logo
Chef at Rick Stein restaurant found dead in staff accommodation

Chef at Rick Stein restaurant found dead in staff accommodation

Independent20-02-2025

A 'much-loved' chef who worked at Rick Stein 's restaurant The Cornish Arms has been found dead.
Police were called to a house of multiple occupancy at Grenville Road in Padstow around 8pm last Thursday out of concern for the welfare of a man inside. The young man, in his 30s, was declared dead at the scene.
A spokesperson for Devon and Cornwall Police told The Independent that his death was not being treated as suspicious and his next of kin had been informed.
Cornwall Live reported that the chef was found dead in the staff accommodation.
Ian Fitzgerald, managing director of The Rick Stein Group said in a statement: "We are deeply saddened to confirm the passing of one of our chefs on Thursday, February 13.
"There are no suspicious circumstances surrounding the death, but out of respect for the family's wishes for privacy during this difficult time, we will not be sharing further details.
"Our heartfelt condolences are with his family, friends and all who knew him. He was a valued and much-loved member of our team and will be greatly missed.'
Stein purchased the Cornish Arms in St Merryn, a village near Padstow, in 2009 with his then-wife and business partner, Jill Stein.
He has four businesses in Padstow, one in St Merryn and one in Newquay, as well as a number of establishments in Marlborough, Sandbanks and London.
This year will mark 50 years since Stein and his ex-wife started their family business.
The Rick Stein Group, which started with the flagship Seafood Restaurant in Padstow, now employs over 600 people and includes restaurants, a cookery school, shops and accommodation.
Stein has gone on to become a familiar face on television as he has fronted a number of food shows, such as Rick Stein's Long Weekends and Rick Stein's Cornwall and Rick Stein's Taste of the Sea.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews The Gold on BBC1: Gold, greed, booze... this caper has the hallmarks of a classic crime flick
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews The Gold on BBC1: Gold, greed, booze... this caper has the hallmarks of a classic crime flick

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews The Gold on BBC1: Gold, greed, booze... this caper has the hallmarks of a classic crime flick

The Gold (BBC Where would you hide £10 million in gold bars? You can't bury it in the back garden — that's the first place police will look. Lock-up garages are too risky. Those places are apt to get burgled . . . the problem with being a big-time crook these days is that there are so many petty thieves. I'd go for the Gothic option — an overgrown Victorian graveyard. Plenty of cities have them, with tombstones and cracked sarcophagi all at crazy angles, overgrown by ivy. Take a crowbar, prise a few open, and conceal the ingots with the coffins. Ingeniously creepy, don't you think? Neil Forsyth, writer of The Gold, has a different theory for what happened to the missing half of the Brink's-Mat bullion. As he told Nicole Lampert, in the Daily Mail's Weekend magazine, it's an idea that was floating around in the 1980s: one of the villains behind Britain's biggest heist simply hid his haul in a Cornish tin mine. That's the basis for this comedy-thriller's second series. Good luck to anyone who hasn't seen the first run, aired in 2023, because many characters return with no introductions, including Hugh Bonneville as the luckless Met detective DCS Brian Boyce. Hugh, doing a gruff South London accent, is never quite convincing playing a straight-as-a-die copper who aims to get results by twisting a few arms and wearing out a lot of shoe leather. He lacks stolidness. There's always an edge of irony in his voice, a knowingness that doesn't fully match his character. But he's on a losing wicket from the start, because all Forsyth's sympathies are with the robbers and their associates. The chief failing of the first series was its insistence on making them likeable, even lovable — when the truth is that men such as Kenneth Noye and John Palmer were obnoxious thugs. Noye, played by Jack Lowden, hasn't returned yet, but Palmer (Tom Cullen) takes a central role. This time, at least, we can see what a vicious man he is — conning retirees into buying worthless timeshares in Tenerife, and lashing out with increasing violence as his paranoia grows. The real entertainment comes from supporting roles, especially Joshua McGuire as a spitefully camp accountant who specialises in tax dodges, and Peter Davison as the wonderfully snobbish Met Commissioner. Stephen Campbell Moore is effortlessly watchable, too, as a bent copper who sees himself as the Lone Ranger. Forsyth's reverence for classic gangland flicks shone through in a closing sequence of smelting gold, bundles of cash, boozing and greed, all set to a soundtrack of electronic music. It recalled one of the great crime movies, Thief, starring James Caan. Sam Spruell plays Charlie Miller, the crafty wide boy who is landed with that tricky problem of stashing a ton-and-a-half of ingots somewhere safe. The Cornish mine is his masterplan. Personally, I wouldn't risk it. The Famous Five are bound to stumble across it on a holiday adventure. 'I say, you fellows — look what Timmy's found!'

