Win a fitness package worth more than £3,000

It emerged yesterday that Christopher Foster's 15-year-old daughter may have been chatting to friends online in the early hours of the morning before the inferno destroyed her family’s sprawling Georgian country home.
Kirstie Foster was thought to have been on a social networking site when she was interrupted, possibly by a power cut at 1am, three hours before the blaze. Last night police were at the house hunting for the remains of the girl and her parents.
Kirstie, a student at the £16,500-a-year Ellesmere College in Shropshire, is believed to have been an enthusiastic member of the teenage-orientated Bebo network, where she swapped upbeat messages with her pals.
The family home of the missing millionaire businessman Christopher Foster has begun to give up its macabre secrets but it will be a slow process. At one point forensic science searchers sifting through the rubble of Osbaston House, in the village of Maesbrook, near Oswestry, were forced to retreat by tumbling debris.
Police still do not know whether the bodies of Mr Foster, 50, his wife, Jillian, 49, or Kirstie, lie beneath the blackened masonry. They have said that the search could take several weeks.
Four days after the investigation began into the deliberate destruction of the £1.25 million property in the heart of the commuter belt, the location resembles the opening scene of a particularly extravagant Inspector Lynley mystery featuring foul play at the end of a grand gravel drive. So far there is little plot development. Only the main character, a businessman with an extravagant lifestyle and a host of money worries, is taking shape against the smouldering cinders.
Mr Foster’s friends in Maesbrook, car dealers and property developers and those he joined on pheasant shoots or fishing trips along the River Morda, have retreated behind their security gates. The family left a friend’s barbecue, apparently relaxed and happy, at about 8.30pm on Bank Holiday Monday. At 4am fire broke out in the main house, stables and kennels.
Yesterday a convoy of police vehicles moved on to the site where structural engineers had worked to make it safe to search.
Three horses found dead at the scene have been examined and officers were awaiting the postmortem results.
The charred remains of the family’s pet dogs were also found. A large horsebox has been removed for scientific tests.
Human tissue may not be apparent to the naked eye but can be detected by scientific analysis. Material has to be laboriously tagged and taken away for examination.
When Mr Foster’s limited company, Ulva, which supplied insulation to oil rigs, went into liquidation last year it faced legal action from one supplier and owed £800,000 tax. The Court of Appeal described Mr Foster as “someone not to be trusted”.
Land Registry documents reveal that the liquidators had made an interim charge on the family home, which could have opened the way for repossession. There is speculation among business associates and villagers that Mr Foster “flipped” when his country-gentleman lifestyle appeared to be slipping away.
Terence Baines, a former director of Ulva, said: “He was an ordinary business salesman, running a company, and a family man. He was just an ordinary everyday chap, well dressed, a good businessman.”
Anne Giddings, 57, Mrs Foster’s sister, who lives in Perton, near Wolverhampton, said: “We are devastated. This just does not happen to your own family. It is like something you see on television.”
Kirstie’s schoolfriends said that she was popular and had a passion for horse riding. Her boyfriend, who is understood to live near Wolverhampton, has been described as deeply upset by developments. One 16-year-old pupil, in the year above Kirstie at Ellesmere, said: “There is no one who disliked her. Everyone got along with her. She had no enemies.”
Brendan Wignall, head teacher at the independent school in north Shropshire, said: “Kirstie is a charming, popular and hard-working girl with many friends, all of whom are hoping that she and her family will be found safe and well.”
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
The inside track on current trends in the charity, not for profit and social enterprise sectors
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
05/2005
£13,500
08/2008
£109,950
2006
£10,750
Great car insurance deals online
£Excellent+ executive benefits
Torres and Partners
London
£49,229 - £62,035 pro rata
Charity Commission
London/Liverpool/Taunton
Alstom Power
Europe
Six Figure
Rolls Royce
Midlands/Europe
From £89,950
Great Investment, River Views
Special Offers now available
New Year in the USA!
.
