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Millionaire golf pro torches own home as he ‘didn’t want ex to have everything’

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Millionaire golf pro torches own home as he ‘didn’t want ex to have everything’

Francis McGuirk, who was a professional at Prince’s Golf Club and once ranked among the top 700 golfers in the world. was spared jail after pleading guilty to arson

Francis McGuirk is pictured leaving Canterbury Crown Court(James Pallant , / Kent Online / SWNS)

A millionaire golf professional who set fire to his own home to spite his estranged wife later told emergency crews: “I didn’t want the b**h to have everything.”

Francis McGuirk, 50, started the blaze at the property he co-owned with former partner Sarah McGuirk after the break-up of their marriage turned bitter. The dad even sent her messages describing his plans to “burn the house to the ground” with him inside shortly before the arson attack on June 25 last year.




And a court heard McGuirk acted on his threat, causing significant damage to the £900,000 property in Sandwick, Kent, and minor injuries to himself. A judge was told this was also a “genuine suicide attempt” and McGuirk has since seen a psychiatrist.

He was given a suspended sentence as a result, after a judge heard the defendant has sought help to improve his mental health and his drinking problem in the year since the fire. McGuirk was given a custodial sentence of 20 months, suspended for two years, and ordered to pay £13,555 in costs.

He must also complete 200 hours of unpaid work in the community, attend 30 sessions of rehabilitation activities, and take part in alcohol abstinence monitoring for 120 days. Sitting at Canterbury Crown Court, Recorder Edmund Fowler also imposed a five-year restraining order forbidding McGuirk from contacting his soon-to-be ex-wife, with the former couple engaged in divorce proceedings.

The recorder added: “Mr McGuirk, I make it very clear to you that were you to commit any offence within the next two years, you would be brought back here and almost certainly go straight into custody. You have come very very close to going straight inside.

“You caused considerable damage and psychological harm to others. You also harmed your own children. Your daughters were forced to leave their home during an already difficult period of their lives.

“This did start out as a serious attempt to kill yourself and that does to my mind reduce your culpability. And you have since sought help to improve your mental health and your drinking problem.”

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