encrusted Rolex
A former film director and actor found murdered at her north London home is suspected to have been targeted for her diamond-encrusted Rolex watch.
Jennifer Abbott, 69, was found wrapped in a blanket on her bed with tape over her mouth by her concerned niece, who had asked for help in breaking down the door.
Known professionally as Sarah Steinberg, she was last seen walking her pet corgi in Camden, north London, on 10 June, with a post-mortem examination giving her cause of death as sharp force trauma.
An ambulance crew was called to her home in Mornington Place, Camden, at around 6pm on June 13 and she was pronounced dead at the scene.
Her pet Corgi had been shut in the bathroom for three days but survived.
Police fear she may have been killed for her diamond-encrusted Rolex watch, which detectives said was missing from her home.
Photographs from her social media show her posing with a range of different celebrities, including socialite Paris Hilton and actress Kate Hudson.
Originally from Arizona, she had studied Arts and Sciences at Merton Technical College in southwest London before moving to Los Angeles to become a film producer.
Her LinkedIn states she was the chief executive of Atlantis Rising Productions, and has also authored several novels.
The neighbour said: 'My son broke the door down. We heard her niece shouting: 'Somebody help me, somebody help' and we went out and asked 'what's wrong?'
'She said: 'I haven't heard from my aunty in four days. Something's wrong – break the door down'.
'I was holding the door open downstairs and my son was upstairs and then I heard her niece screaming and saying: 'Oh my God, she's been murdered'. She had tape across her mouth.
'Her corgi was locked in the bathroom for three days. That poor dog, he couldn't even drink any water, it's amazing he was even still alive.'
She said her neighbour was 'mysterious, and very smart and intelligent'.
'We would chat in the street most of the time. I used to walk around the block with her with her dog,' she said.
'I can't believe we won't see her walking the corgi any more. She was very exuberant, very vivacious.
'She had done a lot of things in her life. She was a doctor but she was also an actor and director in America. She'd directed a movie and I looked at it on YouTube and saw her interviewed in Los Angeles.
'She was a character. She was lovely.
'You're never going to see her again and you just can't take it in. I said to my son: 'I can't believe we were sitting here in the living room, maybe watching television, while she was over there going through that and we didn't know.'
The neighbour said that drug users sit in doorways in the area including near Ms Abbott's flat.
Another woman living nearby described Ms Abbott as 'a woman of taste', while William Currie, 63, a hairdresser, said: 'I just used to see her walking around with her little corgi.
'We just said hello, waved to each other and smiled.
'She used to walk the dog every couple of days. She kept herself to herself, she wasn't too sociable but kind, polite and well-mannered.
'The dog was fat and chubby and barked a lot.'
Police said a post-mortem examination was carried out on Sunday and gave cause of death as sharp force trauma.
Chief Superintendent Jason Stewart said: 'We are working closely with our colleagues in the homicide team to establish exactly what happened and it's incredibly important that we hear from anyone who may have knowledge about how this awful death occurred.
'Were you out in Camden on Friday? Perhaps you had been coming home from work, or at an event nearby?
'Did you see or hear anything around Mornington Place that struck you as being unusual?
'Someone must have seen or heard something and no piece of information is too small.
'It could be the crucial clue that leads us to identify Jennifer's murderer. Extra patrols continue in the area while my officers remain at the crime scene.
'I would urge anyone who has any information, or who may be worried, to speak to them.'
Anyone with information can call police on 101 or message @MetCC on X, giving the reference 6470/13JUN.
