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November 9, 2016

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Jutting jailed for life after murders judged ‘sickening in the extreme’

BRITISH banker Rurik Jutting was jailed for life yesterday for the murders of two Indonesian women at his Hong Kong apartment in a case the judge said was “sickening in the extreme.”

Cambridge graduate Jutting, 31, who tortured one victim for three days, had pleaded not guilty to murdering Sumarti Ningsih and Seneng Mujiasih two years ago on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

But a jury at Hong Kong’s High Court returned unanimous guilty verdicts.

“This must rank as one of the more horrifying murder cases ever to come to court in Hong Kong,” judge Michael Stuart-Moore said, describing Jutting’s actions as “sickening in the extreme and beyond a normal person’s imagination.”

He described the case as touching the “very depths of human depravity” and said Jutting had not shown a shred of remorse.

The judge said Jutting was “highly likely” to kill again if ever released. Defense counsel Tim Owen earlier told the court that Jutting would apply to transfer to a prison in the UK.

The former Winchester College public school student remained almost expressionless, breathing out heavily as he left the dock.

In a gruelling 10-day trial the jury heard how Jutting became obsessed with slavery, rape and torture and played out those fantasies with his first victim, Ningsih.

Fueled by cocaine and alcohol, he tortured her for three days and recorded parts of her torment on his iPhone.

Jutting killed Ningsih by slashing her throat in his bathroom and then stuffed her body in a suitcase which he stored on his balcony.

The court heard he had cut her neck with a serrated knife in the shower after forcing her to lick a toilet bowl.

In hours of self-recorded ranting on his iPhone after that murder, Jutting described his attacks on Ningsih using pliers, sex toys and a belt.

Days later he murdered Mujiasih, slashing her throat in his living room.

He had prepared to torture her but killed her quickly when she began to scream after spotting a rope gag by his sofa.

The women’s bodies were found in the early hours of November 1, 2014, after Jutting called police.

Ningsih and Mujiasih, both in their 20s, had gone to Jutting’s apartment after he offered them money for sex.

Jutting cut Mujiasih’s throat hours after he had met her at a bar near his home in the Wanchai district on October 31.

Both victims were from poor farming families in Indonesia and their relatives had relied on them for financial support.

Ningsih’s mother Suratmi, 51, said she was glad the court had reached its decision, but would never recover. “I lost my child and the pain will never be cured,” she said, speaking from her home in Cilacap on Indonesia’s main island of Java.

She called on the Indonesian government to support her efforts to seek compensation from Jutting to help support Ningsih’s 7-year-old son.

In a letter read to the court after the verdicts, Jutting said: “The evil that I’ve inflicted cannot be remedied by me. I’m sorry, I’m sorry beyond words.”

But the judge dismissed the apology: “It’s the first mention of saying sorry about what he had done and I don’t accept it.”

He described Jutting as an “archetypal sexual predator” who presented an extreme danger to women.

Jutting’s defense had argued his control was impaired by cocaine and alcohol, combined with a narcissistic personality and sexual sadism disorders.

But the prosecution argued he had been able to make controlled decisions.

The judge said: “The defendant could and should have been able to exercise self control ... but he chose not to do so.”




 

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