Marat Ganiev, Eyal Yaffe to face committal hearing in October over death of Isla Bell, 19
Ms Bell, 19, was killed and her remains hidden in a fridge, with police making the grim discovery at a waste management centre in Dandenong on November 19, 2024.
Marat Ganiev and Eyal Yaffe's case was briefly mentioned at Melbourne Magistrates Court on Friday.
Mr Ganiev, 53, is charged with the murder of the 19-year-old, and Mr Yaffe, 57, is charged with assisting an offender after the fact.
Police allege the teenager met Mr Ganiev on October 5, 2024 and began staying at his apartment in St Kilda East.
She is alleged to have texted a friend that she had met the 'best Russian sugar daddy' and he was 'lavishing her with gifts'.
According to police allegations in court documents, CCTV captures a fight at Mr Ganiev's apartment on October 7, followed by extensive cleaning over the following days.
Mr Yaffe is alleged to have arrived at the apartment on October 9, towing a black fridge on a trailer which is then swapped out eight days later with a fridge wrapped in plastic and black tape.
Police allege the fridge contained Ms Bell's remains and was moved across several locations in Melbourne's southeast over the following month.
On Friday, Mr Ganiev was aided by a Russian interpreter as he appeared over audiovisual link.
Mr Yaffe is on bail and remotely dialled into the courtroom.
The court was told four witnesses – including three experts and the informant – were due to give evidence at committal proceedings for Mr Ganiev.
Magistrate Michelle Mykytowycz said the witnesses should be present for the hearing in court, noting one expert was a forensic anthropologist who authored a report.
She said possible lines of questioning could take the anthropologist to diagrams in her report.
'Quite confronting'
'It would be better if it is conducted in court,' Ms Mykytowycz said.
Ms Mykytowycz said she was 'conscious' of the nature of the questions which would be asked at committal proceedings while Ms Bell's family were present.
'Some of the cross-examination might be quite confronting in the circumstances,' she said.
'So I do want the family members to be prepared for that if they're going to attend the proceedings.'
Ms Mykytowycz told Mr Ganiev she was satisfied the prosecution's case had been adequately disclosed and the requested cross-examination of witnesses was not 'trivial or vexatious'.
The court was told three expert and two police witnesses would be required for cross-examination in Mr Yaffe's case.
Both men will face a four-day committal hearing from October 6.
Mr Ganiev remains in custody on remand while Mr Yaffe's bail was continued by Ms Mykytowycz.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
Body found in search for missing pilot
NSW Police have found a body during their search for a missing pilot whose plane crashed in the Snowy Mountains. ( Supplied: ACT Police )

ABC News
6 hours ago
- ABC News
Mark Latham responds to allegations of inappropriate behaviour
Former federal Labor leader-turned Independent New South Wales M-P Mark Latham is under mounting political pressure amid allegations of inappropriate behaviour. It follows media reports he took photos of female colleagues speaking in parliament and made disparaging comments about them in private messages, and recorded a sex tape in his parliamentary office. Mr Latham has denied any wrongdoing.

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
NSW Police employee caught on CCTV in alleged Woolies clash
A wild altercation in a Woolworths in Sydney's west in which a bottle of milk was allegedly smashed over a man has led to charges against a NSW Police employee. CCTV footage has captured the incident between three customers near the checkout area of Woolworths at Auburn Central on Thursday. A man and a woman can be seen arguing with another man, before the confrontation turned physical. At one point, one of the men can be seen striking the other with a bottle of milk which then smashes. Police launched an investigation shortly after a 62-year-old man reported the incident. 'A 62-year-old man reported he had been allegedly assaulted by a 34-year-old man and a 57-year-old woman following a verbal altercation at the checkout,' NSW Police said in a statement. The 62-year-old man suffered minor injuries and later sought medical treatment. The 34-year-old special constable, attached to a specialist command, has been charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm and affray. He has been served a court attendance notice and is due to appear at Burwood Local Court on September 4. A 57-year-old woman, who was also allegedly involved in the altercation, faces the same charges and is scheduled to appear in court on the same date. NSW Police said the special constable's employment status was currently under review.