Daily Mail

Double life of Albanian asylum seeker who killed couple for millions they never had

Ex-commando and gambling addict slaughtere­d line-dancing OAPs at their country cottage after spending 17 YEARS living in Britain under false name

- From Tom Kelly

AN ALBANIAN who brutally murdered two pensioners used a stolen identity to claim asylum and live in Britain illegally for nearly two decades.

In a case that exposed a litany of immigratio­n blunders, violent criminal Vital Dapi lived a double life in the UK and Albania for 17 years before he killed grandparen­ts Peter and Sylvia Stuart.

The former Albanian special forces commando targeted the couple in a ‘callous’ attack at their Suffolk cottage because he thought they were millionair­es and he needed cash to cover massive gambling debts.

Detectives admitted they knew ‘precious little’ about him when he went on the run last year after Mr Stuart, 75, was discovered dumped in a ditch with nine ‘extreme’ stab wounds. The body of retired insurance clerk Mrs Stuart, 69, has never been found.

Dapi was arrested in Luxembourg and admitted his true identity, but British officials did not believe him and he was put on trial under his false name, Ali Qazimaj.

Now, after a jury at Ipswich Crown Court took just three hours to convict Dapi, it can be revealed that he:

Sneaked into Britain in September 1999 clinging to the fuel tank of a truck;

Was granted asylum within six months after telling border officials he was fleeing the war in Kosovo where his entire family had been a victims of ethnic cleansing;

Proudly posed next to a portrait of the Queen at his UK citizenshi­p ceremony in an Essex town hall in 2005 – and sent the picture home to his mother in Albania;

Made regular trips home to his family in Albania, where he retained a passport and ID card in his real name and worked as a suspected hitman around the Balkans;

Was arrested three times in the UK before the murders, without the authoritie­s realising he was living here under a false name.

Last night MPs questioned the ‘extraordin­ary’ failings that had allowed Dapi to live in the country illegally for so long.

The compulsive gambler, who spent up to £1,000 a day at bookmakers, killed the Stuarts to fund his addiction after being told they were millionair­es who had easy access to cash, the court was told.

He made several ‘reconnaiss­ance’ trips in his car near the Stuarts’ remote Brick Kiln Cottage in Weybread, near Eye in Suffolk, in the weeks before the murders.

Police found retired technician Mr Stuart’s body on June 3. Dapi was also convicted of Mrs Stuart’s murder, after her hair was found in his car. After killing the keen line-dancers – who had been married for 48 years – Dapi drove to Dover and fled across the Channel by ferry after using Mrs Stuart’s bank card to take money from a cash machine.

After his capture, he admitted being Dapi but said he had never been to the UK until his extraditio­n, or used the name Qazimaj.

But worryingly, little was done to investigat­e this and prosecutor­s initially told the jury his claim to be Vital Dapi was a ‘lie’. In fact, it was one of the few things he was telling the truth about.

The son of a plumber, Vital Dapi

‘The authoritie­s believed his story’

was born in 1972 in Elbasani, a town two hours from the Albanian capital of Tirana.

His sister Esmeralda Hasko said: ‘He had a dream of the West. Every time he saw the Queen or Tony Blair on the television he would say, “I want to serve you. I want to work for you”.’

In December 1998, Dapi paid a people trafficker to get him to Italy, and from there made his way to the Netherland­s, where he smuggled himself on to a freight ship to Harwich in Essex on September 25, 1999. His uncle, Murat Dapi, said: ‘He clung to the fuel tank of a lorry for the entire journey. When he arrived in Britain, they couldn’t believe he was still alive.’

In the UK he spent six months in a refugee camp. His brother-in-law, Ingrid Hasko, said: ‘Vital bought a Yugoslavia­n passport from a Kosovar and switched the picture for his own. He knew that he needed to have documents from Kosovo to get permanent residency in England.’ To prevent the authoritie­s doing background checks, Dapi told them his entire family had been wiped out. One of his cousins said: ‘ The English authoritie­s believed his story, like they believed so many stories.’

Within six months he was granted asylum followed by permanent residency and citizenshi­p in 2005.

Despite his new identity as Ali

Qazimaj, he maintained a double life, returning to Albania several times a year where he retained citizenshi­p as Dapi.

After working as a driver, shop assistant and in the Holiday Inn hotel in Islington, North London, Dapi settled in Tilbury, Essex, and acted as carer for the father and stepmother of the Stuarts’ son-in-law, Steve Paxman, which is how he came to hear about the couple he would eventually kill.

In 2015, he carried out a suspected hit in Serbia after travelling from Albania, and later boasting to Mr Paxman about carrying out a ‘contract killing’. The following year, desperate for more cash, he attacked the Stuarts.

Jurors yesterday found Dapi guilty after prosecutor Karim Khalil QC told them: ‘He is an arrogant man, he is a profession­al deceiver, he is a callous murderer.’

Tory MP Charlie Elphicke said: ‘ This is an astonishin­g and extremely worrying story. It yet again underlines the vital importance of border security, tough checks and making sure people arriving are who they say they are.’

The Home Office said it could not comment on individual cases. Dapi will be sentenced today – under the name of Ali Qazimaj.

 ??  ?? DAY HE BECAME BRITISH
DAY HE BECAME BRITISH
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 ??  ?? HIS VICTIMS
HIS VICTIMS
 ??  ?? Trained killer: Vital Dapi, above, and above left on the day he received British citizenshi­p from then Thurrock mayor Ian Harrison in 2005, murdered retired couple Sylvia and Peter Stuart, right
Trained killer: Vital Dapi, above, and above left on the day he received British citizenshi­p from then Thurrock mayor Ian Harrison in 2005, murdered retired couple Sylvia and Peter Stuart, right

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