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John Martin Scripps, a.k.a. John Martin, 35, was the
first Westerner to be hung in Singapore for murder on 19 April 1996. He
was convicted in the sensational "Body-parts" or "Black bin-bags" murder
of South African tourist, Gerard George Lowe, 32, in March 1995. The
police were alerted when various parts of Lowe's dismembered body were
found floating in black bin-bags off Clifford Pier. Investigations led
to the arrest of Martin, his eventual conviction and death sentence.
Background
Martin was born in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom, in
December 1959 to Leonard and Jean Scripps. He had an elder sister, Janet.
His parents moved to London when he was very young. He was close to his
father, who was a lorry driver. However, when Martin was 10, his father
committed suicide. Martin left school when he was 15 because of dyslexia.
Known as a mild-mannered, reserved and polite man
with "no friends", Martin had spent most of his adult life behind bars
for petty crimes and drug-related offences before the body-parts murder.
Martin was also linked to murder cases in Thailand, Mexico, Belize and
San Francisco. The only love of his life outside his family, was said to
be his Mexican ex-wife, Maria Arellanos, whom he married when he was in
his 20s and who divorced him while he was in prison.
Scripps' life before the "Body-parts" murder
1973 : At age 14, Scripps
disappeared in France from a cadet training camp.
1974 : Convicted for burglary and
theft in juvenile court
1978 : First adult conviction for
indecent assault
1978-1982 : Burglaries in London,
jailed in Israel for burglary
1982 : Jailed for burglary and
assault in Surrey. He absconded and travelled to Southeast Asia and
America
1985 : Jailed again in Surrey for
burglary. He absconded again to smuggle drugs through various countries
1987: Jailed in London for heroin offences
Jun 1990 : Absconded from London
jail
Nov 1990 : Jailed for heroin possession at
Winchester
1993 : Acquired butchery skills in
prison
31 Oct 1994 : Absconded from Mount
Prison in Hertfordshire. Travelled through Holland, Belgium, Paris,
Spain
Description
In mid-March 1995, Singaporeans were gripped by the
news that dismembered parts of a human torso and lower limbs were found
floating in black garbage bags in the waters off Clifford Pier. Fears
that this was the work of a killer at large proved true. The body parts
were identified as belonging to a South African tourist, Gerard George
Lowe, 32, who went missing. His head and arms were never found.
Following police investigations, John Martin Scripps,
was caught and charged in court to stand trial for the murder of Lowe.
Martin was accused of killing Lowe, in Room 1511 which they shared in
River View Hotel between noon on 8 March and 8:00 am on 9 March. Acting
for the prosecution were Jennifer Marie, Noral Huda and Toh Han Li. They
highlighted that Martin had a reputation of befriending tourists,
killing them and then dismembers their corpses. He robs them of their
wallets, credit cards, cash and passports. Martin had considerable skill
as a prison butcher and Lowe's body showed signs of being dismembered
professionally.
In Lowe's case, the defence mooted that Martin killed
Lowe unintentionally when he rebuffed the latter's unwanted homosexual
advances in their River View Hotel room. In the ensuing fight, he hit
Lowe with a camping hammer. He panicked and fled when Lowe was dead. An
anonymous British friend disposed of the body. Acting for the defence
were Edmond Pereira and Joseph Theseira. Justice T.S. Sinnathuray found
Martin was found to be a calculative killer who set out to murder and
rob the unsuspecting Lowe. He was sentenced to death, by hanging.
Timeline
8 Mar 1995 : Martin arrived in Singapore on a
flight from San Francisco. He met South African tourist Gerard George
Lowe at Changi Airport and agreed to share a room at River View Hotel.
Martin later murders Lowe and dismembers the body.
9-10 Mar1995 : Lowe's name was removed
from hotel registry at Martin's request.
9-10 Mar 1995 : Martin used Lowe's credit
cards, withdrawing $8, 775 in cash and buying a $499 videocassette
recorder. He attended a Singapore Symphony Orchestra performance on
March 10.
11 Mar1995 : Security guards observed
Martin walking out of hotel around 6:35 a.m with a heavy suitcase. About
15 minutes later Martin returns without the suitcase. He checked out of
hotel and left for Bangkok.
13, 16 Mar 1995 : Human body parts including
torso, thighs and legs in black plastic bags were recovered off Clifford
Pier. Positive identification of Lowe was made by his widow.
