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Erin Patterson's agony is exposed in the revealing pictures we couldn't show you until today - as she now faces life in jail for triple murder

Erin Patterson's agony is exposed in the revealing pictures we couldn't show you until today - as she now faces life in jail for triple murder

Daily Mail​07-07-2025
The private torment Erin Patterson faced throughout her marathon trial is etched on her face in photographs taken just a fortnight into her almost three-month-long trial.
Pictures of the triple killer sitting in the back of a prison transport vehicle as she arrived at the Latrobe Valley Law Courts building on May 12 show the depth of her internal anguish.
Six candid frames reveal Patterson's emotions becoming even more heightened as she realises she has been captured on film and turns away from the camera to hide her face.
Justice Christopher Beale made an order on April 28 preventing publication of any pictures 'which suggest, expressly or impliedly, that she is in custody'.
'The Court orders that any online images of the accused that were published before the making of this order, and which continue to be published online, are to be cropped in accordance with the above prohibition,' his order stated.
Those prohibitions are often made so as not to influence the minds of jurors who might be unaware if an accused person is on bail or in prison.
Justice Beale's order was made to expire at the end of the trial, which on Monday afternoon resulted in four guilty verdicts.
Patterson will be taken to the maximum security Dame Phyllis Frost Centre at Deer Park, 17km west of Melbourne's central business district, where she will start the rest of her life in prison.
Pictures of the triple killer sitting in the back of a prison transport vehicle as she arrived at the Latrobe Valley Law Courts building on May 12 show the depth of her internal anguish
The 50-year-old was found guilty about 2.15pm of murdering her three in-laws with death cap mushrooms in a beef Wellington that she served them for lunch at her home.
The verdict ends one of the nation's most intriguing homicide cases.
The mother-of-two sat defiantly throughout her 10-week trial, glaring at the media, members of the public and the family of the people she murdered with callous disregard.
Patterson had pleaded not guilty to the murders of Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister, Heather Wilkinson.
They died after consuming death caps in the beef Wellingtons during lunch at Patterson's Leongatha home in southeast Victoria on July 29, 2023.
Only Pastor Ian Wilkinson survived her plot - a blunder Patterson would live to regret, and will now serve time for after also being found guilty of attempting to murder him.
Seated at the back of courtroom four of the Supreme Court of Victoria, sitting at the Latrobe Valley Magistrates' Court, Patterson, dressed in a paisley shirt, appeared stunned as her fate was sealed on Monday afternoon.
Asked to deliver a verdict, the jury foreperson - one of only five women to sit on the original 15-person panel - simply stated, 'guilty'.
The verdict produced an audible gasp from those within the packed courtroom, which included members of the Patterson clan.
Patterson will now be taken back down to the Morwell Police Station cells where she had been kept throughout the trial.
They are the cells she had grown to loathe throughout her trial, complaining about being denied a pillow, doona and her computer.
She can expect to spend the next decades of her life caged within the walls of Dame Phyllis Frost Centre alongside a rogue's gallery of female killers.
On her weekly trips back there, Patterson had come to loathe the Chicken Cacciatore meals provided to her en route because the dish 'had mushrooms in it'.
Once caged, she can expect to be kept in an isolation cell for her own protection for the foreseeable future due to her high profile and the frailty of her elderly victims.
It can now be revealed Patterson's two children had continued to see their mother behind bars while she awaited trial, unwilling to accept she could murder their grandparents and aunt.
Patterson could be heard asking about them during breaks in the trial, asking a woman to ensure her now 16-year-old son was given 'extra hugs'.
The arrogant killer had been so cocky she would walk free that she had workers erect black plastic around her Leongatha home to shield her from the media on her expected return.
Her estranged husband Simon Patterson is expected to address the large media pack that has descended upon the Morwell courthouse.
The civil engineer had been warned mid-trial by Justice Beale to hold off engaging with reporters until the verdict had been delivered.
The prosecution had dumped three attempted murder charges against his wife related to him.
