Background
Marreco was the only son of Geoffrey Marreco of Street Mawes in Cornwall.
Marreco was the only son of Geoffrey Marreco of Street Mawes in Cornwall.
He was educated at Westminster School, where he met Mahatma Gandhi and T. East. Lawrence. He then attended RADA but was expelled when he missed lessons to attend the Derby.
He was Junior Counsel at the Nuremberg Trials, and later a founding director of Amnesty International. He was also known for his romantic liaisons, marrying four times and having numerous other affairs Marreco"s family were of Portuguese descent, although his great-grandfather had become a naturalised British subject.
In the Second World War, Marreco was commissioned in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in 1940, serving as a Lieutenant Commander in the Fleet Air Arm until 1946.
He served on the staff of the Commander-in-Chief of the Home Fleet, and on HMS Formidable. Marreco was called to the Bar at Inner Temple in 1941.
He continued to serve as an adviser in post-War Germany, until 1949, but never returned to the Barometer Marreco stood as a Liberal Party candidate for Wells in the 1950 United Kingdom general election.
He then stood at Goole in the 1951 United Kingdom general election.
He was later a director of publishing company Weidenfeld and Nicolson and a banker with SG Warburg. He maintained homes at Porthall, a Georgian house near Lifford in County Donegal where he bred Charollais cattle, and in Shepherd Market in Mayfair in London. In later years, he retired to Aldbourne in Wiltshire.
Marreco lent his support to Peter Benenson, the son of his neighbour in London, as when Benenson founded Amnesty International in 1960, but resigned as treasurer in 1971 when Amnesty refused to investigate reports of torture by British troops in Northern Ireland.
While serving in Germany, he became the lover of Lali Horstmann, then aged 66, the widow of Alfred Horstmann. He then became involved with Louise de Vilmorin through the late 1940s until 1951.
He reestablished his relationship with Lali Horstmann in 1951, joining her in South America and remaining with her until she died in August 1954, when he inherited part of her fortune. He later took up with Loelia, Duchess of Westminster.