15 Mar1995 : Martin meanwhile flew to
Phuket from Bangkok. Canadian tourists Sheila Mae Damude, 49, and her
son Darin, 22, were on the same flight. They were later found murdered
and dismembered.
19 Mar 1995 : Martin returned to Singapore and
was arrested at Changi airport. He was found to have knives, a 1.3 kg
hammer, an electrical stun device, handcuffs, a can of mace, credit
cards, possessions and the passports of Lowe and the Damudes with him.
21 Mar 1995 : Martin was charged for forgery.
He told police he was Simon James Davis, age 29, the same named he used
to check into River View Hotel with Lowe.
24 Mar 1995 : Martin -- his true identity now
known - was convicted of Lowe's murder.
2 Apr 1995 : A third bin bag with body parts
was found floating off Clifford Pier.
4 Apr 1995 : Martin gave statement to
Singapore police, claiming that an anonymous British friend was
responsible for disposing of Lowe's body.
18 Sep 1995 : Martin was formally charged for
the Lowe's murder in Singapore court.
2 Oct 1995 : Martin's trial begins
in Singapore high court.
10 Nov 1995 : Martin was found
guilty and sentenced to hang. Defence lawyers indicated they would
appeal.
4 Jan 1996 : Martin withdrew his
appeal
10 Mar 1996 : Martin declined to
seek pardon from President Ong Teng Cheong
19 Apr 1996 : Martin hung at Changi
Prison
Dubbed the "tourist from hell" by the British
tabloids he may well have murdered three people in all.
Scripps was convicted of the murder of Gerrard George
Lowe after a trial that began on October the 2nd 1995. It was to be
Singapore's most sensational murder case since that of Adrian Lim, who
with his wife and girlfriend, were convicted, in May 1983, of the murder
of two children in 1981.
46 year old Lim, a self-styled spirit medium and the
two women, Hoe Kah Hong and Tan Mui Choo who both in their early 30s,
were hanged together in Changi prison in November 1988.
September 18th 1995.
In the Singaporean equivalent of Committal
Proceedings Scripps appeared in court to be formally charged with the
murder of 32-year-old Lowe, a South African brewery engineer who was on
a shopping trip to Singapore in March 1995.
Various parts of what were believed to be Lowe's
dismembered body were found floating in black bin-bags in Singapore
harbour.
Scripps, who fled from Britain while on parole, was
also a suspect in the murders of Canadian tourist Sheila Damude and her
son, Darin, on the Thai island resort of Phuket, and has been linked to
murders in San Francisco, Mexico and Belize.
When arrested at Changi airport on March 19th 1995,
Scripps was carrying more than US$ 40,000 in cash and traveller's'
cheques and the passports, credit cards and other belongings of Lowe and
the Damudes.
He also had a stun-device, handcuffs and a can of
mace as well as a hammer and knives. Swabs from the hammer matched
bloodstains across the carpet of the Damudes' hotel room.
The preliminary enquiry saw written statements from
as many as 77 witnesses for the prosecution supporting the murder charge
and 11 other charges ranging from forgery, vandalism and cheating to
possession of weapons and small quantities of controlled drugs.
Defence lawyer Joseph Theseira said "The prosecution
also wanted to introduce evidence linking the killings in Thailand."
Scripps arrived in Singapore on March 8th from San
Francisco and left for Phuket three days later.
The investigation into Lowe's murder began shortly
afterwards when a black plastic bin-bag containing a pair of legs was
fished out of the water off Singapore's Clifford Pier.
A few days later, another bag containing thighs and a
naked, headless torso turned up.
The skulls, torsos and several limbs belonging to the
bodies of the Damudes were found in a deserted tin mine on Phuket
between March 19th and 25th.
The Damudes are reported to have travelled on the
same plane to Phuket as Scripps and checked into a room close to his in
the same hotel.
Douglas Herda, a spokesman for the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, which is helping co-ordinate the Singapore and Thai
murder investigations, said Thai authorities were waiting for the
forensic evidence before deciding whether to file charges.
October 2nd 1995 - The trial.
The trial began with Scripps entering no plea but "claiming
trial" which, under Singapore law, means he was contesting the charges.
Singapore does not have jury trials.
Evidence of how Lowe's body was skilfully cut up and
wrapped in black plastic bin bags before being thrown into the Singapore
harbour was presented to the court.