He too had been invited to the deadly lunch, but pulled out the night before.
While no motive was ever provided to the jury, it was presented with a clear picture of animosity between the estranged couple leading up to the lunch.
Simon claimed that while they remained friendly during separation, things changed when he made the decision to change his relationship status on his tax return.
He had been dropping the kids at Patterson's Leongatha home when she allegedly came out and asked to have a chat.
The jury heard Patterson jumped in the passenger side of Simon's car.
Patterson was so confident she would be going home she had workers prepare black plastic around her home to shield her from waiting media
'She discovered that my tax return for the previous year for the first time noted we were separated,' Simon told the court.
Patterson told him the move would impact the family tax benefit the couple had previously enjoyed and she was obliged to now claim child support.
'She was upset about it,' Simon said.
Patterson also wanted child support and the school fees paid.
The court heard Patterson changed the children's school without consulting Simon.
His own son would later tell the jury his dad went out of his way to hurt his mother.
Patterson had banked on the jury believing it was possible she had picked the death cap mushrooms used to kill her in-laws by mistake.
Throughout the trial her barrister Colin Mandy, SC, had worked to sow the seeds of doubt in the jury's minds.
Patterson's legal team Sophie Stafford and Colin Mandy, SC enter the Latrobe Valley Law Courts during the trial
DRAMA BEHIND THE SCENES
Long lines of true crime fanatics snaked into the courtroom day after day.
Small children gawked and laughed at Patterson in the prison dock as if she were a character at a theme park.
The judge's tipstaff - a burly security guard charged with maintaining order in the court - was kept busy dealing with overly enthusiastic members of the public.
While the jury was out, numerous people were caught taking photos inside the courtroom.
One brazen gentleman went so far as to snap a selfie with Patterson in the background.
The phones were seized and the photos deleted.
Meanwhile, The Kyle & Jackie O Show found itself in hot water that Justice Beale suggested was in contempt.
He suggested prosecutors look to charge the 'shock jocks' over comments they made on air toward the end of the trial.
He did so with tactical questions aimed at trying to obtain admissions to his suggestions from key witnesses.
It was a tactic that failed time and time again, leaving the jury with no doubt Patterson had deliberately picked the death cap mushrooms she used to murder her lunch guests.
Lone survivor, Mr Wilkinson, was the second witness to front the jury after Simon Patterson.
Seated in the witness box, Mr Wilkinson provided powerful and compelling evidence about not only how Patterson lured his family to lunch, but also how she went about killing them.
He was challenged repeatedly on his evidence by Mr Mandy but never wavered from his original version of events.
Mr Mandy suggested Mr Wilkinson's claim that the four plates used to serve beef Wellington to Patterson's lunch guests were all grey, and all the same, was not correct.
He further suggested there was 'no smaller plate', but Mr Wilkinson disagreed.
'It (the beef Wellington) was very much like a pastie, it was a pastry case and inside was steak and mushrooms, there was gravy available on the table,' Mr Wilkinson said.
'I could see them (the plates) between Heather and Gail, there were four large grey plates, one smaller plate - a different colour, an orangy-tan colour.
'Gail picked up two of the grey plates and took them to the table, Heather picked up two of the grey plates and took them to the table, Erin picked up the odd plate and put it at her place at the table.'
Mr Mandy's attempts to trip Patterson's husband up during his evidence also fell flat.
Patterson had blamed Simon for the atrocious lies she told her loved ones, police, health authorities and the media after her lunch guests became seriously ill.
In the last days of the trial, the jury watched Patterson tell some of those lies to Homicide Squad Senior Constable Stephen Eppingstall during her record of interview.
It had been Senior Constable Eppinstall who spearheaded the investigation into Patterson, leaving no stone unturned in his quest to provide justice to the families of those who lost their loved ones.
During that interview, Patterson repeatedly denied owning the dehydrator she used to milk the maximum potential out of the death cap mushrooms she would later serve for lunch.
'I've got manuals of lots of stuff I've collected over the years,' Patterson told the detective on August 5, 2023, following a search of her home which located the dehydrator manual.
'I just keep them all.'
