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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Emily Pennink, PA & Stephen Topping

'Evil' killer dumped headless body of friend in woods 200 miles away - now she'll be sentenced on TV

Television cameras will capture the moment a self-styled healer found guilty of murdering her friend is sentenced in court. It was alleged Jemma Mitchell hit 67-year-old Mee Kuen Chong over the head with a weapon at her London home, before driving more than 200 miles to dump her headless body in Devon.

Now, 38-year-old Mitchell will make history by becoming the first woman to be sentenced on television in England. Jurors heard that Mitchell took Ms Chong’s decapitated and badly decomposed body to woods in the seaside town of Salcombe two weeks after the attack.

Prosecutors said Mitchell intended to kill devout Christian and vulnerable divorcee Ms Chong before faking her will to inherit the bulk of her estate - worth more than £700,000. The court heard Mitchell came up with the plan after Ms Chong, who was known as Deborah, backed out of giving her £200,000 to pay for repairs to Mitchell’s £4 million dilapidated family home.

READ MORE: ''You have made me into this... you have got enough money": Woman took teenage son on revenge mission against her mum after complaining she had been frozen out of family will

The trained osteopath, who boasted online of her award-winning skill in human dissection, had denied having anything to do with Ms Chong’s death - but declined to give evidence at her trial. Mitchell stood impassively in the dock as she was found guilty of murder while Ms Chong’s family in Malaysia watched the verdict via a video link.

On Friday (October 28), Judge Richard Marks KC will be broadcast handing down his sentence at the Old Bailey. It is only the second time cameras have been allowed into an English criminal crown court to record a sentencing, and the first in which the defendant is a woman.

Jemma Mitchell, who is due to be sentenced at the Old Baile (PA)

During the trial, jurors viewed CCTV footage of Mitchell arriving at Ms Chong’s home carrying a large blue suitcase on the morning of June 11 last year. More than four hours later, she emerged from the property in Wembley, north-west London, with the suitcase appearing bulkier and heavier.

She also had with her a smaller bag full of Ms Chong’s financial documents, which were later recovered from Mitchell’s home. After the was reported missing, Mitchell claimed she had gone to visit family friends 'somewhere close to the ocean' as she was feeling 'depressed'.

In reality, Mitchell had decapitated Ms Chong and stored her remains in the garden of the house she shared with her retired mother in Willesden, north-west London, the prosecution suggested. On June 26 last year, she stowed the body inside the suitcase in the boot of a hire car and drove to Devon.

A screen grab taken from CCTV issued by Metropolitan Police of Jemma Mitchell on Chaplin Road, north west London dragging a blue suitcase on June 11, 2021 (PA)

Ms Chong’s headless body was found by holidaymakers beside a woodland footpath near the picturesque town of Salcombe the next day. Following a police search of the area, Ms Chong’s skull was recovered a few metres away from the body.

A post-mortem examination found skull fractures which could have been from a blow to the head and broken ribs, said to have been caused by the body being stuffed into the suitcase. A search of Mitchell’s home uncovered Ms Chong’s fake will and personal papers.

The blue suitcase had been stored on the roof of a neighbour’s shed. Although no forensic evidence was recovered from the suitcase, Ms Chong’s DNA was identified on a bloodstained tea towel in a pocket.

Jurors heard that Ms Chong had suffered from schizophrenia and was referred for help after writing letters to the then-Prince of Wales and prime minister Boris Johnson. She met Mitchell through a church group and initially agreed to help her, but days before the murder backed out of bankrolling Mitchell’s building work urging her to sell up instead.

Mee Kuen Chong (PA)

Mitchell had grown up in Australia, where her mother worked for the British Foreign Office and had set up an osteopathy business there before returning to the UK in 2015. On her website, she had claimed she was 'attuned to subjects in neuroanatomy, genetics and dissection of human cadavers'.

Following her conviction, Detective Chief Inspector Jim Eastwood, who led the investigation, said: “Mitchell has never accepted responsibility for Deborah’s murder so there are questions which remain unanswered. Why she kept her body for a fortnight, why she decapitated her, why she deposited her remains in Salcombe.

“What we do know is that these were evil acts carried out by an evil woman and the only motive clearly was one of financial gain.”

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