On Tuesday the 3rd, James Quigley, a Prison Officer
at Albany Prison on the Isle of Wight, told the court he had taught
Scripps how to dismember and bone slaughtered animals.
"He was instructed in butchery over a six-week period
in March and April 1993. He was trained to bone out fore quarters and
hind quarters of beef, sides of bacon, carcasses of pork, and how to
portion chicken". Quigley said that Scripps, who was serving a 13-year
jail term for drug-related offences, had been a quick learner.
Chao Tzee Cheng, a government pathologist, testified
that the manner in which Lowe's body was cut up indicated that only a
doctor, a veterinarian or a butcher could have dismembered it.
Chao told the police, "Look, you are dealing with a
serial killer."
Security was heavy throughout the court session, with
Scripps sitting between two uniformed armed police officers in a glass
and metal cage, his legs in irons.
He was allowed to speak briefly to his mother and
sister before and after the proceedings.
The prosecution alleged that Scripps, using a false
name, had checked into the same Singapore hotel room as Lowe on March
8th and later killed him.
Scripps flew to the Thai island resort of Phuket in
Thailand on March 15th and was arrested on his return to Singapore's
Changi airport on March 19th.
Police witnesses testified that when he was arrested
he was wearing a money belt containing four different passports, each
with different names but with his own photograph, and that one of the
passports belonged to Lowe.
Police said he also had passports belonging to
Canadians Sheila and Darin Damude whose dismembered and mutilated bodies
were later found on Phuket island. Thai police had issued a warrant for
Scripps's arrest in connection with those murders.
In a confession made public when it was admitted as
evidence, Scripps told the court he met Lowe at Changi airport on March
8th and they agreed to share a hotel room. He admitted killing Lowe in
the room in the after he was awakened by a half-naked Lowe, who was
smiling and touching his buttocks.
"I am not a homosexual and at that time it appeared
to me Mr. Lowe was a homosexual. I freaked out, I kicked out and started
swearing "I had experience of such things in the past and I was very
frightened."
Scripps said he used a three-pound camping hammer "to
hit Lowe several times on the head until he collapsed onto the carpeted
floor. "My right hand was covered with blood. Everything happened so
quickly," he said.
After realising Lowe was dead, Scripps said he sought
the help of a British friend, whom he refused to name. The friend
disposed of the body without telling him how. Scripps denied that it was
he who cut up Lowe's body, however.
The defence tried to show Scripps did not intend to
kill Lowe and that the killing was an act of manslaughter, which carries
a maximum penalty of life in prison.
The prosecution claimed Scripps committed
premeditated murder with the intent to rob Lowe.
On the fourth day of the trial, prosecutor Jennifer
Marie said Scripps had practised forging Lowe's signature, suggesting
the killing was premeditated.
She showed the court items seized from Scripps's
luggage, including a notebook and tracing paper filled with practice
signatures of Lowe's name.
Marie also produced credit cards, passports and other
documents she alleged had been tampered with.
His defence lawyer Edmond Pereira questioned two
police officers, trying to show they conducted an inadequate search for
blood traces next to the hotel-room bed where Scripps claimed that Lowe
had fallen and bled to death.
Police witnesses said there were no traces of blood
in the carpet, only in the bathroom. That, the prosecution argues,
supports its contention that the killing was premeditated murder.
But Pereira implied that if police found no blood
traces on the carpet, it could have been because they did not conduct
enough tests, and not in the exact spot where Lowe fell.
Pereira asked for a one-day adjournment so he could
consider new evidence the prosecution wanted to introduce in an attempt
to link Scripps with the two murders in Thailand.
Scripps said that he did not remember buying the
concert ticket, and that he did not attend the performance. He told the
court he went drinking with a British friend that night.
Pressed by the prosecution about his movements
between March 8th and March 11th, Scripps said his memory was hopeless.
"You've got a good memory. I haven't," he said. "I'm
dyslexic. I get things mixed up."
October 24th 1995.
Scripps told the court he had tried to commit suicide
by slitting his wrists to escape being hanged.
"I believed I was going to be hung," the 35-year-old
Scripps said on his fifth day in the witness box. "I kept thinking about
Lowe and the Filipino lady that got hanged."