To remain anonymous contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555111 or online.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
31 minutes ago
- The Independent
Desperate father who set himself alight while serving 13 years in jail for stealing a phone finally moved to hospital
A father who set himself alight as his mental health crumbled while serving 13 years in prison for stealing a phone is finally being transferred to hospital following a six-year battle by his family. Thomas White, who is languishing under an abolished indefinite jail term described as 'psychological torture' by the UN, developed paranoid schizophrenia and psychosis in prison as he lost hope of being freed from his Imprisonment for Public Protection (IPP) sentence. Last year, The Independent revealed how he had set himself on fire in his cell as this newspaper backed his family's calls for him to be transferred for inpatient mental health treatment, after he was repeatedly refused a hospital bed. In March, we revealed how he had he had suffered yet another mental health crisis, which saw him repeatedly smash his face on the floor of maximum security HMP Manchester, where he was being held. This week, the 42-year-old father of one learned he will finally be discharged from prison into hospital care. His tearful sister Clara White told The Independent: 'Thomas will now be a patient and not a prisoner.' White will be moved from the Category A jail, where inspectors last year raised the alarm over widespread drug use, rising violence, poor living conditions and a string of self-inflicted deaths, to the specialist medium secure Rothbury unit at Northgate Park in Northumberland. 'Thomas has been a casualty in this, but so have I and my mum and family,' she said, after years watching him deteriorate inside jail. 'He deserves to be treated with dignity, and I am just overwhelmed that he will go to a safe environment where he's not being hurt.' She said every member of the family shed tears of joy after learning the news on Monday evening. 'The hardest thing was watching my brother dying in front of me,' she added. 'Every visit, he was just dying in front of me; he was weighing less and less. Look at his eyes, you could just tell the pain he was in.' The move comes after prisons minister James Timpson personally visited White on the hospital wing of HMP Manchester during a visit in March, The Independent can reveal. IPP sentences – under which offenders were given a minimum jail term but no maximum – were scrapped in 2012 amid human rights concerns, but not retrospectively, leaving thousands of inmates trapped in jail for years beyond their original prison terms. White, who had previous convictions for theft, was handed an IPP sentence with a two-year tariff for robbery just four months before the sentences were outlawed. Then aged 27, he had been binge-drinking when he took the phone from two Christian missionaries in Manchester. But thanks to the indefinite jail term, he has remained incarcerated as his mental health has deteriorated. He moved prisons 12 times and was banned from seeing his only son, Kayden, nearly 16, for the majority of his prison term. Three psychiatrists had called for White to be moved to a hospital to treat his mental health conditions. The latest on 13 February concluded he was 'struggling in the prison environment' and it is likely 'he is deeply frustrated and angry as a result of his predicament'. Two medical reports last year laid bare the toll of the devastating IPP jail term, warning that White's 'lengthy incarceration' was creating 'impermeable barriers' to his recovery. Dean Kingham, White's lawyer, had argued it was 'inhumane' to keep a man who needs hospital treatment incarcerated inside HMP Manchester. Discussing White's case earlier this year, he told The Independent: 'The British Psychological Society has recognised the psychological harm caused by the IPP sentence. 'Here we have a man whose condition has deteriorated day by day, year by year, being held in a prison that's failing, where the inspector in October 2024 issued an urgent notification. Somewhere, he can more easily access drugs than in the community. 'For me, here we have a potential Article 3 breach of his human rights.' At least 94 IPP prisoners have taken their own lives in prison as they lose hope of being freed, according to campaigners. Of 2,614 people still incarcerated on an IPP jail term, almost 700 have served at least 10 years longer than their original minimum term. However, successive governments have refused to re-sentence IPP prisoners, despite calls from the justice committee and the UN special rapporteur on torture amid high rates of suicide and self-harm.


The Sun
31 minutes ago
- The Sun
I had no idea my son, 19, was an addict before the unthinkable happened… I dropped him at uni & he came back in a coffin
HEARING a familiar ping, mum Jo Forsdyke picks up her son's phone and sees a text which sends a dagger through her heart. Less than a year ago her 19-old-old son Josh had tragically died after leaping from London Bridge into the River Thames. 8 8 8 His mum, dad Alex and two brothers then faced an agonising four day wait before his body was recovered. At the time Jo, a service manager at an IT company from Stockton-on-Tees, had no idea her talented, artistic middle son was using the class B drug ketamine while studying in London. It was something she only discovered after his death in August last year. Ten months on, his phone is still receiving sickening text messages from callous dealers. Shocking new figures from NHS clinics reveal last year 3,609 people in England were treated for ketamine addiction, eight times more than a decade earlier. One charity in Lancashire is helping children as young as 11 who are hooked on the illegal substance. Up and down the country, streets are so awash with the cheap drug that users 'can't get away from it'. Some addicts report that ketamine, which is also called kitkat and special K, is being sold for as little as £3 a gram in Manchester. It is also prevalent at our universities. Mum Jo tells The Sun: 'I was completely ignorant about it, and maybe we're not sophisticated, but we just didn't have a clue about what drugs were out there and how accepted they are and how widely available they are - and how cheap they are.' Parents who have found their children caught up in the ketamine crisis gripping Britain want to warn others about what is going on. Mother-of-three Julie, from Burnley, Lancs, didn't understand why her once athletic 13-year-old daughter was going missing for days on end, throwing "anything she could get her hands on' and being excluded from school until she ended up in accident and emergency. Finally, in terrible pain, her daughter confessed that she was addicted to ketamine. One in ten 15 year-olds have been offered ketamine, and doctors are treating people as young as 16 with severe bladder symptoms due to prolonged use of the drug which leaves addicts incontinent. At least 55 people in Britain died from the habit in 2023 and a quarter of 16-to 24-year-olds have tried it. 