Wednesday, February 18 2026 -The boyfriend of a woman who died from bre@st cancer faked her will and a wedding in Cyprus in a bid to get his hands on her £500,000 fortune, a court has heard.
London cleaning company boss and mother-of-one Kassy Sinar
was just 46 when she d!ed of the disease in October 2023.
She left the whole of her £500,000 estate in trust for the
benefit of her 16-year-old daughter Jocey in a will she made in 2022.
But after her death, her partner Cengiz Arif - Jocey's
father - tried to claim his daughter's money for himself, producing a document
which he claimed was Ms Sinar's true last will, dated 10 May 2023, under which
everything went to him.
He also made bogus claims that he and Ms. Sinar had secretly
married in Cyprus in 2006 and even banned her family members from attending her
funeral in London.
Mr. Arif had previously abandoned his partner on her
deathbed and flown abroad to spend two weeks in Cyprus instead.
Ms Sinar's brother, Ernest - who, along with his wife
Michelle, is now Jocey's legal guardian, went on to sue on the family's behalf.
Now, High Court judge Chief Master Karen Shuman has ruled
that both the marriage certificate and the 2023 will were 'forged'.
She upheld the 2022 will leaving all of Ms Sinar's money in
trust for her daughter, and ordered Mr Arif him to pay the estimated £206,000
costs run up by Ms Sinar's brother fighting the case.
The judge also stripped Mr. Arif, who didn't show up at
court to defend the case of his roles as executor of the 2022 will and trustee
of his daughter's trust fund, and made an injunction banning him from dealing
with or dissipating any of the properties or money in Ms. Sinar's estate.
The court heard that Ms Sinar, originally from Manchester
but living in London, had bought a property in Kimberley Gardens, Finsbury
Park.
She and Mr. Arif were in a on-off relationship with Jocey,
born in 2009, but the couple then split between 2011 and 2018.
Ms. Sinar told friends that she had refused his proposal of
marriage and that the relationship was 'abusive and toxic'
The couple later got back together, but tragically Ms Sinar
was diagnosed with breast cancer and died in October 2023 in a hospice.
After her death relations broke down, with brother Ernest
and his wife holding their own memorial service for Ms Sinar after Mr Arif
banned them from her cremation in London.
Mr Arif then came forward with the supposed 2023 will,
leaving all Ms Sinar's estate including her London home and a bolt hole house
she had bought in Thurston Street, Burnley, to him.
He also began pocketing the rental income from the Finsbury
Park property, the court heard.He claimed that she had self-drafted and signed
the will without informing her family or daughter, and that the pair had
secretly married in 2006 without her brother or any other of her friends or
family having known.
Mr Arif made no claim to be her husband before her de@th.
Ms Sinar's brother made enquiries with the Turkish
authorities questioning the validity of the marriage certificate produced, only
to be told that no wedding had taken place on the date claimed and that the
registrar Mr Arif named had not even been working.
Turkish authorities confirmed that 'the marriage is not
legally valid,' the judge said.
She continued: 'Nobody was aware that Kassy was allegedly
married.
'I'm satisfied on the evidence that I have heard that this
was an unhappy, toxic and abusive relationship. There is evidence of physical
and emotional abuse.
'In her last weeks of life, he left her to travel to Cyprus
for at least two weeks.
'She was never married to Cengiz, therefore he has adduced
to the court a forged document.
'Cengiz produced in these proceedings a false document. He
was never married to Kassy.
'I'm satisfied that the marriage certificate is a forged
document.'
The judge went on to order him to pay Ernest's costs of the
case, which his barrister Sarah Harrison said came to around £206,000.
The judge ordered an up-front payment of £120,000 on account
of those costs.
Verity Hudson, from Ernest's solicitors Rothley Law said
after the case:
'This was a complex and emotional case that required careful
investigation. Having worked closely with the family since 2023, we're so
pleased to have helped secure the right outcome for them.'

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