A lovestruck businessman who gave £180,000 to a married woman 20 years his junior after meeting her on Tinder has today won a court fight to make her pay it back.
'Naive'
London-based oil industry consultant Marcel Kooter, 57, said he was 'blinded by attraction' when he agreed to transfer £182,000 to Manuela Radeva after meeting her online in February 2017.
Mr Kooter and Ms Radeva had a nine-month long relationship, and she moved into his apartment in Woolwich soon after they met.
On her Tinder profile, Bulgarian Ms Radeva, 37, claimed to be an investment banker working for Citibank who was single and looking for love, a court heard today.
But Mr Kooter told the High Court in London Ms Radeva had lied about her profession and got married to another man just weeks before they met.
When their relationship broke down, Mr Kooter sued her, claiming he had only given her the £182,000 to invest for him, because he thought she was a high level professional investment expert.
He also demanded another 36,000 euros he said he lent her.
Ms Radeva admitted she was married, but claimed she was amicably separated from her husband and 'regarded herself as single'.
She said Mr Kooter gave her the bulk of the money to support their 'expensive, luxurious lifestyle' together.
Ms Radeva claimed the payments were part-and-parcel of their lavish 'domestic expenses as a couple'
The court heard the couple enjoyed a 'lavish lifestyle' together, enjoying skiing holidays and stays in expensive hotels.
Mr Kooter spent thousands on gifts, including designer luggage and a Chanel handbag and purse for his new lover, as well as paying for their 'hotel and bar expenses', the court heard.
Michael Collard, defending Ms Radeva, claimed the payments were part-and-parcel of their lavish 'domestic expenses as a couple'.
He told the court: 'This was a man on a very high income in what was clearly a serious relationship. They were living together.
Manuela Radeva, pictured outside court today, has been ordered to pay Mr Kooter back more than £180,000
'There is a factual dispute over what these moneys were transferred for during a personal relationship.
'This was a relationship with lots of kisses. It was not a professional relationship between the two of them.
'Whether the money was paid is not the important point - the question is what was it for? They were clearly living an expensive luxurious lifestyle and there was lots of money being spent.
'Mr Kooter is now suspicious about everything.'
Of the 36,000 euros, which Mr Kooter says was a loan, he added: 'It's the sort of payment a wealthy boyfriend could make to his girlfriend...There is no evidence that he would have expected the money back.
'It seems clear that the only reason he now wants it back is because the relationship failed and now he is suspicious...Ms Radeva has explained that his suspicions are unfounded.'
Neil Vickery, representing Mr Kooter, said: 'It's apparent Mr Kooter was very attracted to Ms Radeva and wished to have a relationship with her.
'But it is quite clear that the money he was paying her was an investment. She described herself as a capital investment manager on Tinder and in emails.'
Ms Radeva admitted £182,000 was transferred to her during the relationship, but said some of it was spent on bitcoin mining machines for Mr Kooter, while the rest funded 'their domestic expenses as a couple.'
But the judge said this left a missing £82,000 she had been handed by her then boyfriend, for which 'no explanation was forthcoming.'
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