'Not himself' 8 8 8 Jo, 50, says her son Josh, a talented artist, had 'changed' after leaving the North East to study at the University of the Arts London in September 2023. She recalls: 'We saw changes in Josh when we went on holiday to France last July. There was a big group of us. "He was very strange, erratic. He just wasn't himself.' Jo thought this was just because he'd gone away to uni, but then on August 26 last year he took a lethal cocktail of ketamine, the prescription painkiller tramadol and alcohol. She recalls: 'He'd only just turned 19, on the 4th of August, and then he jumped from the London Bridge. He was still a kid, you know. 'He drowned and his body wasn't found for four days. It was an absolute nightmare.' Josh left his mobile phone behind, which revealed how addicted he was to ketamine. She claims she found "shopping lists" of drugs available to students where he was living. Jo explains: 'There were pictures of boxes of ketamine being bagged up in the halls of residence. 'There's still messages on his phone. It still lights up with drug dealer messages. "I think that they just send them out to everyone, but they're still coming through.' Josh's grandmother Annie Llewellyn previously told how their family is devastated, with her daughter Jo remarking she had "dropped Joshua at the university in September 2023 and he came back in a coffin in September 2024". Easy access At the inquest into his death Melanie Sarah Lee, Assistant Coroner of Inner North London, was critical of the easy access to drugs at the halls of residence. She wrote: "I heard evidence that ketamine was easily and openly available to students as it was being dealt from and/or by persons with access to, and moved between, student halls of residence. "In my opinion, action should be taken to prevent future deaths.' The coroner, sitting at St Pancras Coroner's Court in January, concluded that Josh "took his own life whilst his judgement was impaired due to drugs and alcohol". Josh's only mental health issues were anxiety, and Jo fears that he might have taken ketamine because he was wrongly told it would help. She continues: 'I just think he thought that ketamine would just help, but they've got no idea what they're dealing with.' Jo isn't blaming the university or anyone else for Josh's death. She is speaking out to encourage other parents to look out for the warning signs. Jo concludes: 'If one person thinks when their child is acting a bit strangely, just to start a conversation about it, even if it just helps one family, that's all I care about.' 8 8 'Horrendous' For Julie, 49, who we are not fully identifying to protect her now 15-year-old child, problems started much earlier, but the pattern is familiar. Her daughter was involved in 'athletics, dance, drama, horse riding' prior to her behaviour changing in secondary school. Julie recalls: 'Looking back now the signs were all the times she was not cooperating with anything, not wanting to get out of bed, and then when she did get out of bed she was wanting money and out the door and then we couldn't trace her. 'Sometimes she'd go missing when she couldn't get money or she had a phone taken away so she had no contacts to get anything. 'The rage, the smashing the house up, it was horrendous. 'Throwing glasses, plates, cups, anything she could get her hands on, smashing doors. It was really destructive and violent.' The rage, the smashing the house up, it was horrendous. Throwing glasses, plates, cups, anything she could get her hands on, smashing doors. It was really destructive and violent Julie, mum The bad behaviour also led to her daughter being suspended by her school. But often it is other pupils who are dealing drugs. Father Alex Frost, 55, who is campaigning to protect Burnley against ketamine, says that pupils are being expelled from schools for selling the banned substance. Julie had no idea that pupils had such easy access to them. Who would think that 13-year-olds are taking ketamine? Only when she took her daughter to the pharmacy last August to find medicine for stomach pain did the truth come out. The pharmacist said Julie's daughter needed to go to the hospital and it was there that the girl admitted she had been hooked on the drug for 10 months. Julie says: 'I think the hospital staff scared her and it put reality into it. Because of the pain she was suffering, what it was doing to her. 'We were really lucky in the sense that she herself decided that's it. 'Unfortunately some of the kids that she was involved with are still doing it and much worse.' The devastating impact of ketamine Ketamine can lead to death by putting pressure on the heart and respiratory system. But its other effects on the body, which are often irreversible, are horrifying, too. 'Ketamine bladder syndrome is one of the worst symptoms,' Dr Catherine Carney, an addiction specialist at Delamere, told Sun Health. This is where the breakdown of ketamine in the body causes inflammation in the bladder wall. It leaves people unable to hold urine and passing chunks of their bladder tissue. Some users face the prospect of having their bladders removed entirely. Dr Carney explains: 'The lining of the bladder can shrink over time and be extremely painful for those experiencing it. 'This can often lead to lower abdominal pain and pain when passing urine, as well as bleeding. 'It's usually what has forced people to get help because they can't tolerate it any more. 