The Daily Telegraph

Fentanyl killer used 20 aliases to dupe pair

‘Geeky’ fantasist invented personas to manipulate the couple before killing them and changing their will

- By Will Bolton Crime Correspond­ent

AN IT worker befriended a married couple and created 20 fake identities to manipulate and drug them before killing them with a fentanyl overdose.

Luke D’wit, 34, was yesterday found guilty of the murders of Carol and Stephen Baxter who were discovered slumped in armchairs at their home in West Mersea, Essex, in April last year.

Over the course of a five-week trial, it emerged that D’wit had spent months “torturing, drugging”, and manipulati­ng the couple before giving them a fatal dose of the synthetic opioid fentanyl.

As they lay dying in their conservato­ry, D’wit monitored their movements on cameras installed in the property.

He had created an “elaborate” network of up to 20 fake identities, which he used to give Mrs Baxter misleading advice about how to manage a thyroid condition. On one occasion, D’wit pretended to be a woman called Jenny, and sent her a voice note saying: “Oh so nice to finally speak to you after all these messages we’ve been doing.”

Mrs Baxter believed that “Jenny” was a friend of a woman named Cheryl, who claimed to have the same disease – except “Cheryl” was another of D’wit’s inventions

D’wit created “Jenny” as a theatre producer who said she could help boost the singing career of Mr and Mrs Baxter’s daughter.

When the recording of D’wit posing as Jenny was played in court, some jurors deemed it so ridiculous they laughed. Tracy Ayling KC, prosecutin­g, said that while the impression was ridiculous, it hid a “sinister intent” to make Mrs Baxter sicker.

‘We were all dolls in his doll’s house’

Speaking after the verdict was returned, the couple’s son, Harry, said: “We were all dolls in his doll’s house, victim to his manipulati­on.”

He said D’wit got pleasure from playing “foul games” with his parents and appeared to enjoy his mother’s declining health. “I feel great sadness looking back on the videos of her when she was acting strangely and seeing him in the background giggling and smiling knowing he’s the one inflicting this pain,” he added.

His sister, Ellie, said: “My mum lost her freedom, her will, her ability to function two years prior to her murder due to her illness. An illness no-one could help with or understand because it was contrived by Luke D’wit. Mum felt so alone and lost, and there was nothing I could do other than give her my shoulder to cry on and cuddle her.”

Det Supt Rob Kirby said the murders were “cold, calculated acts”.

“In all my years in policing, Luke D’wit is one of the most dangerous men I have come across. I have absolutely no doubt that had he not been caught, he would have gone on to commit further murders,” he said.

The case bears similariti­es to the Maids Moreton murder in 2015. Benjamin Field, a church warden, was convicted after he seduced and murdered Peter Farquhar, 69, in order to inherit his wealth.

Field also admitting defrauding Ann Moore-martin, 83, with whom he had started a sexual relationsh­ip, and was jailed for life in 2019.

The Baxters were self-made millionair­es who had been looking forward to taking early retirement and were planning on downsizing to a bungalow. Mrs Baxter, 64, wanted to take up art classes and Mr Baxter, 61, was enjoying the prospect of being able to play more golf.

“They were going to retire early and live,” their daughter said.

Fentanyl discovery

After the Baxters’ bodies were discovered, their deaths were treated as unexpected, but not suspicious, with investigat­ors considerin­g a possible carbon monoxide leak alongside other innocent explanatio­ns.

However, two months later it emerged that the couple had been poisoned with fentanyl following a post mortem investigat­ion.

Their daughter, Ellie, was initially arrested on suspicion of murder as detectives pursued a number of lines of inquiry. Miss Baxter was discounted as a suspect after a new will, written the day after the couple died, and empty packets of fentanyl were discovered in the Baxters’ home. The fake will named a close friend of the couple as the “director and person of significan­t control” of their company. That individual, who was described as being like an “adopted son” to the couple, was D’wit.

Ring doorbell camera footage played to the jury showed D’wit leaving the couple’s home at 7.55pm on Friday, April 7 last year – making him the last person to see them alive.

The couple ran a company called Cazsplash, with Mrs Baxter having designed a type of bath mat to go around a curved corner shower.