Patterson also denied ever foraging for mushrooms.
'Never,' she insisted.
Patterson had claimed she had bought the dried mushrooms used in her beef Wellington from an Asian grocer in Melbourne's south-east.
In a heavily edited recording, Patterson was seen highlighting the level of assistance she had provided to health authorities to find that non-existent grocer.
'I'm sure you understand too that I've never been in a situation like this before, and I've been very, very helpful with the health department through the week, because I wanted to help that side of things as much as possible, because I do want to know what happened,' she said.
'I've given them as much information as they've asked for, and offered up all the food and all the information about where the food came from the house.'
In a statement conveniently leaked to select media organisations after the lunch, Patterson admitted she lied to investigators when she told them she had dumped the dehydrator used to dry the death caps at the tip 'a long time ago'.
Patterson claimed then she had been at the hospital with her children 'discussing the food dehydrator' when her husband asked: 'Is that what you used to poison them?'
Worried that she might lose custody of the couple's children, Patterson said she then panicked and dumped the dehydrator at the tip.
Six days after the meal, the dehydrator was found by police at a local tip.
In an act of sheer arrogance, or stupidity, Patterson had decided not to dispose of the dehydrator in the bush, but at the tip using EFTPOS in her own name to pay for it.
Simon's supposed quip about the dehydrator was put to him by Mr Mandy at trial.
It had been an integral element of Patterson's defence when he opened the trial more than a month ago.
But Simon denied making the comment that Patterson claimed sparked her web of lies.
'I did not say that to Erin,' Simon said.
The jury then heard from a swag of medical experts, who Patterson hoped would help convince the jury that she too had become sick from eating the lunch.
Mr Mandy told the jury Patterson had not pretended to be sick after the lunch.
'The defence case is that she was not feigning illness, she wasn't pretending to be sick. The defence case is that she was sick too, just not as sick,' Mr Mandy said.
'And the defence case is that she was unwell because she'd eaten some of the meal.'
While intensive care specialist Professor Andrew Bersten said he was convinced Patterson had indeed suffered a 'diarrhoea illness', the jury felt her overall claims didn't stack up.
The jury heard Prof Bersten had come to his conclusions based on medical records alone and had never actually treated Patterson after the lunch.
Nurse Cindy Munro, who was working at Leongatha hospital when Patterson turned up the Monday after the lunch, said Patterson 'didn't look unwell' compared with two of her seriously ill lunch guests.
'She didn't look unwell like Heather and Ian,' Ms Munro said.
'Ian looked so unwell he could barely lift his head. She didn't look unwell to me.'
Doctor Laura Muldoon, part of the toxicology department at Monash Medical Centre, also told the jury Patterson's claims didn't stack up.
'I noted she looked clinically well, she had some chapped lips but otherwise very well. She had normal vital signs,' Dr Muldoon said.
She told the jury there was no evidence Patterson had encountered death cap mushroom poisoning or consumed any other toxins.
Another doctor, Varuna Ruggoo, said Patterson's liver function tests returned normal results.
Even Patterson's own children could not persuade the jury she had been sick following the lunch.
Patterson's then nine-year-old daughter told police her mother had a sore tummy and diarrhoea the day after the lunch.
She also claimed that she had seen her go to the toilet about 10 times.
Her older brother, then aged 14, also told police his mother claimed to be sick.
He told police Patterson had complained of feeling 'a bit sick and had diarrhoea'.
'She was playing it down,' he said.
Despite feeling unwell, the teenager said Patterson insisted on driving him about 90km to attend a flying school lesson in Tyabb.
When the lesson was cancelled due to poor weather, she was forced to turn straight back around and drive all the way home.
As the trial entered its final stages, Patterson's legal team worked hard to convince the jury Patterson could have accidentally picked the death cap mushrooms.
Dr Tom May, a mycologist or fungi specialist, gave jurors an extensive lesson on amanita phalloides or death cap mushrooms.
Patterson's hopes lifted when Dr May gave evidence that although death caps were 'typically greenish or yellowish', they 'may be whitish or brownish with or without white patches'.
The expert was taken by Patterson's defence through a series of photos of dodgy- looking mushrooms and asked to identify them.