Jennifer Marie told the court Scripps tried to cut
his wrist with a small, sharp piece of glass in police custody shortly
after he was arrested. The prosecution depicted Scripps as a cool,
methodical criminal who murdered tourists to steal from them.
Scripps agreed with a suggestion by Judge T.S.
Sinnathuray that it would take about five minutes for a skilled butcher
to dismember an animal. Asked by the prosecution whether the same skills
could be used to dismember a human, he said: "The bones look similar."
But asked whether he dismembered Lowe, Scripps said: "No, I don't have
all the skills you mentioned." Scripps disputed the prosecution's
assertion that he had ample time and opportunity to chop up Lowe's body,
pack the parts in a suitcase, and throw them in the river.
October 25th 1995.
Scripps said he did not report killing Lowe because
he feared he would be automatically hanged under Singapore's tough laws.
In his sixth day on the witness stand, he was asked
by prosecutor Jennifer Marie why he did not immediately call a doctor or
hotel staff after Lowe collapsed in their room. "Because this man died
at my hands, and under Singapore law that is an automatic death sentence,"
he replied. "That's what I understood at the time."
Scripps had earlier alleged that a British friend
staying at a hotel on the nearby resort island of Sentosa, connected to
Singapore by a causeway, disposed of Lowe's body. He said he fled to the
friend's hotel while the body was being disposed of. He said he had
known this man for eight to 10 years and remembered that he once worked
at an abattoir. He refused to name the friend, whom he described as a
dangerous man, or describe the hotel in further detail because he said
he feared retaliation against his family. Scripps was cautioned by the
Judge that his reluctance to give basic information on the friend could
harm his defence. "Here you are facing a murder charge, which carries a
death penalty in this country," "I have to ask myself, at the end of the
day, this question: Did the accused, John Scripps, go to a hotel on
Sentosa?" Scripps still declined to describe the hotel.
Prosecutors alleged that Scripps's story of the
friend was a complete fabrication. They also tried to point out
discrepancies between his earlier statements to police and his testimony
on the witness stand. Marie said Scripps's statement to the police on
April 29th made no mention of attempted homosexual assaults he later
told the court he suffered while in prison in 1978 and 1994. "I'm
suggesting that this (1994) incident never occurred," said Marie. "It's
yet another fabrication of yours." Scripps countered that the assault
really happened, but he did not report it to the British prison
authorities.
November 6th1995.
Jennifer Marie told the court in her closing
arguments "The conduct of the accused after the killings suggested that
he was cold, callous and calculating a far cry from the confused, dazed
man walking in a dream world, the picture he gave of himself". She said
Scripps was "a man very much in control of his faculties" when he
embarked on a shopping spree using Lowe's credit card, buying a pair of
fancy running shoes, a video cassette recorder and a ticket to a
symphony orchestra concert.
"He is a man who has no qualms about lying
continuously, consistently and even on the (witness) stand, in any and
every matter," she said. Concluding her case, Jennifer Marie said the
excuse that Scripps killed Lowe because of a homosexual advance was just
one of a "string of lies" to mask a premeditated murder by a greedy
serial killer "who preyed on tourists."
Lowe's widow testified that her husband, who had gone
to Singapore on a shopping holiday, was not a homosexual.
In his closing statement for the defence Edmond
Pereira said "we urge this court to come to a finding that the accused
is not guilty of murder, but is guilty of culpable homicide not
amounting to murder." "The killing occurred in a sudden fight in the
heat of passion upon a sudden quarrel," he said. "He is not a man prone
to violence." Pereira also urged Judge T.S. Sinnathuray to ignore
information from Thailand. "There is no evidence to suggest that the
accused is responsible for the deaths of the two Canadians," he said,
calling the Thai information "nothing more than circumstantial" and
"prejudicial."
November 7th 1995.
The trial was adjourned for the judge to consider his
verdict after more than a month of evidence.
November 10th 1995.
Scripps, dressed in khaki with a prison-style crew-cut
and standing in a glass cage, was said to be laughing and joking with
his guards minutes before the verdict. In court, as he awaited sentence,
he said: "Karma is karma. It's in God's hands now."
The judge told a packed courtroom: "I'm satisfied
beyond a reasonable doubt that Scripps had intentionally killed Lowe." "After
that, he dis-articulated Lowe's body into separate parts, and it was he
who subsequently disposed of the body parts by throwing them into the
river behind the hotel."