Cruise the Islands of Hawaii - Pride of America
List your property with two leading travel websites
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths
News International associated websites: Globrix | Property Finder | Milkround
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
my gess is that jill and kirstie did'nt know the extent of chris's debt and that week it was all going to come out and it was all being taken away. how do you go from living like a millionaire in a million pound mansion to living in a council house!?
stan, leicester,
Guys guys, its one heck of a big mystery, but we shouldn't be worrying about how and why things happened yet. We dont even know if they're dead! Let's hope theyre not. Save your speculation for when we REALLY know what happened. Im totally curious like the rest of you, but its too early to judge.
Charlotte, London,
What's the deal with the seemingly deaf neighbours?
In 'third body found' story it says that the alarm was raised after neighbours heard a car petrol tank explode.
So these neighbours managed to hear a relatively small one off explosion, but failed to hear up to 10 gunshots from a powerful weapon?
Will, Derby,
Mo, Essex, I'm with you,
How on Earth could ONE person shoot his wife and daughter, then four dogs and horses, deal with the windows, horsebox, set fire to the garage, stables and outbuildings in such a short period of time????????????
Surely someone MUST have heard something????
Neighbours????!!
john, Armadale, West Lothian
Who says there was an actual power cut anyway??? Maybe Kirstie was suddenly interupted by whoever or whatever and the plug to the computer simply yanked out of he wall or is that too simple ?
jey, Leicester,
"A good businessman" is how Mr Foster is described by his former co-director. I'd hate to see his idea of a bad one! His business activities seem to have been entirely predicated on greed and self image. A sad but highly topical parable for our age.
Peter, East Sussex, UK
just one idea if thier was a power cut how could someone see and have the nessasary items to board up such a large house with many windows,
david, manchester, lancashire
Can a single man execute such a grand scale disaster, parking a trailer to block the gate, killing off all the pets, boarding the windows and then setting fire to that whole scale of a mansion, kill his wife and daughter all by himself within 3-4 hours? Most unlikely...I mean who are his neighbours?
Mo, Essex, UK
Plus there was also a horse trailer with tyres slashed parked accross the entrance gate to delay fire fighters gaining entry dito the boarded windows and doors all done from the INSIDE.
emma, macclesfield,
I'm wondering why this is news. Even if it is, what on earth does this poor girls school fees have to do with anything
Mark, Brisbane, Australia
This is awfully sad. But a note regarding Timesonline criminal cases more broadly: why do people frequently add such facile comments suggesting potential leads? Do you, D. of Bromsgrove, seriously think that a plethora of police experts might not have considered the regional extent of a power cut?
Victoria, London,
What they need to check for is public CCTV camera backups and scan all the license plates in that area - find out who lives in the area and who doesn't and go after each one and question those that don't live in the area (if they haven't already began the process). Check with petro stations as well.
Dare, Kent,
Steven Katirai, they (the investigators) have a lot more information at their disposal than they are letting on. For a start they could so easily sweep through the accounts of all the mobile phones in the house, given the time it happened there shouldn't be too many calls at that time.
Matthew Roberts, Birmingham, England
Sounds like whoever did this cut the power to disable the security systems and communications. I wonder if there is mobile reception there?
Steven Katirai, Ncl Upon tyne,
This "power cut" is only a speculation among Bebo users about why Kirsty might have suddenly gone offline. My understanding is that none of the neighbours have said anything about a power cut, and there is no other evidence to suggest that there was a fault with the electricity supply.
Fred, Surbiton,
Karen, i think you misinterpreted David's comment - i don't think he was worrying about whether his goldfish might have gone a few hours without their regular oxygen level over and above the tragedy of a dead family - but rather trying to piece together clues...
Marco, Kraków, Poland
Use your brain, Karen. If the powercut was all of the local area, it could be coincidence. If it was just to the house, it is likely to be caused by whoever started the fire.
Billy, Devon,
If the power cut was local to the house possibly quite a lot if it was in an area possibly nothing. A localised power cut may be a pointer as to why and how the fire occured and what was happening in the house at the time. All avenues of investigation must be considered how ever seemingly pointless.
John, Durham,
David, What difference does a power cut make now?
karen, halifax, england
David, what difference does that make now?
karen, halifax, england
Does anyone know if the power cut was local to the house or the area?
David , Bromsgrove,