Wife had affair with husband's carer - while the pair left him in bed for days on end and took his inheritance

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now
A scheming wife embarked on an affair with her disabled husband’s carer and then used her spouse as a ‘cash cow’ as the pair swindled him out of his inheritance, a court heard.

Over a 10-year period, Sarah Somerset How and lover George Webb allegedly ‘enslaved’ her husband Tom, barely keeping him alive as they spent his money while treating him ‘like a piece of property’.

While they bought themselves lingerie and DJ equipment with cash he had been given by relatives, the 40-year-old, an ‘intelligent’ history graduate with cerebral palsy who uses a wheelchair, was left as a ‘prisoner in his own home’, a jury was told.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad
George Webb and Sarah Somerset How are on trial at Portsmouth Crown Court Pictures: Solent News and PicturesGeorge Webb and Sarah Somerset How are on trial at Portsmouth Crown Court Pictures: Solent News and Pictures
George Webb and Sarah Somerset How are on trial at Portsmouth Crown Court Pictures: Solent News and Pictures

The pair allegedly left wheelchair-bound Mr Somerset How - who is almost blind and needs 24-hour care - in bed for 90 per cent of the time, allowed him a shower once a week and went for a whole year without brushing his teeth.

For food he would be left with only a packet of crisps and a sandwich, the court was told, while the pair carried out their plan to ‘ostracise’ him from his family.

The jury was told that eventually Mr Somerset How managed to raise the alarm about how he was being treated with a friend who alerted his parents.

They then staged a rescue with police and social services, ‘an operation that had the marks of extracting someone as a hostage’, the court heard.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mrs Somerset How, 49, and Webb, 50, are now on trial at Portsmouth Crown Court charged with holding a person in slavery, fraud, theft and ill-treatment by a care worker.

Live-in carer Webb faces an additional charge of ABH against Mr Somerset How after an incident where is he accused of hitting him with a shoe.

The court heard the alleged offences took place between January 2010 and December 2020, when Mrs Somerset How began her affair with Mr Webb.

Paul Cavin, prosecuting, said: ‘These offences were a deliberate exploitation and effective enslavement of Tom.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

‘Tom was born with cerebral palsy and is badly affected by it. He has required 24-hour care and assistance with everything since his birth.

‘His eyesight is almost to the point of blindness.

‘He is a highly intelligent man with a degree. The defendants treated him like a piece of property instead of a person they should have cared for.’

Mr Cavin said Mr Somerset How told the police that ‘the level of care they gave to him was barely existent’ and ‘it was the bare minimum to ensure he was alive’.

‘He was left with just a sandwich and a packet of crisps,’ he said. ‘He showered once a week and wouldn't have his teeth brushed for long periods of time.’

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mr Cavin said the couple's neglect of Mr Somerset How was deliberate.

‘This was all for a reason, not for lack of skills,’ he said. ‘In 2010, the defendant commenced an affair and thought to conceal it from him. But he was vital to their relationship - he provided them with a source of income.

‘Any divorce would have brought all that to an end. They sought to isolate him from friends and family. He was not allowed to call people without one of them being present. He was their cash cow.

‘They plundered his finances, spending £12,000 of his inheritance.’

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The court heard Mr Somerset How met his wife in 2008 through Gina Zeelie, a friend who worked with Mrs Somerset How.

At this time, he was living in sheltered accommodation and recovering from surgery.

In 2010, they moved into a purpose-built bungalow in Chichester, West Sussex, and had 24-hour care paid for by social services during the week, with his wife providing weekend cover.

Mr Webb, working for healthcare agency NursePlus, arrived in 2016 to help care for him. with the three of them living in the same house.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

This then transitioned into private care, paid for by Tom at a rate of £4,000 a month. Over the next four months the alleged ill treatment worsened.

At work Mrs Somerset How told colleagues that she and Webb would have sex in the sitting room after her husband had gone to bed.

Mr Cavin said: ‘For the first six weeks, it was fine, but this began to decline rapidly from then. He was left in bed for up to nine hours at a time with only a urine bottle and a packet of crisps.

‘Tom noticed the defendants were spending a lot of time together and began to suspect they were having an affair. He was right to suspect that.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

‘Tom gave an estimate that he spent nearly 90 per cent of the next four years in bed. Every few months, he was allowed to see his mother.

‘He went weeks without showering and almost a year without brushing his teeth.

‘On one occasion, he soiled the bed, and Webb brought him to the shower and sprayed him in the face with it, calling him dirty and scummy, which he said felt like he was being suffocated.

‘Tom said Mr Webb threw a shoe at his face, causing him an injury to his lip.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

‘He was increasingly ostracised. He was not just neglected. He was not just abused. He was treated like a piece of property. Every aspect of his life was controlled. His remaining independence he had was taken away from him by the defendants. He couldn't dismiss his carer who was abusing him, and his wife wouldn't intervene or help him because she was having an affair.

‘He became a prisoner in his own home. He was entirely dependent on his abusers to stay alive.

‘Tom received money from family members, which was taken by the defendants without his consent.

‘This was spent on DJ equipment, as Mr Webb would DJ as a hobby, lingerie and paying off credit cards. Mr Webb's salary payments were over and above.’

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Eventually, in July 2020, Mr Somerset How told Ms Zeelie about the alleged abuse.

‘He confided in her about the conditions he was being kept in,’ Mr Cavin said. ‘She urged him to speak to his family, but he refused, worried that he might come to harm.

‘She was so disturbed that she connected with his parents on Facebook to tell them. In August, they hatched a plan to tell Tom that his mother wanted to speak to him.

‘Two days later, Tom's mother, Helen, told Gina she had told social services. This was an operation that had the marks of extracting someone as a hostage.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

‘They had mundane conversations on Facebook to distract Sarah.’

The court heard his mother then made an unexpected visit to the house, where Mr Webb was aggressive and was shouting that they needed notice if she was visiting.

On August 15, the court heard Mr Somerset How confirmed to social services he was being ill treated and an ‘extraction date’ was agreed on for five days later.

Police officers, social services and family members all turned up and Mrs Somerset How and Webb were arrested.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Messages on their phones read to the court saw Webb and Mrs Somerset How call each other ‘darling’ and ‘babe’ while using offensive terms to refer to her husband and his family.

In one message, Mrs Somerset How said she ‘just wanted to slap him [Tom]’ and in another she said ‘the fact that he breathes drives me nuts’.

She also sent a text to Webb a message that read ‘all that keeps me going is our five-year plan’.

Concluding his opening, Mr Cavin said of Mr Somerset How: ‘He became a victim of modern slavery, we argue. He was effectively imprisoned in his own home.’

Mrs Somerset How and Webb deny the charges.

The trial – expected to last four weeks – continues.