Having announced the guilty verdict Judge T.S.
Sinnathuray sentenced Scripps to death by hanging. Scripps showed no
emotion as the verdict was read.
His mother and sister, who attended the trial's early
days, were not in court to hear the verdict. His mother, Jean Scripps,
58, from Sandown, Isle of Wight, said: "I brought John into this world.
I am the only person who has the right to take him out of it. "I cannot
believe how my boy could have changed from a kind, human being into the
monster described in court."
After the verdict, defence lawyer Edmond Pereira told
reporters: "Scripps has a right to an appeal, which he can exercise
within 14 days and he shall be advised of that right." He declined to
make any other comment. A legal source said any such plea would likely
be heard by an appeals court early in1996.
The Judge said he was convinced that Scripps killed
and dismembered the Damudes, but added that he decided Scripps's guilt
independently of the Thai evidence. "On the evidence, I had no
difficulty to find that it was Scripps who was concerned with the deaths
of Sheila and Darin and for the disposal of their body parts found in
different sites in Phuket,".
"The dis-articulation of the body parts of Lowe,
Sheila and Darin have the hallmark signs of having been done by the same
person." The judge said the Thai evidence was "materially relevant"
because it rebutted Scripps's defence that he killed Lowe
unintentionally during a sudden fight.
January 4th 1996.
On the 4th January 1996 Scripps withdrew his appeal
which was scheduled to be heard on January 8th. His lawyer Edmond
Pereira declined comment on why Scripps had decided against appealing.
"He has written with his own hand to the prison
authorities that he does not wish to pursue the appeal," the lawyer said.
Pereira said Scripps could still ask for clemency. "It would appear to
me that it's the last avenue open, but we have no instructions (from
Scripps)," he said. Prison authorities have yet to inform him of his
deadline for filing a clemency plea, said Pereira. There is usually a
six-to-eight-week period in which a prisoner may file. Pereira described
Scripp's mood as "sad" during their last prison visit. "We were talking
about his concerns for his family. I can't say he's worried, because he
would have known the consequences of not pursuing the appeal."
February 14th 1996
Scripps was said to be eager to die, according to a
spokeswoman from the British High Commission in Singapore. "He won't be
putting in an appeal. He's eager to get it over and done with. He's just
waiting for the day," she said.
His lawyer Edmond Pereira said he was surprised by
the High Commission's remarks. "There are some instructions Scripps has
given me, but I'm not at liberty at this stage to make any comment
because the matter has not been finalised," he said. He also said that
even if a prisoner refused to petition for clemency the matter still had
to go before the president, but added: "If you don't request clemency,
they won't exercise clemency."
Scripps was being held in solitary confinement on
death row at Changi and spent most of his time watching television and
reading, the High Commission spokeswoman said. A priest visited him
weekly, and once a fortnight a consular representative went to check on
his welfare and pass on messages from his family. "He's okay. He's
generally well. He doesn't really want to see many people at all," the
spokeswoman said.
March 10th 1996
Scripps declined seek a pardon from President Ong
Teng Cheong, Singapore's Sunday Times newspaper reported. The newspaper
quoted Edmond Pereira as saying he had received a letter from Scripps
during a prison visit last month. "His instruction to us was that he did
not want to petition for clemency from the President," Pereira said. "It
was his wish to let the law take its course."
April 15th 1996.
It was announced that Scripps was to be hanged at
dawn on Friday 19th April. His lawyer, Mr Edmond Pereira, told The
Straits Times newspaper that he had been informed of the execution date
by Scripp's relatives in London.
The British Foreign Office in London had also issued
a similar statement to the press, adding that the British government had
considered the case and had decided not to submit a plea for clemency.
The Straits Times understood that while being held on
Death Row, Scripps had turned down a request from the London's Scotland
Yard to interview him. British police detectives believe that he is
linked to the disappearance of management consultant Timothy McDowell,
28, who went missing while holidaying in Belize in Central America.
Scotland Yard suspects that Mr McDowell was possibly murdered and his
body, which was never found, dumped into a crocodile-infested river by
Scripps. They found a substantial amount of money transferred from Mr
McDowell's bank account to Scripps's account in Britain after his arrest
in Singapore. This sum of money was later moved to another account, also
under Scripps's name, in the United States.
