Daily Mail

‘Breaking Bad killer’

Banker tried to dissolve gay PC lover’s body in bath after seeing it on TV

- By Chris Greenwood Chief Crime Correspond­ent

A FORMER bank IT expert obsessed with TV show Breaking Bad strangled a police officer to death when they met for sex before trying to dissolve his body in an acid bath, a jury was told yesterday.

Stefano Brizzi, 50, is accused of murdering off- duty PC Gordon Semple when the pair met for a drug-fuelled group sex session.

Brizzi, who used to work for Morgan Stanley, then chopped up his victim with a saw before tossing body parts in the River Thames, the court heard.

The Italian was a fan of Breaking Bad, a hit US drama about a chemistry teacher turned drug kingpin. One scene involves the body of a rival being dissolved in an acid bath. He also referred to the drug crystal meth, which is at the centre of the series, as ‘Nutella’, the court heard.

PC Semple’s remains were discovered after police were alerted by neighbours to an appalling ‘smell of death’.

Officers were hit by an overwhelmi­ng stench as Brizzi opened the front door of his flat wearing just his underwear and a pair of sunglasses.

Inside they found some of their colleague’s remains in the bath and discovered attempts had been made to boil his flesh away in saucepans. Later, a severed foot was found in the river.

Yesterday, Brizzi went on trial at the Old Bailey, where he claimed PC Semple died accidental­ly during a sex game.

He denies murder but has admitted obstructin­g the coroner in his duty by dismemberi­ng the 59-year-old’s body.

Opening the case against him, Crispin Aylett QC said PC Semple went to Brizzi’s flat on the Peabody Estate in Southwark, south London, on April 1. They arranged the rendezvous on the gay dating app Grindr, where they invited others to join in.

When PC Semple did not come home, his partner Gary Meeks rang his mobile phone and it was answered but all he could hear was breathing.

Six days later, two women PCs visited Brizzi’s home and made the shocking discovery.

Mr Aylett said: ‘In the bathroom, the bath was full of what

‘Satan told me to do it’

turned out to be acid. On the bathroom floor were plastic buckets containing human remains.’

Brizzi allegedly said: ‘I’ve tried to dissolve the body… I’ve killed a police officer. I killed him last week. I met him on Grindr and I killed him. Satan told me to.’

The pair had invited two other men to join the ‘party’ but only one turned up. When the man arrived at 7pm, Brizzi told him through the intercom: ‘Someone fell ill but we’re taking care of it. So our party is cancelled.’

On April 4, a neighbour complained about the ‘ revolting smell’ and Brizzi told him he had been cooking for a friend. The same day he bought a set of saws and several large buckets.

After his arrest, Brizzi said he had been hearing voices telling him: ‘You must kill. You must kill.’ Despite this, he is not claiming to be mentally ill.

Asked why body parts were found in the river, he said: ‘I kind of said “goodbye”... I thought it was a nice way to... make a funeral on the River Thames.’

Mr Aylett said the Italian must have hoped first to avoid being caught and, if that failed, to make it impossible to discover how PC Semple had died.

But a pathologis­t identified bruising on the officer’s neck, suggesting he was strangled.

Police found Brizzi was addicted to crystal meth. He had been sacked by Morgan Stanley over his drug use.

PC Semple, from Inverness, lived in Greenhithe, Kent. He was attached to a Westminste­r Council anti-social behaviour unit.

The trial continues.

 ??  ?? Smell of death: Gordon Semple’s body was found after neighbours complained of the stench Denies murder: Stefano Brizzi, 50
Smell of death: Gordon Semple’s body was found after neighbours complained of the stench Denies murder: Stefano Brizzi, 50
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