EXCLUSIVE Inside the high street so bad locals call it 'St Awful': How Cornwall's biggest town has a problem with drugs, homelessness and empty shops
EXCLUSIVE Inside the high street so bad locals call it 'St Awful': How Cornwall's biggest town has a problem with drugs, homelessness and empty shops

Daily Mail​

time17 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Inside the high street so bad locals call it 'St Awful': How Cornwall's biggest town has a problem with drugs, homelessness and empty shops

It was once the global capital of the China Clay industry, bringing enormous wealth, jobs and pride to the area, but St Austell is now gripped by poverty and drug abuse. The town's reputation has become so bad that locals have cruelly dubbed it 'St Awful' and this week told MailOnline they now fear to walk down the high street. Signs of drug abuse were everywhere, a sharps bin installed in a town centre car park was overflowing with hypodermic needles. Youtuber JoeFish recently found dozens of drug addicts passed out in the town centre in the middle of the day. Morley Cummings, 59, who slept rough in the town for 10 years before getting his own place, told MailOnline: 'It's worse now than I've ever seen it. 'When I was homeless there wasn't much of a problem with drugs but now there's so much more. It's not just the amount of people using drugs, the drugs they are taking are much worse too. 'I feel intimidated when I come into town, I have been robbed a lot of times, so much so that I now carry a panic alarm. 'I know of people in St Austell who have a house but are still out on the streets begging because it's easier than getting a job. 'Just putting more money into rebuilding the town centre isn't helping, so many shops are closing down and staying empty for years.' During our visit we found 26 empty shops within the tiny town centre - some were clearly abandoned years ago with mould inside, weeds growing around entrances and windows boarded up. It comes despite tens of millions of pounds being spent on regenerating the town centre in recent decades. Outside the White River Place shopping centre - built in 2009 at a cost of £75million - hairdresser Rachel Ford, 51, admitted she rarely visits the town centre any more. She said: 'I rarely come into town, there are almost no shops open, it's just depressing. 'There are drunks and addicts everywhere which creates an intimidating and scary atmosphere. 'There is just so much homelessness and rough sleeping it makes respectable people not want to be around it. 'This town could be so good, they have spent a lot of money here but it hasn't worked. 'I would like the authorities to get a grip on it, we never see the police and I wouldn't want my kids to go out drinking in town in the evening - it's just not safe.' Despite locals claiming the streets are blighted with drug users, police figures suggest it is the seventh worse crime in the area with 83 incidents reported in the last 12 months. Census data shows as well as being Cornwall's largest town, St Austell is its second most deprived. Cornwall itself remains one of the most deprived regions of the UK. The contrast with its south coast neighbour Fowey could not be more stark. The picturesque fishing former village - once home to comedian Dawn French - sits around five miles to the east but is a mecca for second home owners and is consistently ranked among the country's most expensive seaside towns. Peter Seddon, 74, who has lived in St Austell almost 50 years said he had only seen things change for the worst. He added: 'This high street is in a worse state than it was under Thatcher, there is no wealth generation any more. 'A lot of people have tried to set up businesses in the town but they have lost their shirt before they've even opened. 'Look at this whole parade of shops, there is nothing you would want to go to. Can you build a town on just nail bars? 'Drugs are a massive problem here, we see that every day. A lot of problem people have been moved here from elsewhere and as a result middle class people do not want to come into town. 'I feel really sorry for people who come here.' Steven Runham, 73, who lived in the town for 40 years said he was horrified by how much the town has declined. He said: 'It used to be a really nice little town but like lots of others it's just failed. 'They have tried to regenerate it a lot but it never quite works. 'It's ok when the sun shines and the tourists are down but the rest of the time there's nothing to bring people here. 'What we have ended up with is somewhere that used to be really nice to come to but now you only come if you have to.' In 2023, a new £58million regeneration scheme was unveiled by St Austell Town Council which would include building rooftop gardens, more student accommodation and demolishing large parts of the town centre. Organisers had hoped to secure funding from Cornwall Council and the Government by 2024. At the time Sandra Heyward, chair of the regeneration partnership, said she believed the projects were 'viable'. She said: 'This plan is definitely not an off-the-peg, one-size-fits-all plan which has happened so many times in the past. 'It has been well thought out and is the result of hours of consultation with the public, stakeholders, Town Council and Cornwall Council and is ready for activation.'