He hit the bullseye every time: they were all death caps, with none of the images looking remotely palatable to any reasonable human.
Dr May had posted images on a citizen science website called iNaturalist of death caps he had found in Outtrim - a short drive from Patterson's home - in April that year.
It was a location that just happened to be visited by Patterson leading up to the deadly lunch.
Phone data later obtained by police alleged Patterson's phone was 'pinged' in areas identified on that website as having death cap mushrooms there.
The jury further heard Patterson took steps to hide evidence, swapping out the SIM card on her usual phone while detectives were carrying out a search of her home.
That phone has never been recovered.
While left alone, she also managed to factory reset her new phone, handing the wiped device over to a detective and factory resetting it again remotely while it was in police possession.
But Patterson was unable to erase the contents of her home computer, which contained what the jury concluded was damning evidence that what she did was premeditated.
During the trial, Victoria Police forensic data analyst Shamen Fox-Henry revealed Patterson made a visit to the iNaturalist website on May 28, 2022.
The title of one of the visited pages included the words, 'Deathcap from Melbourne VIC, Australia on May 18, 2022'.
Mr Fox-Henry had also found a series of messages sent by Patterson that suggested she had very personal issues with Simon's parents.
In the messages, Patterson described her in-laws as a 'lost cause' and exclaimed 'f**k them'.
'I mean clearly the fact that Simon refuses to talk about personal issues in part stems from the behaviour of his parents and how they operate,' she wrote around December 6, 2022.
'According to them, they've never asked him what's going on with us, why I keep kicking him out, why his son hates him, etc. It's too awkward or uncomfortable or something. So that's his learned behaviour. Just don't talk about this s**t.'
Patterson claimed her father-in-law's solution to her relationship problems with his son was to 'pray'.
'Don rang me last night to say that he thought there was a solution to all this. If Simon and I get together and try to talk and pray together,' she wrote.
'And then he also said, Simon had indicated there was a solution to the financial issues if I withdraw this child support claim?!'
Patterson claimed she told her in-laws she wanted them to be accountable for the decisions their son made concerning their grandchildren.
'I would hope they care about their grandchildren enough to care about what Simon is doing,' she wrote.
'Don said they tried to talk to him, but he refused to talk about it, so they're staying out of it, but want us to pray together.
'I'm sick of this s**t. I want nothing to do with them. I thought his parents would want him to do the right thing, but it seems their concern about not wanting to feel uncomfortable, and not wanting to get involved in their son's personal matters, are overriding that. So f**k them.'
When reporters finally caught up with Patterson in the days after the lunch, she broke down in tears and proclaimed she had done nothing wrong.
'I didn't do anything,' she said, wiping away tears.
'I loved them and I'm devastated that they're gone.'
Patterson said all four guests were wonderful people and had always treated her with kindness.
'Gail was like the mum I didn't have because my mum passed away four years ago and Gail had never been anything but good and kind to me,' she continued.
'Ian and Heather were some of the best people I'd ever met. They never did anything wrong to me.
'I'm so devastated about what's happened and the loss to the community and to the families and to my own children. They've lost their grandmother,' she told reporters on August 8 that year.
'What happened is devastating and I'm grieving too and you guys don't have any respect for that.'
As the trial came to its conclusion, Mr Mandy was faced with the decision to risk putting his client in the witness box in a last-ditch attempt to save her skin.
His decision to put her up would come back to haunt him.
Finally out of the prison dock, Patterson faced off with the jury to try and explain away her lies.
She sobbed and cried in scenes similar to those seen outside her house years earlier.
The jury didn't buy her story and Patterson was cooked worse than her rotten beef Wellington.
She will be sentenced at a date to be fixed.
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Moment blood-soaked Colombian killer dances naked after decapitating and murdering couple in their London home...then drags suitcase carrying remains on Clifton Suspension Bridge
Moment blood-soaked Colombian killer dances naked after decapitating and murdering couple in their London home...then drags suitcase carrying remains on Clifton Suspension Bridge

