Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

'I Treated Her As A Sex Object, That Turned Me On,' British Banker's Torture Video Stuns Jury

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Oct, 2016 01:32 PM
    Filming himself torturing and killing a young Indonesian woman, British investment banker Rurik Jutting veered between boasting, remorse and describing the pleasure he derived from sexually brutalising the first of two victims.
     
    Footage taken from four hours of recordings on Jutting's mobile phone formed the core of the prosecution opening on the second day of a murder trial in Hong Kong that has grabbed global attention.
     
    The 31-year-old Cambridge University graduate has admitted killing Sumarti Ningsih, a 23-year-old single mother, and another Indonesian woman, Seneng Mujiasih, in his luxury high-rise apartment two years ago.
     
    But he has pleaded not guilty to murder on grounds of "diminished responsibility", while pleading guilty to the lesser crime of manslaughter.
     
    The four women and five men on the jury clenched their jaws and, at times, diverted their eyes as they endured an opening 20-minute segment of the torture of Ningsih. Tears welled up in the eyes of one middle aged male juror.
     
    Appearing topless, overweight and unshaven, Jutting appeared on camera, at times showing Ningsih's body, and spoke with chilling calm in a series of monologues that he described as "narcissistic ramblings".
     
    While the video was not shown to the public in the courtroom, journalists covering the trial could hear the audio.
     
    "I just killed someone, first person I ever killed, I cut her throat in the bathroom ... to be precise I cut her throat while she was bending over licking dirty toilet bowl," he said.
     
    Jutting, who had held a high flying job at Bank of America in Hong Kong before his arrest, at one point filmed himself taking cocaine as he explained how he tortured Ningsih.
     
    "I treated her as a non-person, a sex object. And that turned me on."
     
    Bespectacled and wearing pale blue shirt, Jutting was flanked by three policemen as he watched what he had done on a video recording a judge said had been found on his iPhone.
     
    Jutting, who had attended Winchester College, one of Britain's most prestigious private schools, shut his eyes, sometimes covering his face with his hand rather than look at the screen in front of him.
     
    BRITISH SCHOOLGIRLS
     
     
    Jutting used a belt, sex toys, a pair of pliers and his fists to torture Ningsih over three days before eventually slitting her throat with a serrated-edged knife, according to the prosecution.
     
    On the recording, Jutting spoke in a relaxed, soft voice as he taunted, bullied and mutilated Ningsih, a single mother who had been visiting Hong Kong on a tourist visa.
     
    "Its better than being beaten isn't it? Do not cry, take it like a good girl," Jutting said as he described how he was going to put his fist into her.
     
    Jutting called his victim 'Alice' as he tormented her.
     
    While threatening to cut off her nipples he calmly said: "This doesn't really hurt does it? You deserve some water don't you? Just one more before some water."
     
    After that video, others showing Jutting and Finfish's mutilated, naked body were screened in an open court room.
     
     
    In one, Jutting spoke of a "fantasy" to kidnap three teenaged girls from Wycombe Abbey, a girls' boarding school in High Wycombe, a town northwest of London.
     
    As he listened to that passage, Jutting shook his head in the courtroom while holding a hand over his face.
     
    In one scene he urinated into a beer glass as he expressed fears of being jailed in Hong Kong, planning to return to Britain to co-operate with authorities.
     
    In another, he played the song Disturb by pop artist Rhianna as he lays out freshly-purchased hardware store "goodies" he plots to use on another victim - a hammer, and nails, pins and sandpaper.
     
    DEPRESSED AT WORK
     
    Prior to the jury selection on Monday, Deputy High Court Judge Michael Stuart-Moore warned potential jurors that if they were unable to cope with viewing extreme violence they should excuse themselves.
     
    The defense and prosecution were largely in agreement over the physical evidence, Stuart-Moore had advised the jurors on the first day of the trial.
     
    He told them that the outcome could rest on psychiatric and psychological testimony to determine whether it was a case of murder or manslaughter.
     
    Murder carries a mandatory life sentence, while manslaughter carries a maximum of life though a shorter sentence can be set.
     
    The women's bodies were found in Jutting' s apartment after he had called police.
     
    Ningsih's remains were discovered in a suitcase on the balcony, while the body of the second victim, 26-year-old Seneng Mujiasih, was found inside with wounds to her neck and buttocks, the prosecutor told the court.
     
    Mujiasih, a domestic helper, was working in a bar when she met Jutting, according to the prosecution.
     
     
    Jutting, who spoke of his addiction to drugs and alcohol, also alluded several times to paying for sex, and referred to Ningsih as his prostitute. At one point he moved the camera to show his large belly and lowers it to glimpse his genitals.
     
    "Killing her may have been kindness, living with that would have haunted her," he is heard saying.
     
    As he prepared to hide the body in a suitcase Jutting questions whether he has a problem as he feels excited.
     
    Soon after his arrest in November, 2014 Bank of America had said Jutting had worked there until recently, but did not say exactly when or why he left. A spokesman for the bank declined to comment when contacted by Reuters on Tuesday.
     
    Jutting spoke of his role as the bank's vice president and head of Structured Equity Finance & Trading (Asia) and expressed "job depression".
     
    During one section Jutting remarks that after killing Ningsih, he felt most guilty about not being in the office to close a "financing deal for a literally soulless project."
     
    "Newly unemployed, soon to be unemployed, part time rapist and murderer," he says after musing over future plans to kidnap, torture and rape young girls.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Child Care Projects make a positive impact, one goal at a time

    Child Care Projects make a positive impact, one goal at a time
    Projects Abroad makes progress on literacy efforts through detailed Care Management Plans

    Child Care Projects make a positive impact, one goal at a time

    Some British Indian Men Consider Their Wives As 'Disposable Women': Report

    Some British Indian men are among a broader South Asian group in the UK who are guilty of mistreating and abandoning their wives in their countries of origin, a new report by a UK University has found.

    Some British Indian Men Consider Their Wives As 'Disposable Women': Report

    2 Indians Charged With Visa Fraud In New Jersey

    2 Indians Charged With Visa Fraud In New Jersey
      Harpreet Sachdeva, 26, and Sanjeev Sukhija, 35, currently on a foreign worker visas and living in New Jersey have been charged with one count of conspiracy to commit visa fraud.

    2 Indians Charged With Visa Fraud In New Jersey

    Will China Again Block Masood Azhar's Terror Listing? It Has Days To Decide

    Will China Again Block Masood Azhar's Terror Listing? It Has Days To Decide
    In March this year, China - a permanent member of the UN Security Council - had blocked an application moved by India and co-sponsored by United States, United Kingdom and France to place sanctions on the JeM chief.

    Will China Again Block Masood Azhar's Terror Listing? It Has Days To Decide

    India to boycott Saarc Summit in Islamabad, Pakistan says 'unfortunate'

    India to boycott Saarc Summit in Islamabad, Pakistan says 'unfortunate'
    India on Tuesday announced it will not attend the Saarc Summit in Islamabad in November, saying that regional cooperation and terror don't go together.

    India to boycott Saarc Summit in Islamabad, Pakistan says 'unfortunate'

    Pakistan approaches ICJ over Indus Waters Treaty

    Pakistan approaches ICJ over Indus Waters Treaty
    Pakistan on Tuesday approached the International Court of Justice over implementation of the Indus Waters Treaty, with senior Pakistani officials taking up the matter with the World Bank.

    Pakistan approaches ICJ over Indus Waters Treaty