Scripps had spent his last days writing garbled love
poems to his former Mexican wife - described as the one true love of his
life - from his 8ft-by-6ft windowless cell, lit 24 hours with a camera
monitoring him permanently. There is a hole-in-the-ground lavatory and
straw roll-mat to sleep on.
April 19th 1996 - The execution.
His sister Janet and mother Jean said goodbye to him
12 hours before his execution. Under Singaporean law they would not have
been allowed to be present at the hanging. Janet said: "How do you say
goodbye to your own brother like that? We didn't actually say the word.
I just couldn't."
In accordance with Singapore's execution rules
hangings are carried out in private on Friday mornings on a large
gallows within the prison that can accommodate up to seven prisoners.
The measured drop method of hanging is used. It is normal practice in
Singapore to hang several prisoners simultaneously although no details
of the executions are released to the media.
For his last meal, he asked for a pizza and a cup of
hot chocolate.
He would have been woken by guards at about 3.30am
and escorted to a waiting room where he and the other two prisoners (two
Singaporean drug traffickers) were prepared. He would have been allowed
to speak to a priest and a prison chaplain before the execution.
It is thought that the three men were led to the
gallows at around 6.00 am local time with black hoods covering their
heads. After being left to hang for an hour the bodies were taken down
and released to the families during the morning.
At about 10.30 am, his body, wrapped in a white sheet,
was taken in an undertaker's van to a funeral parlour for cremation
prior to his mother and sister taking his ashes back to Britain.
Scripps left a final, rambling semi-literate note
which read: "One day poor. One day reach. Money filds the pane of huger
but what will fill the emteness inside? "I know that love is beyond me.
So do I give myself to god. The god that has betrad me. "You may take my
life for what it is worth but grant those I love peace and happiness.
Can I be a person again. Only time will tell me."
What really upset him, he wrote in prison, was "when
you are told every day that you are not a member of the uman rase
(sic)".
One of the stories he wrote on whilst death row
graphically described a fantasy suicide hanging, but the hanging of
which he dreamt was very different from the cold meticulous execution he
experienced. In his fantasies he contemplated suicide at the end of a
rope but he survived. He wrote "I tied the rope around my little neck
before I got up on the old creaky chair. I reached down and picked up a
handful of earth and put in my mouth. Then I crawled up to the old
creaky chair and pulled the rope tighter and tighter still. I was tiptoe,
just one more pull, then my feet left the chair knocking it over and
darkness embraced me as the heavens opened. "I woke up in darkness and
felt a heavy weight on my chest. I cried out 'Mummy, I am here.'
His former wife, Mexican, Maria Arellanos, learnt for
the first time that the death sentence had been carried out, on the
Friday he was executed. She had married Scripps at 16 and the couple
separated in 1988, but they remained emotionally attached. She said: "I
knew this would happen to John but I didn't know it would hurt so much.
The last memory I have of him is a message he sent promising we would
meet in the next life and that he would never let me go again."
She said Scripps was a deeply religious man who had
become a devotee of the Virgin of Guadaloupe, Mexico's patron saint.
Although their relationship ended in recrimination over his criminal
ways and his womanising, he was never violent towards her and she
remained in love with him.
Background.
Scripps was born in Hertford in December 1959 and his
parents moved to London when he was young. His father, a lorry driver,
committed suicide. At 14 he disappeared in France from a cadet training
camp. A year later he was in juvenile court for burglary and theft.
His first adult conviction was for indecent assault
in 1978 and he was fined £40 at Hendon. Thereafter it was a grim
catalogue - burglaries in London followed by jail in Israel for stealing
from a fellow kibbutz worker; jailed again in 1982 for burglary and
assault in Surrey where he absconded to embark on criminal trips through
South East Asia and America. In 1985 he was jailed again in Surrey for
burglary (he absconded again to smuggle drugs through various countries).
1987 - jailed in London for heroin offences (absconded June 1990).
August 1990 - detained carrying heroin at Heathrow. November 1990 -
arrested again, carrying heroin and jailed at Winchester - absconding
from Mount prison in October 1994, then travelling via Holland, Belgium,
Paris and Spain to reach Mexico in November
His ultimate journey began on October 28th 1994 when
he failed to return to the Mount Prison in Hemel Hempstead, Herts, after
four days' leave. The Mount governor, Ms Margaret Donnelly, said: "He
was no longer considered a risk. He had no history of violence. He was
quiet and reserved." However, his mother says the authorities should
have realised the risk because he had been selling his possessions
openly to raise money.