'We've had young men in agony, wetting the bed. 'Their whole life is focused on where there's a toilet because they can only hold urine for ten minutes. 'For a teenager or someone in their early 20s, that's absolutely life-changing. 'In some cases, the bladder damage progresses to the kidneys and people get kidney failure, too. 'This is developing in people who have been using for two years, so it is relatively quick.' Dr Carney adds that the urine samples of new guests checking into the clinic are often just a 'pot of blood'. This is followed by weeks of agony coming off the drug. An irony of ketamine use is people tend to take more and more to numb the pain of the side-effects it causes. Dr Carney says: 'There's nothing that we can give which is as strong as a medical anaesthetic (the ketamine). We can use codeine-based products or anti-inflammatories. 'Some antidepressants help at night, but the pain is hard to manage in the early days. 'Most people that come to us, the bladder will improve to the point that they don't need to have it removed. 'But once you've got a bladder that has shrunk to the size of 70ml, that's never getting better.' Ketamine is a difficult habit to kick and her daughter still has the 'urge' to take it, despite knowing the harm it can do. A common side effect is 'k-cramps' - and because ketamine is an anaesthetic, users take more of it to numb the pain it is causing. Many parents have told The Sun how their children died from the habit, with the drug destroying their bodies. Ketamine is currently a class B drug like cannabis. Julie thinks it should be a class A drug on the same level as cocaine. The long term damage to their health will put a huge strain on the NHS. It's a juggernaut coming down the mountain Father Frost Father Frost, from St Matthew's CofE Church, Burnley, agrees. He concludes: 'Ketamine is affecting all communities. I have heard that older people are using it in rural villages, retired people. 'It is in our schools, but our children aren't getting signposted by GPs to detox or rehab, which is what they need. 'The long term damage to their health will put a huge strain on the NHS. It's a juggernaut coming down the mountain.' The 'heroin of a generation' Party drug ketamine has been dubbed the 'heroin' of a generation as users warn its true toll has yet to be fully seen. The potent painkiller and sedative has become a hugely popular street drug due to its hallucinogenic and relaxing effects. But for some, a party habit can spiral into a devastating addiction. Exeter University researchers who interviewed 274 ketamine addicts warn the drug causes 'high levels of physical health problems and psychological consequences'. They estimated that nearly half – 44 per cent – of British users suffering devastating side effects from ketamine do not get professional help. Sixty per cent had bladder or nasal problems, while 56 per cent suffered from organ cramps. Six in 10 interviewees had mental health problems and reported psychological issues including cravings, low mood, anxiety and irritability. One anonymous ketamine user in the study said: 'I feel it is the heroin of a generation. 'More information will only become available once more people my age begin to suffer so greatly from misuse that it can't be hidden anymore.' Another added: 'People know the risks of heroin and cocaine but not how addictive ketamine can become.'


Telegraph
32 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Strangulation in pornography to be made illegal
Pornography depicting any act of strangulation is to be made illegal as part of government efforts to combat an 'epidemic' of sexual violence against women and girls. The move was recommended in a review for the Government by Baroness Bertin, a Conservative peer, who found that porn had effectively established choking as a 'sexual norm'. She said that a belief had taken root that choking a partner during sex was 'safe' because it was not fatal, despite overwhelming evidence that there was no safe way to strangle a person. The Government has already introduced a specific offence for abusers who strangle their partners, with perpetrators facing jail sentences of up to five years. Alex Davies-Jones, the justice minister, said: 'Depicting strangulation during sex is not only dangerous, but also degrading, with real-life consequences for women. 'Cracking down on the appalling rise of strangulation pornography will protect women and send a clear signal to men and boys that misogyny will not be tolerated.' Lady Bertin, who was commissioned to carry out the review by Rishi Sunak, also recommended that harmful online porn that would be illegal on the high street should be banned. The review, published on Thursday, found that violent, harmful and misogynistic porn was common on mainstream platforms. However, the material would be judged as illegal and refused classification by the British Board of Film Classification if it was sold in shops on the high street, according to Lady Bertin's review. It comes ahead of new legally enforced rules requiring websites that host pornographic or other harmful content to have 'robust' age verification in place for UK users by July at the latest. Methods to be required include open banking, photo ID matching, facial age estimation, credit card checks, digital ID services and email-based age estimation. 'No such thing as safe strangulation' Andrea Simon, the director of the End Violence Against Women Coalition (EVAW), said: ' We welcome the Government's decision to criminalise the depiction of strangulation in pornography, a move that reflects years of campaigning by EVAW and other experts who have long warned about the normalisation of violence against women and girls in online content. 'There is no such thing as safe strangulation; women cannot consent to the long-term harm it can cause, including impaired cognitive functioning and memory. Its widespread portrayal in porn is fuelling dangerous behaviours, particularly among young people. 'This is a vital step towards recognising the role violent pornography plays in shaping attitudes to women and regulating an industry which promotes and profits from violence against women. The UK's flagship Online Safety Act must now be updated to ensure online platforms are made to remove this content.'