Daily Mail​

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Moment blood-soaked Colombian killer dances naked after decapitating and murdering couple in their London home...then drags suitcase carrying remains on Clifton Suspension Bridge

This is the chilling moment a blood-soaked killer sings and dances naked after barbarically murdering a couple in their home before dumping their dismembered bodies on Clifton Suspension Bridge. Yostin Andres Mosquera, 35, was today convicted of murdering Alberto Alfonso, 62, during a recorded sex session just hours after bludgeoning his partner Paul Longworth, 71, over the head with a hammer on July 8 last year. Leaving Mr Alfonso to die, the Colombian porn actor casually walks across the bedroom, ripping off a face mask and gloves before he starts singing and dancing 'in elation' with his arms and hands visibly covered in blood. He then threw a towel over the body and made his way to his victim's computer, accessing his online banking and withdrawing cash with his card in the early hours of the morning. In a bid to cover his tracks, he cut off his victims' heads and hid them in a chest freezer at their house in Scotts Road, Shepherd's Bush, west London, where he had been staying. The trial heard how two days later, Mosquera hired a man with a van who unwittingly drove him from London to Bristol so he could dump a suitcase and a trunk containing their chopped-up bodies on Clifton Suspension Bridge. The grisly deaths were first discovered when the luggage was found on the iconic bridge at 11.30pm on July 10 last year. One of the suitcases had a tag on it linking them back to an address on Scotts Road where police found the heads in the freezer. Following the guilty verdict, the Met Police has released CCTV which offers the clearest timeline yet of Mosquera's calculated plot to cover up the double murder before he was arrested outside Bristol Temple Meads station. At Woolwich Crown Court today, Mosquera was found guilty of both murders after jurors deliberated for five hours and three minutes. Chilling footage shows Mosquera struggling to drag a red taped-up suitcase towards Clifton Suspension Bridge at around 11.23pm. It was bursting at the seams with blood leaking out shortly before the human remains were discovered. Mosquera was then approached by two members of staff who manage the bridge, while a cyclist followed him to take a video of his face which was shared by police during their manhunt at the time. Revealed for the first time today, a series of chronological CCTV clips shows Mosquera's victims' last moments and the immediate bid to dispose of their bodies. At 10.17am on July 8 last year - one of the men, believed to be Mr Longworth, can be seen closing a window and putting a curtain up. CCTV shows Mosquera looking out of the window at 12.30pm, drawing the curtains. They remained shut until about 1pm, when Mosquera opened them again which prosecution suggested was when Mr Longworth had been killed. CCTV shows Mr Alfonso - wearing a green hoodie - returning home from work at around 6.43pm on a bike, unaware his partner has been murdered. 