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The death of West London's nightlife: How organised crime, date rape druggers, and American expats are pushing the richest Brits away from the once exclusive party scene

أخبار محلية
Daily Mail
2026/05/27 - 18:18 501 مشاهدة
Published: 19:18, 27 May 2026 | Updated: 19:21, 27 May 2026 It's the early 2000s. Partygoers are stumbling out of a Knightsbridge club and piling into a black cab, untroubled and with plenty of disposable income - the 'cost of living' crisis means nothing to them.  Nor are they troubled by masked moped gangs waiting in dark alleyways outside West London clubs who are ready to pounce - which is a reality today.  Now, there have even been instances of date rape druggers from within the once exclusive and protected clubs.  In February, for example, Michelin-star restaurateur Vikas Nath, 63, was found guilty of spiking a woman's drink with a date-rape drug after she left him alone with the drink in the rooftop garden bar at a private members' club in Mayfair.  As the wealthy masses have migrated east and north of the capital, to edgier party scenes like Hackney or Camden, they have ditched the private members' clubs that once offered them safer nights out.  The likes of Annabel's, Kensington Roof Gardens, Tramp, Christabel's or 64 Knightsbridge are having to battle a crime wave which is driving their wealthiest clients away from their well-polished doors.  Gangs of thieves operating on mopeds in the city have targeted elite clubs and stigmatised them in the process, particularly given the high profile of some of their victims.  Indeed, it was Mick Jagger's fiancée who was most recently caught up in the violence which is now a constant threat in the south west's once hailed club joints.  Annabel's (pictured) is a West London celeb haunt. But after suffering a wave of crime incidents, its image of exclusivity and protection for its wealthy clients has been knocked  Michelin-star restaurant boss Vikas Nath, 63, was caught on CCTV spiking a woman's spicy margarita at the rooftop of Annabel's  Knightsbridge has experienced a sharp rise in crime (pictured: footage of a ram-raid at the Bucherer Rolex Boutique at One Hyde Park in January) The Rolling Stones' star's partner Melanie Hamrick, 38, posted to social media in the early hours of the morning on Wednesday, February 11, that she had been 'attacked' by two muggers from behind outside Annabel's - the Mayfair private club.  She wrote that she was 'shaken', saying: 'This is incredibly hard to share, but I was physically attacked at Annabel's Mayfair tonight.  'Two people grabbed me from behind, and thank god for good people who stepped in to help me.'  It was unclear whether the incident took place inside the venue. But it followed the conviction just a few days before of date rape drugger, Vikas Nath, at the same private club.  The 63-year-old restaurateur was caught brazenly adding gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) into a woman's spicy margarita while sitting in the rooftop garden bar of Annabel's in Mayfair, central London, on January 15 2024.  The audacity of the crime, which took place within yards of colleagues and customers enjoying their evening at the £3,750-a-year club in Berkeley Square, showed how insidious behaviour and violence has pierced the shield once protecting west London's elite from the wider realities of city life.  Knightsbridge has even been dubbed 'no-go Knightsbridge' lately by its own residents, who claim the exclusive area is a billionaire's playground no more.  They say people with any real money have fled the tyranny of ram-raiding gangs and machete thugs now operating in the area, which is home to a string of high-end stores such as Harrods.  Multiple houses close to Harrods department store have been up for sale, signifying a trend in the area Thugs smashed cabinets and looted the store before taking off on mopeds parked outside at a heist on January 20 at Rolex's Knightsbridge store  The murder scene after Blue Stevens was knifed to death last year outside the £1,650-a-night 5-star Park Tower Hotel and Casino, which is directly across the road from the famous department store in central London  Lowering property prices in Knightsbridge are further evidence of the wider decline of West London's popularity with the rich and famous.  House prices are at their cheapest in 15 years, as consistently high crime rates and Rachel Reeves' mansion tax are putting off super-rich buyers.  Since 2018, house prices in Knightsbridge alone have dropped by over a million pounds, costing on average just £2.7million today.   In January, machete-wielding robbers threatened customers as they raided a Rolex store and took a number of high value items during a terrifying three-minute raid shortly before 11am on January 20.  Wearing helmets, the thugs smashed cabinets and looted the store before taking off on mopeds parked outside.  The store was on the ground floor of the luxurious One Hyde Park building, which billionaire Reform treasurer Nick Candy constructed with his brother in 2009.  The daylight raid came just weeks after Loro Piana, a luxury Italian fashion brand a short walk from Harrods, saw its own store looted.  And in July last year, a 24-year-old man was stabbed to death by a masked man outside a Knightsbridge casino.  Phone muggings by bike gangs like this one in Knightsbridge are also common Multi-million pound mansions and townhouses on the wide leafy lanes of Knightsbridge and Kensington have fallen in value and are at the lowest levels for 15 years Blue Stevens died after being knifed outside the £1,650-a-night 5-star Park Tower Hotel and Casino, which is directly across the road from the famous department store in central London.  Locals said it was just the latest in a series of serious crimes to plague what is one of the richest and most exclusive parts of the capital.  By contrast, areas of east London like Hackney and Walthamstow have seen rising property prices in the last few years, as the areas once stigmatised by higher crime rates have seen gentrification as a wave of rich elites move out of the city to younger, 'more hip', areas.  The average house in Hackney in January this year was £622,000 for example - up 2.2 per cent from January 2025, according to the Office for National Statistics, while Walthamstow saw similar average house prices and a growth of nearly 10 per cent over the last three years.  The east and north of the capital are also being hailed as better 'nights out' too, with cheaper drinks, readily available Ubers, and the less well-known party scenes making their customers less of a target for criminals.  What's more is the influx of Americans pricing out traditional British upper-class clientele of West London.  The asset-wealthy's favourite spots are being overrun by rich Americans claiming Marylebone and Mayfair as their own London version of New York's West Village.   Indeed, the so-called 'Donald Dashers' have been snapping up the best luxury mansions in the area since 2016 - and the US migration is now being uncomfortably felt by the resident British class there.  Perhaps the West is not always best - and time will only tell if the flight away from SW1 is permanent.  No comments have so far been submitted. 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