Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Michael
ONUFREJCZYC
The body was never found
He was wounded twice in the First World War and earned nine medal for
gallantry in WW2 and, when the fighting ended, he chased a lifelong
dream of becoming a farmer.
Enlisting in the Polish Resettlement Corps in South Wales he bought
Cefn Hendre Farm in 1949, having raised a loan from Polish Army Funds.
He largely kept himself to himself and did little to integrate with
the local community.
In April 1953 he took on a new business partner in fellow Polish war
veteran Stanislaw Sykut to help him run down the dilapidated farm.
More importantly, he needed the capital of some £600 Sykut brought
with him.
But the fiery-tempered Onufrejczyk was soon bullying Sykut, who
complained to police that he’d beaten him up.
The same day he went to a local solicitor to arrange ending their
partnership – either Onufrejczyk could buy him out or they’d have to
sell up and split the proceeds.
By the end of the year Sykut had vanished, his disappearance
explained away by Onufrejczyk as a result of taking a two-week trip to
London.
Knowing his tendency for violence police kept a watch on Onufrejczyk,
but, despite making intensive searches of the farm, no body was found.
Conflicting reports of the missing man abounded around Llandeilo:
He’d gone to London, returned to Poland, Onufrejczyk even spreading word
that he’d been kidnapped at gunpoint by Polish secret police.
Later discoveries that he’d attempted to forge transfer of the deeds
to the farm solely to his name led police to make more searches, this
time with a team from the Monmouthshire Forensic Laboratory.
Experts uncovered more than 2,000 dark stains on the walls, ceiling
and passage leading from the kitchen to the farmyard, the majority of
which were human blood. One thing, however was still missing, Sykut
himself.
Onufrejczyk, who failed to convince anyone by explaining the stains
as belonging to rabbits he’d skinned, was eventually charged with murder
in August 1954.
The jury at the 12-day trial in Swansea returned a guilty verdict and
he was sentenced to death, later commuted to one of life imprisonment –
a case often quoted as a precedent whenever a ‘missing body’ murder
comes to trial.
Upon his released in 1965, Onufrejczyk returned to Cwmdu asking
anyone if they’d seen his old friend Sykut.
But police always suspected he’d met his end in the kitchen of the
farmhouse he’d shared with the former war hero, who’d chopped him up and
fed his remains to their pigs.
Onufrejczyk was killed in a road accident the following year, so we
shall never know.