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He says it is car parts, oil, it doesn't smell of that at all. It looks like blood to us. Without smashing the case open we are not going to know and that's for you. We are convinced it's blood.' Bodycam footage of Mosquera being arrested on a bench outside Bristol Temple Meads in the early hours of July 13 was also released. He is pinned to the ground and asked to confirm his name by officers. One of the suitcases had a tag on it linking them back to an address on Scotts Road where police found the head in the freezer. Mosquera, a Colombian national, met Mr Alfonso online and used the names 'iamblackmaster and 'mrd—k20cm'. The court heard Mosquera visited the couple in London in October 2023 and that they travelled to Colombia in March 2024. He returned to England last June on the promise of English lessons and financial support from Mr Alfonso, whom he had met years earlier on porn websites. The court heard how he also participated in sex acts and dominated and degraded Mr Alfonso who filmed it and posted the footage online. He was in a paid sexual relationship with Mr Alfonso. Prosecutors told the trial how Mr Alfonso, a swimming instructor at Mode Gym in Acton, and Mr Longworth, a retired handyman, were in a happy long-term relationship when they were barbarically murdered by Mosquera. Mr Longworth is believed to have been killed by multiple blows to the head with a hammer between 12.30pm and 1pm on July 8 last year when Mosquera was seen closing curtains to a first floor window on CCTV. Mosquera shattered Mr Longworth's skull before hiding his body in a divan bed, the court heard. He later cut his corpse up with a power tool and knife and stuffed it in a suitcase, the trial heard. Later that day, Mr Alfonso was stabbed to death after he and Mosquera were recording themselves having sex. Jurors were shown the horror footage of Mr Alfonso being killed on camera. Mr Alfonso was in a 'submissive' role and referred to Mosquera as 'master' during the recorded session. 'What is striking, when one considers the footage, is just how calm and in control the defendant remains throughout', prosecutor Deanna Heer, KC, told the trial. On the day that the two men were killed Mosquera googled 'Where on the head is a knock fatal?' and 'How long before a corpse starts to decompose?' 'The post mortem examination of his body revealed that he had suffered severe blunt force trauma to the head which caused his death', said Ms Heer. She explained that there were injuries on his hand, which suggested that he had tried to defend himself. 'When the flat was later searched, a hammer was found lying on the floor in the hallway. It was found to be stained with Paul Longworth's blood', she said. Earlier in his evidence, Mosquera claimed Mr Alfonso cut up Mr Longworth's body after killing him. He said he stabbed Mr Alfonso because he was 'afraid that he would do the same to me that he had done to Paul'. Mosquera said after seeing Mr Longworth's dismembered body, he decided to do the same to Mr Alfonso's corpse. 'Yes I saw Paul's body and I cut Albert's. I don't know the exact moment but I cut it having seen Paul's body'. The trial heard how Mosquera was interrupted by a man while he was attempting to dispose of the suitcases on Clifton Suspension Bridge. Prosecutor Ms Heer, KC, said: 'At about 11.30pm on the night of the 10 July 2024 Douglas Cunningham was cycling home across the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol when he saw the defendant, Yostin Mosquera, standing next to a large red suitcase. 'Thinking he was a lost tourist, Mr Cunningham stopped to see if he was okay. 'A few metres away from where the defendant was standing, on the bridge approach, there was another suitcase, a large silver trunk. 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Man guilty of decapitating and dismembering two men before dumping remains in suitcases on Clifton Bridge
Man guilty of decapitating and dismembering two men before dumping remains in suitcases on Clifton Bridge

