Murderer Rena Salmon who shot her love rival in Chiswick has turned on the daughter who stood by her while she served 14 years for the crime.

Jasmin Salmon was just 10 when her mum blasted a pregnant woman with a double-barrelled shotgun in a Hounslow beauty salon.

Hours earlier former Army sharp-shooter Salmon had dropped Jasmin off at school and told her: "Always remember that I love you, no matter what happens."

The words were etched on Jasmin’s mind and every month since 2002 she travelled hundreds of miles to visit her mum in jail.

Now, that loyalty has been thrown back in her face as Salmon takes court action that could leave Jasmin homeless, with the legal papers served on Friday.

In her first interview, Jasmin, now 24, told The Sunday Mirror : “I stood by mum for 14 years even after what she did. Now she’s got a solicitor threatening to take my home.

“I can’t believe she’s doing this. I used to speak to mum five times a week. I’ve been there for her, I’ve been through a lot because of what she did. Now she’s turned on her own daughter.”

Salmon and Jasmin are in dispute over a flat which was bought for £50,000 and is now worth up to £88,000.

Jasmin claims her mum loaned her £65,000 to buy and renovate the home.

But Salmon has instructed solicitors to ask the courts to declare the property, in Liverpool, is hers.

The legal action came after the pair’s tangled financial arrangements went pear-shaped and things turned sour.

Jasmin said her mum even locked her out of the flat, dumped her clothes at her boyfriend’s place and called the police during a bizarre row over a pet lizard.

In turn, Jasmin ended up calling a parole officer demanding her mum stays away from her.

Salmon achieved notoriety for the shocking murder of Lorna Stewart, her husband’s pregnant lover.

She shot Miss Stewart twice in September 2002.

Salmon, now 56, was jailed for life and served 14 years – suffering a heart attack and battling cancer near the end of her sentence.

Jasmin says she always remained close to her mum, speaking several times a week and making monthly visits.

When Salmon was freed from Askham Grange women’s prison in North Yorkshire Jasmin was waiting at the gates.

Jasmin said her mum loaned her £65,000 to buy the flat two years ago.

This week Jasmin received a solicitor’s letter which claims it was agreed “the property would be purchased in your name and that upon her release you would transfer the title into her name”.

As the flat only cost £50,000, Salmon claims Jasmin pocketed the difference. Through her solicitor Salmon says she also entrusted her debit card to Jasmin, to pay for her funeral should she die and split the difference with her brother.

The letter accuses Jasmin of at least £11,000 of “unauthorised” withdrawals, adding: “On being challenged to explain this dishonesty, relations between you and our client rapidly deteriorated.”

On Friday – before she had replied – Jasmin received a solicitor’s letter detailing a court hearing to try to stop Jasmin selling the property.

Angrily denying her mum’s claims, Jasmin said: “The whole point was she’d lend me the money – a mortgage from mum, not the bank, because I couldn’t get the credit rating.

“Then I’d pay her back with £300-a-month rent. She was fully aware it cost £50,000 because I had to send all the paperwork to prison because the ­authorities wanted proof it was for a property and not something else.

"The rest was for ­renovations and she even said if there was £1,000 left I should go on holiday.”

Jasmin said there was never any formal contract, just a verbal agreement about the loan and the repayments.

She added: “The plan was when Mum got out she would buy another place and we’d be close to each other.”

Jasmin said she would be getting a solicitor to contest her mother’s claims. She said she would be happy to sell the flat and repay the £65,000.

But she added: “I’ve put two years work into the flat. I picked it, knowing it would appreciate in value, so I would like the equity.”

Of the debit card allegations, Jasmin said she used to take money to give her mum in prison and pay for her solicitor.

Jasmin said: “Last year I wasn’t working and she’d say ‘the money’s there baby girl, you use it.’ She’d tell me to get my nails done, take my boyfriend out or get my hair done. She said I could use it, so I did. Now she’s complaining.”

Salmon’s position is that the flat would be held on trust for her by Jasmin – who would pay rent to live there. Before Christmas, Salmon bought another flat just 100 yards from the home in dispute.

Body-piercer Jasmin said: “There were a lot of petty rows. Our relationship started to break down within weeks. Her behaviour and moods were up and down. Living together wasn’t working.

“After one argument she threw me out of my own flat and moved my belongings to my boyfriend’s. She just bagged it and left it at his door.

"I’ve got a bearded dragon lizard and she said she’d call the RSPCA and report me for not feeding it. I arranged to collect it, but when I went she wouldn’t open the door.

"She ended up calling the police on me. She sent a message saying something like ‘God forgive you because I never will’.

“I just want to sell the place, give her the money back. I want to go away and travel, get some distance between us.”

Speaking for the first time about her traumatic childhood, Jasmin said: “One time we went to the house Dad shared with Lorna and Mum scraped ‘whore’ down her car. She let me slash one of the tyres. She let a 10-year-old do that.

“Then we drove down to their ‘love nest’ in Devon and smashed everything. Mum let me into their bedroom to cut up the bed sheets, the bed where my dad and Lorna had sex.

“They had a big metal chimney fire in the garden. We put all his clothes and the sheets in there and burnt them. We got a McDonald’s on the way home.”

Of the day of the murder she recalled: “I got up in the morning and she plaited my hair. She was in her favourite outfit with all her jewellery on. Then she made breakfast and she took me to school.

“As I got out of the car I said ‘I’ll see you later... always remember that I love you, no matter what happens’.”

That night her dad told her: “Mum killed Lorna.”

Jasmin says she started visiting her mum once a month, travelling from boarding school in Devon to HMP ­Bullwood Hall in Essex.

Salmon moved to Askham Grange and worked with a charity helping ­rehabilitate ex-offenders and also as a cleaner at a local convent.

Speaking via her flat intercom Salmon declined to comment, saying: “I’ve nothing to say thank you.”

How Rena Salmon killed

Cold-blooded Rena Salmon killed her love rival then sent her husband a text message saying: “I’ve just shot Lorna. This isn’t a joke.”

The trial took place at the Old Bailey

Salmon used a double-barelled shotgun she had bought husband Paul as a present. Pregnant Lorna Stewart – who had been having an affair with Paul – was working in her beauty salon in Chiswick, West London, in September 2002.

The Old Bailey was told how Salmon drove from Great Shefford, Berks, to confront Lorna, 36.

As Salmon entered the salon Lorna was heard to say “So you have come to shoot me?”

Former Army corporal Salmon said “Yes” then opened fire at close range.

The court heard Salmon was “cool as a cucumber” as she dialled 999 to confess: “I shot my husband’s mistress.”

Salmon denied murder, claiming diminished responsibility. She told the court she went to the salon – a day before she was due to attend a divorce hearing – intending to kill herself.

Salmon said: “I wanted her to feel some of the pain she had put me and my kids through. I wanted her to have some feeling for someone other than herself.”

But the jury decided she had killed Lorna out of “plain anger and revenge”.

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