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Prince Andrew's ex-girlfriend Koo Stark walks free from court as she returns painting to a former partner

Former partner of the Duke of York had been accused of stealing £40,000 painting

Alex Diaz
Thursday 20 June 2013 12:23 BST
Koo Stark has walked free from court after she returned a £40,000 painting she was accused of stealing from a former partner
Koo Stark has walked free from court after she returned a £40,000 painting she was accused of stealing from a former partner (Lewis Whyld/PA Wire)

Koo Stark, a former girlfriend of the Duke of York, walked free from court today after she returned a £40,000 painting she was accused of stealing from a former partner.

The 57-year-old, of Knightsbridge, London, was appearing at Isleworth Crown Court after she allegedly took the artwork from the flat of Warren Walker, father of her daughter Tatiana.

But before the case went to trial, prosecution and defence reached an agreement for her to return the Anthonie van Borssom oil painting, which depicts a moonlit coastal landscape.

Wearing a black fitted dress with white oriental print and black kitten heels and carrying a black leather handbag, Ms Stark - real name Kathleen - remained calm as she was cleared of one count of theft.

The American-born actress, then aged 26, dated the Duke of York after his return from the Falklands War in 1982. They went out together for 18 months.

The Duke went on to marry Sarah Ferguson in 1986.

The painting, titled A Moonlit Coastal Landscape With A Fisherman Drying Nets In The Foreground And Various Pinks Setting Sail, was brought to court and handed over to a solicitor representing Mr Walker.

Ms Stark's defence claimed yesterday that she believed it was hers when she took it.

Judge Andrew McDowall told her barrister: "It is an unfortunate fact that for many years these parties have been locked in battle in the civil and family courts.

"At the end of the day, the fact of the matter is if your client had acted through the civil courts, it would have been dealt with there and if she had not gone to the property and taken away the painting, this would never have happened.

"If things had gone differently, we might have been here for days.

"It was better to resolve this matter without running the risk of private personal matters being ventilated in court."

Mr Edward told the judge that the complainant had "sought to criminalise the mother of his child unjustly, disproportionally and inappropriately".

He also said the case had given rise to the "very real risk" that his client would be left homeless and unable to provide a home for her daughter.

In a statement read outside court by Ms Stark's solicitor, Jules Azzopardi, she said: "Today I have been cleared of a charge that should never have been brought against me.

"I leave court with my liberty and my good name, but it should never have come to this.

"I was a defendant charged with a serious crime.

"In my mind, I have been looking into a prison for the last 10 months.

"I have travelled through the criminal courts, a stranger in a strange land.

"When I was arrested I was even put into a cage - as they describe it at the police station.

"I have been vilified and put in the pillory.

"Fortunately, common sense has prevailed and my former partner has relented.

"As Yeats once said: 'Young we loved each other and were ignorant'.

"I leave with the desire that from now on we will treat each other with respect and that any disputes we may have are dealt with in private and with dignity."

PA

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