Thursday, April 30, 2026 - A woman who st@bbed her film director sister to death before stealing her Rolex has been found guilty of murd£r.
Jurors on Wednesday, April 29, found Nancy Pexton guilty of
violently k!lling her sister, Jennifer Abbott Dauward.
Homeless Pexton is said to have been 'jealous' of her
sister, who was nine months her senior.
According to Mail Online, Pexton showed up at Ms Abbott's
home in Camden, north London, when she stabbed her to de@th and then fled the
scene. She bound her sister with gaffer tape and left her to die, before she
was discovered by a concerned relative three days later.
Pexton declined to give evidence during her trial at the Old
Bailey, instead relying on her defence that a drug dealer living in her
sister's block of flats was responsible.
Forensics experts later discovered Pexton's clothes had been
saturated with her sister's blood, which Pexton sought to explain by saying she
had given Ms Abbott a hug as she suffered a nosebleed.
Jurors at the Old Bailey convicted Pexton today following a
three-week trial. She will be sentenced at a later date.
Prosecutor William Boyce KC told jurors how homeless Pexton
called her sister and spoke on the phone for around 15 minutes, shortly after
11.30am on June 10 last year.
She arrived at Ms Abbott's flat in Mornington Place, Camden,
north London, shortly before 1pm, carrying some KFC, and left around an hour
later, when she called her GP saying she felt suicidial, the court heard.
Pexton said she had a blackout about what happened earlier,
jurors were told, but later gave a full account, and denied assaulting her
sister.
He said: 'The prosecution say that the defendant murdered
her sister, Jennifer Abbott, on June 10, 2025.
'They spoke by phone that morning, before the defendant then
travelled to her sister's flat by bus.
'The murd£r took place in that time.
'The defendant then left the flat and called her – Ms
Pexton's – GP, saying she had taken an overdose.
'She was taken to hospital and stayed there until her
arrest.
'She said she could not remember what happened in the
previous 90 minutes.'
Ms Abbott, a 69-year-old also known as Sarah Steinberg, was
found three days later, covered by a sheet, with significant injuries to the
upper half of her body.
The prosecutor said: 'It was obvious very quickly that Ms
Abbott was dead. She was lying primarily face up, but slightly on her right
side.
'Her head pointed towards the window, and her feet pointed
towards the door of the room leading into the hallway.
'Her right arm was extended under the coffee table, between
which and the sofa she lay, and her left arm was across her body. She appeared
to be wearing only her knickers.'
There is no evidence Ms Abbott was sexually abused, although
there was duct tape over her mouth, the court heard.
Mr Boyce said Ms Abbott ordinarily wore a bracelet and a
gold Rolex watch, which had diamonds in place of roman numerals.
Ms Abbott was so attached to the timepiece that she would
often keep it on even while washing, the court heard.
But the Rolex was not discovered on her dead body, and was
instead later found among her younger sister's possessions.
Mr Boyce said: 'Ms Abbott was wearing the bracelet, but the
Rolex watch was missing.
'As you will hear, when police went to hospital and spoke to
the defendant… they searched her property and in one of her bags was her
sister's watch – the watch she never took off, the watch to which she was
greatly attached.'
The court heard Pexton told police her sister 'asked me to
look after it'.
Mr Boyce said Ms Abbott was not in good health, and
described as 'frail and inactive', although she regularly walked her dog, a
large Corgi.
Mr Boyce told jurors the 'traumatic nature' of Ms Abbott's
death proves her assailant intended to kill the victim or cause her really
serious harm.
Jurors were also shown messages from Ms Abbott to her nephew
Feras Abu-Kait, outlining concerns about her sister.
She said: 'I've been having a hard time. Nancy wrote a text
saying she is gonna kill me, she said I should look behind me and be scared of
the enemy, obviously, the enemy is her.'
In another message, she added: 'She could kill me and stab
herself.
'She's always been jealous of me, all her life wanted what I
have, I had cars, houses and designer clothes, and she spent all her life
living on benefits.
'So who do you think is jealous of who?'
Ms Abbott's directoral credits include War of the Gods, a
documentary about religion and power.

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