Mr Baxter was an executive for the transnatio­nal real estate firm Jones Lang Lasalle, which was founded in the UK but has its headquarte­rs in Chicago.

The couple, who married in 2000, had two children together. Mrs Baxter, a former adult education teacher, had two more children from two previous marriages. They were social members at West Mersea Yacht Club which flew its flag at half mast after their deaths.

D’wit first met the Baxters in 2014, after the couple advertised for help with IT for the business. He acquired the job by fraudulent­ly claiming he had a Masters degree in computer science from the University of East Anglia.

D’wit portrayed himself as a geek

After working for them as a consultant, he befriended them, and in court he claimed he had been Mrs Baxter’s “closest friend”.

He portrayed himself as a slightly weird, geeky, but ultimately harmless friend. He lived at home, shared a bedroom with his mother, Janatha, showed little interest in careers or relationsh­ips, played video games and occasional­ly attended Comic Con, a comic book fan convention. Numerous friends gave evidence saying he “had a good sense of right and wrong” and often helped out at a local soup kitchen.

In the months before he murdered the Baxters, D’wit created numerous false identities, including a doctor, which he used to manipulate the couple and separate them from their relatives.

D’wit put Mrs Baxter in touch with a “Dr Andrea Bowden”, who he claimed was a specialist from the US who could help advise her on how to manage her thyroid condition.

He also created fake aliases for the imaginary patients, including “Cheryl” who Mrs Baxter talked to about her health fears. “Linda”, encouraged Mrs Baxter to take the remedies offered by “Dr Bowden”. One message from Linda read: “Do what Andrea says or you will have other problems.”

Dr Naveed Younis, an endocrinol­ogist who gave evidence in court, described the treatments and remedies as “utter rubbish”.

The couple described D’wit as their “mixologist” and Mrs Baxter told Dr Bowden he always made “all of her potions”.

Solicitor Christophe­r Andrews said that the Baxters wrote their will, which was approved and signed in September 2021, and he was never contacted about updating it before their deaths.

The couple’s original will had stated that the Baxters’ money would be left to their four children.

Discussing the fake will, which had been created on D’wit’s phone, Mr Andrews said it didn’t “read as a legal document”. He added: “It appears whoever drafted this document has no idea how a business is run.” D’wit was arrested on July 6 after the will was discovered and it became clear that he had been the last person to see the couple before they died.

When their bodies were found, D’wit was called over to the house by Miss Baxter, and on police bodycam footage he is heard saying: “Unfortunat­ely with Carol, you don’t know what she’s taken … sometimes she forgets and she can take it six or seven times. She doesn’t know.”

As police arrested him, he was found to have both unopened and opened packs of fentanyl patches in his rucksack. He was also found to have a number of metal tacks alongside pill casings.

During the trial it emerged that Mrs Baxter had been admitted to hospital after complainin­g of severe pain. X-rays showed a number of identical tacks in her stomach.

Detectives “strongly believe” she had been secretly fed the tacks by D’wit. In court, when questioned, he maintained he was innocent but admitted creating the fake identities.

He said he had only done so, however, to help the couple. Det Supt Kirby said that D’wit had purported to be an “upstanding, helpful and kind member of the community”.

He added: “The reality is far more sinister. He is a cold, calculated murderer.

“D’wit went to great lengths to cover up his tracks. He deceived everyone who knew him, who welcomed him into their family homes and who relied upon him for help, or at least what they believed was help.

“Thankfully, the jury saw through his fantasies and gave guilty verdicts.”

D’wit, who used a wheelchair throughout the trial, did not react. He will be sentenced at Chelmsford Crown Court tomorrow.

‘In all my years in policing Luke D’wit is one of the most dangerous men I have come across’

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 ?? ?? Luke D’wit speaks to police after the bodies of Stephen and Carol Baxter, left, were found at their home in West Mersea last April. He was bearded when he was arrested for murder three months later, below
Luke D’wit speaks to police after the bodies of Stephen and Carol Baxter, left, were found at their home in West Mersea last April. He was bearded when he was arrested for murder three months later, below
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