Wubi News

'Trusting The Salt Path author was our biggest mistake'

2025-07-18 14:00:14

A family who claim The Salt Path author Raynor Winn stole tens of thousands of pounds from their business say trusting her was their "biggest mistake".

Ros Hemmings and her daughter Debbie, from Pwllheli in Gwynedd, allege Ms Winn - who worked for their property business in the early 2000s - stole around £64,000.

It comes after an investigation by the Observer contained claims Ms Winn gave misleading information about her life story in her book The Salt Path, which has been made into a film starring Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.

Ms Winn has called the Observer report "highly misleading" and disputed many of its claims.

The 2018 book The Salt Path, and its recent film adaptation, tells the story of a couple who decide to walk the 630-mile South West Coast Path after their home was repossessed following a bad business deal.

But the Observer claimed Ms Winn - whose legal name is Sally Walker - and her husband, Moth Winn, had lost their home after she took out a loan to repay money she had been accused of stealing from her previous employer, Martin Hemmings.

In a statement issued earlier in July, Ms Winn stood by the book's description of how they came to lose their house saying the dispute with the Hemmings did not result in her and her husband losing their home.

Raynor Winn (right) whose book The Salt Path was recently turned into a film starring Gillian Anderson (left)

Martin Hemmings, who died in 2012, was an estate agent and property surveyor from north Wales, and husband to Ros Hemmings.

Mrs Hemmings, 74, became friends with Mr Winn when they worked at the same National Trust site in the 1990s.

"I got on extremely well with him," said Mrs Hemmings. "He seemed a really nice person."

Then in 2001, Mr Winn mentioned his wife had lost her job at a hotel as a bookkeeper.

"It coincided with my husband's bookkeeper retiring so I suggested her to my husband," said Mrs Hemmings.

"She came for an interview, and she was the one. She seemed very efficient, we liked her."

But she said after that her husband noticed a change in the business.

"Within a year or so we weren't making any money," said Mrs Hemmings.

Initially they did not suspect anything.

"I did not think there was any reason for this aside from the fact that Martin was rubbish at sending out bills," said Mrs Hemmings.

But their daughter Debbie, who was aged around 29 at the time, became emotional as she remembered receiving a distressed call from her father as the financial pressure built over a number of years.

"He said: 'I just don't know what's gone wrong, I'm working every hour God gives me and there's no money,'" said Debbie Adams, now aged 46.

"About five days after that first call he rings up and goes, she [Winn] has been nicking money. I was like, 'dad come on now, no. Surely there's something gone wrong?' He said 'no, we've had a look and there's money missing'."

They claimed a meeting between Mr Hemmings and the bank manager showed £6,000 to £9,000 was missing. They said Mr Hemmings then went straight to the police and a local solicitor.

A photo of the Hemmings family with mum Ros and daughter Debbie with father Martin, who died in 2012

They said shortly afterwards, Ms Winn visited them at their home.

"She was crying," said Mrs Hemmings. "She had brought a cheque I think it was for £9,000. She said this is all the money I have, I've had to sell some of my mother's things to do this, can we call it quits?"

Mrs Hemmings said her husband took the money on the advice of the police who said: "It may be all you get."

But they also advised the couple to start going back through the accounts to check if anything else was missing.

She said they went back through years of the business's financial paperwork.

"It was a very upsetting thing to do and it took us weeks and weeks," said Mrs Hemmings. "But we found she had taken about £64,000."

Mrs Hemmings said a few weeks later they received a letter from a solicitor in London offering to pay the money back and legal fees which came to around £90,000.

It included an agreement not to pursue criminal charges which Mr Hemmings signed.

Mrs Hemmings said: "He was keen to do it in a way, we had no money and had nearly been basically bankrupt. She also had young children, and to have a mother in prison or facing a criminal charge, he didn't want that to happen."

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