Black man had medical emergency that deteriorated after altercation with police, jury concludes
Black man had medical emergency that deteriorated after altercation with police, jury concludes

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • The Guardian

Black man had medical emergency that deteriorated after altercation with police, jury concludes

A vulnerable black man who died after police dragged him across a bathroom floor by his collar and handcuffed him had a medical emergency that was worsened by his interactions with the officers, an inquest jury has concluded. Godrick Osei, a student, had been experiencing acute behavioural disturbance (ABD) in the early hours of 3 July 2022 after using cannabis and cocaine, and drinking alcohol, the inquest into his death heard. The 35-year-old thought he was being chased by someone and called the police asking for help before breaking into a care home in Truro, Cornwall, and entering a narrow bathroom. Care home staff called 999 and when police officers arrived, Osei was locked inside the bathroom screaming and calling for help. Officers forced their way in and found Osei on the floor. One of the officers, PC Peter Boxall, told the inquest he dragged Osei by his collar as this was the safest way to get him out of the narrow space. He argued that handcuffing him was justified for the safety of the officers and members of the public, including Osei. The inquest heard ABD presents with symptoms such as extreme agitation, paranoia, rapid breathing and sweating, and can be exacerbated by restraint. Boxall said he had been trained in ABD but had not recognised it in Osei. The inquest jury returned a narrative conclusion on Friday. It said: 'Godrick's death was caused by heart failure related to acute behavioural disturbance (ABD) and associated drug and alcohol misuse and mental health difficulties (PTSD). 'His ABD was exacerbated by the use of illicit substances and alcohol and psychological distress he experienced with his interactions with the police.' In legal arguments during the inquest, the family argued that the jury should be given the option of reaching a conclusion of unlawful killing. They said that everything Osei experienced that night – including being dragged across the floor and sworn at – was 'part and parcel' of the events that led to his death. Devon and Cornwall police argued that natural causes ought to be the conclusion. The case is particularly sensitive for the Devon and Cornwall force after the death of church caretaker Thomas Orchard, who died after a heavy webbing belt was placed over his face by police during a mental health crisis in Exeter in 2012. An inquest jury found in 2023 that prolonged use of the belt may have contributed to his death. The charity Inquest, which has been supporting Osei's family, said his death highlighted a 'broader and longstanding pattern' of a disproportionate number of deaths of black men after police use of force, particularly those in mental health crisis. Research by Inquest in 2022 reported that black people are seven times more likely to die after police restraint than white people. After the conclusion of the hearing, Jodie Anderson, senior caseworker at Inquest, said: 'The police response to Godrick was brutal and inhumane. Terrified and in crisis, he called 999 seeking help, fearing for his life. Instead, he was met with aggression and force. 'Godrick's death highlights a deeply embedded culture within policing: one that defaults to violence rather than compassion. From the Macpherson report to the Casey review, the warnings about institutional racism have been clear – yet nothing changes.' During his inquest in Truro, Osei's family claimed he was treated 'inhumanely' because of his race, which was denied by the officers involved in the incident. His relatives described him as a deeply loved son, brother, and father-of-two, a 'gentle giant' who had struggled with his mental health after the death of his father. Una Morris, the family's lawyer, suggested to PC Boxall that his attitude changed when he saw Osei was black. The inquest heard that he told a colleague to 'red dot' Osei – aim a Taser at him, though the electrical weapon was not discharged – and said: 'Fucking hell, look at the sight of his fingers.' The lawyer asked Boxall if dragging a black man by the collar across the floor and swearing at him was 'inhumane'. Boxall replied that the man's race made no difference. 'We needed to gain control,' he said. However, he apologised for his language. Devon and Cornwall police have been contacted for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store