British backpacker murder trial shown CCTV of 'killer carrying suitcase with her body inside'
Suspect’s accounts of actions and whereabouts in police interviews during days after death of British backpacker Grace Millane contradicted by numerous CCTV recordings
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A jury in New Zealand has been shown footage of a man accused of murdering a 21-year-old British backpacker wheeling a suitcase allegedly containing her body through a hotel and loading it into a car.
Grace Millane, from Wickford in Essex, died the day before her 22nd birthday after going on a Tinder date in Auckland, New Zealand, with the 27-year-old murder suspect whose identity has been withheld by the courts.
The man has denied her murder.
The jury in Auckland High Court was also shown footage of the suspect’s first police interviews, in which he gave accounts of his actions and whereabouts that are inconsistent with CCTV recordings from various locations.
CCTV showed him on a date with Millane the day before he was filmed leaving the hotel carrying two large suitcases.
Prosecutors claim Millane’s body was inside one of them, The New Zealand Herald reports.
The suitcase containing her body was found on 9 December last year, buried in woods outside the city.
The court also saw photographs of the woodland site where the shallow grave containing the suitcase was found.
The prosecution alleges that on the night of 1 December last year, the accused strangled Millane to death in his hotel room after the pair spent the evening together.
He then stuffed Millane’s naked body into a suitcase and dumped it in the shallow grave in Auckland’s Waitakere Ranges, the court was told.
The defendant, who had claimed in police interviews to have parted ways with Millane earlier in the night, subsequently claimed the 21-year-old woman died after they had engaged in rough consensual sex.
The court was also shown CCTV footage of the man buying one of the suitcases, a shovel, cleaning products, bringing a carpet cleaning machine into the hotel and driving a hire car.
In his initial police interviews, during which time the suspect was being questioned but not under arrest, he claimed after he and Millane had parted company he had then drunk excessively, was helped to bed by a porter in the hotel, and had not woken up until 9am or 10am on 2 December.
He claimed when he got up he had gone to an Irish pub and eaten a medium-rare steak with mushrooms, chips and salad, before drinking 10 beers in two hours.
However, CCTV showed him buying a suitcase at 8.14am the same morning.
The court in Auckland also heard from a woman who had been on a date with the accused later on 2 December at about 4pm, after they had also matched on Tinder.
She described him as “very intense”, and said he had told her he was “trying to find a really large duffel bag”.
“He really wanted to find a big bag with wheels on it,” she said.
She also recounted a story the suspect had told her. She said he told her about a man who had killed a woman during rough sex and was later convicted of manslaughter.
“It’s crazy how guys can make one wrong move and go to jail for the rest of their life,” he allegedly told her.
“He seemed to have empathy with this man that he knew,” she told the court.
She said the man had texted her later and written: “Hey, I had a really great time. I’d like to do it again.”
“I said, ‘No thank you, I wouldn’t,’” she added.
The trial continues.
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