The Independent

time42 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Man guilty of decapitating and dismembering two men before dumping remains in suitcases on Clifton Bridge

A man has been found guilty of murdering two men before dumping their remains in suitcases near Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol. Yostin Andres Mosquera, 35, was found guilty at Woolwich Crown Court of murdering civil partners Albert Alfonso, 62, and Paul Longworth, 71, in July last year in their flat in Scotts Road, Shepherd's Bush, west London. He then dumped their remains in suitcases near Clifton Suspension Bridge. Mosquera, who was also staying with the couple, 'decapitated and dismembered' them, froze parts of their remains and brought the rest in suitcases to Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol, according to the prosecution. He is alleged to have repeatedly stabbed Mr Alfonso, who suffered injuries to his torso, face and neck, while Mr Longworth was attacked with a hammer to the back of his head and his skull shattered, jurors at Woolwich Crown Court heard. Mr Alfonso enjoyed 'extreme sex' and Mosquera, a Colombian national whom he met online years earlier, was part of that world, jurors heard. Mr Alfonso was stabbed to death during a filmed session, with footage shown in court recording Mosquera singing and dancing in the aftermath of the attack.

Colombian man found guilty of murder after leaving couple's bodies in suitcases on Bristol bridge
Colombian man found guilty of murder after leaving couple's bodies in suitcases on Bristol bridge

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

Colombian man found guilty of murder after leaving couple's bodies in suitcases on Bristol bridge

A Colombian man has been found guilty of two murders after taking his victims' bodies in suitcases to Bristol's Clifton Suspension Bridge last year. Yostin Mosquera was found guilty today of the murders of Paul Longworth and Albert Alfonso, who were killed in London on 8 July 2024. Mosquera's victims were 62-year-old Albert Alfonso and his civil partner, 71-year-old Paul Longworth. It is believed that Mosquera, a 35-year-old who worked in the adult film industry, first met Mr Alfonso online. The three men struck up a friendship, the couple visited Mosquera in Colombia, and they repeatedly flew Mosquera to the UK to stay with them at their flat in London. While the men would take day-trips to tourist attractions, like Madame Tussauds, Mr Alfonso and Mosquera would engage in extreme sex together. But in the weeks leading up to their murders, Mosquera was clearly planning his attacks. He looked online for a freezer and, on the day of the killings, searched for: "Where on the head is a knock fatal?" The prosecution argued he was financially motivated. Mosquera repeatedly tried to find the price of the couple's property in Scotts Road, Shepherd's Bush, and stole money from Mr Alfonso after murdering him. On 8 July 2024, Mosquera killed Mr Longworth by hitting him with a hammer, shattering his skull, before hiding his body in a divan bed. That evening, during sex with Mr Alfonso, Mosquera stabbed him with a knife. A postmortem revealed 22 stab wounds. All of this was recorded on cameras, which had been placed in the room by Mr Alfonso. Mosquera then decapitated the bodies, the heads stored in a freezer which he had delivered on 9 July. The other remains were put in suitcases and on 10 July, Mosquera hired a van with a driver to transport him and the bags to Clifton Suspension Bridge. The prosecution argued Mosquera went to Bristol with the intention of throwing the bags off the bridge. But, struggling with their weight, Mosquera caught the attention of passers-by, telling them the cases contained car parts. But people noticed liquid leaking from the bags - blood. Mosquera ran off and was later arrested at Bristol Temple Meads station on 13 July 2024 and charged with both murders. When the case came to trial, initially at the Old Bailey and then at Woolwich Crown Court, the gruesome footage of Mr Alfonso's murder was repeatedly played to the jury. 'It was the worst video I have ever seen' It is not often a murder is caught on camera. It is even rarer when they are filmed from multiple angles, with sound. I was at the Old Bailey for the first trial, where the recording of Mosquera killing Albert Alfonso was repeatedly played to the jury. The two men are naked, taking part in consensual sex, which was filmed by Mr Alfonso on several cameras, a normal practice for the pair. Unwittingly, Mr Alfonso recorded his own murder. We see Mosquera hide the knife. Then, when Mr Alfonso is at his most vulnerable, Mosquera calmly stabs him in the neck. Mr Alfonso struggles against Mosquera, screaming, but is overpowered. Mosquera cruelly taunts him, asking, 'Do you like it?' As Alfonso lay dying, Mosquera bizarrely sings and dances before going to Alfonso's computer. The judge warned the jury about the graphic video, reassuring them that, if they felt unable to proceed due to its content, they would be excused. One jury member did not come back the next day and I could completely understand their discomfort. The sound of screaming was hard to forget. A murder is always upsetting to watch, but this felt intrusive. While many aspects of their sexual relationship could be disturbing to an outsider, Albert Alfonso could never have predicted that his private recordings would be so publicly analysed at a trial into his own murder. Miranda Jollie, Senior Crown Prosecutor at the CPS, said she found the video "horrific," but maintained that it was necessary to show the video because of Mosquera's claims. Mosquera denied the murders, but admitted killing Mr Alfonso, his defence team argued it was manslaughter by loss of control. However, the video evidence contradicts this claim. It shows Mosquera had hidden the knife before sex, showing the attack was premeditated. He was also calm as he attacked Mr Alfonso, who was taken off guard, and went to Mr Alfonso's computer to try and steal from him as he lay dying. In court, Mosquera argued, through a Spanish interpreter, that Mr Alfonso had repeatedly "raped him" and that Mr Longworth had been killed by Mr Alfonso. But the prosecution argued there was no evidence to support these claims, while the couple's relationship was unconventional, it was also "loving", and Mr Alfonso would never have killed Mr Longworth.

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