Charity run by Bet365 gambling tycoon Denise Coates is accused of sitting on millions in donations dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The bookie s daughter from Stoke who hit the jackpot: How ultra-secretive workaholic mother-of-five Denise Coates, 53, became Britain s best paid woman after mortgaging family business to set up Bet365 - and is using her £469MILLION salary to build a futuristic fortress
Bet365 boss Denise Coates originally trained as an accountant but hated job so made switch to bookies
But in the late 1990s after taking father s Provincial Racing shops to profit she gambled on new online future
They mortgaged the stores to get £15million loan to build Bet365, starting from a Portkabin in a car park
Yesterday it emerged her idea had seen her paid £469million, UK s largest salary, as it spectacularly paid off
Updated: 27 Jan 2021, 17:41
A NEWBORN baby died just a week after his skull was fractured with forceps during a botched delivery.
Tiny Kaylan Coates suffered a fractured skull and brain bleed during a forceps delivery and tragically died from a hospital infection days later.
2
Hayley Coates, 28, was broken when her baby Kaylan died following care at Queen’s Medical Centre, NottinghamCredit: Eugene Henderson
2
The tot died just a few days after the forceps delivery Credit: Eugene Henderson
A coroner has slammed the care given to his mum whose week-old baby died following a catalogue of hospital blunders as nothing short of shocking .
A coroner has slammed the care given to a mother whose week-old baby died following a catalogue of hospital blunders as nothing short of shocking .
Tiny Kaylan Coates suffered serious injuries including skull fractures during a forceps delivery and died from a hospital infection days later.
Staff at Nottingham s Queen s Medical Centre ignored pregnant Hayley Coates pleas for a Caesarean section and did not spot her baby s signs of distress, an inquest was told.
Despite being a high-risk patient, she was allocated a newly qualified midwife - and maternity ward staff failed to monitor her properly despite having time to socialise and shop online, a legal representative for Ms Coates told the inquest.