Comment.
One wonders whether Scripps actually wanted to die
for his crimes - few other countries nowadays would have obliged him in
this relatively short time scale. It was clear from his own evidence
that he knew the penalty for murder in Singapore. One wonders why he
chose to commit one of the murders there and then return a few days
later.
I am less surprised that he withdrew his appeal and
decided not to ask for clemency - he knew that he would lose and that he
would just be delaying the inevitable and living in miserable conditions
on death row for many more months or even years to come.
Singapore hanged over 260 people (including several
women) between 1975 and 1996 for drug trafficking and murder and
reprieves are extremely rare.
It is also interesting to note that the British
government declined to get involved in Scripp's case - possibly they
felt that Singapore had done the rest of the world a favour. They are
normally resolutely anti death penalty.
But what made a non violent criminal suddenly turn
into a serial killer? A question to which we will never know the answer
now but still a very interesting question none the less. Unusually for a
serial killer there appears to be no sexual motive behind the murders
but merely a greed motive and perhaps an enjoyment of killing.
John Martin (born John
Martin Scripps, December 9, 1959 – April 19, 1996)
was a British serial killer who murdered three tourists
— Gerard Lowe in Singapore, and Sheila and Darin Damude
in Thailand — with another three unconfirmed victims.
He posed as a tourist himself when
committing the murders, which made British tabloids
nickname him "the tourist from Hell". He cut up all his
victims' bodies, using butchery skills he learned in
prison, before disposing of them.
Martin was arrested in Singapore when
he returned there after murdering the Damudes.
Photographs of decomposed body parts were shown as
evidence during his trial, making it "one of the most
grisly" ever heard in Singapore. He defended himself by
saying that the death of Lowe had been an accident and
that a friend of his had killed the Damudes. The judge
did not believe Martin's account of events and sentenced
him to death by hanging, making him the first Briton in
Singapore to be given the death penalty.
Early
life
John Martin Scripps was born in
Letchworth, Hertfordshire, to Leonard and Jean Scripps,
who were an East End lorry driver and a Fleet Street
barmaid respectively. He traveled often in childhood,
occasionally accompanied by his father, Leonard, to whom
he was very close. Leonard Scripps committed suicide by
gassing when his son was nine.
After his father's death, Scripps
developed problems with reading and writing, which led
to him leaving school at the age of 15. After dropping
out of school he continued to travel, raising money for
his trips by doing odd jobs and selling antiques.
Scripps committed his first crime in
May 1974, when he was sentenced to a 12-month
conditional discharge and fined £10 by the Highgate
Juvenile Court for burglary. The punishment did nothing
to deter him from stealing, and by August 1976 he had
stolen again three times. In June 1978, he was fined £40
for indecent assault.
Criminal
career
In 1980, Scripps married Maria Pilar
Arellanos from Cancún, Mexico whom he had met on a trip
to her country. They traveled together for two years
until in 1982, he was jailed three years for theft,
burglary, and resisting arrest. His imprisonment upset
Maria, and their relationship was further soured when he
ran away from jail during home leave in June 1985 — just
months short of completing his term — and burgled again.
He was sentenced to another three years' imprisonment,
during which she filed for divorce and married Police
Constable Ken Cold, an officer in the Royal Protection
Squad.
This angered Scripps, who stole some
of Cold's clothing while released on home leave in an
act of revenge. He was appeased only when Maria divorced
her new lover and returned to her hometown. After he was
released, he legally changed his name to John Martin.
He soon started trafficking in drugs.
Being an experienced traveler, he carried heroin between
Asia and Europe for a syndicate. Singapore authorities
first encountered his name in 1987, when he was arrested
at Heathrow Airport for possessing drugs. Police found
on him a key that belonged to a safe deposit box in a
bank in Orchard Road. Officers from Singapore's Central
Narcotics Bureau seized 1.5 kilograms (3.3 lb) of heroin
worth about US$1 million from the box.
For this and another drug offence,
the Southwark Crown Court in January 1988 sentenced him
to seven years in jail; he escaped while on home leave
but was later re-arrested. In July 1992 the Winchester
Crown Court added another six years to the original
sentence, which would have kept him behind bars until
2001 had he not escaped again.
He was incarcerated at Albany Prison
on the Isle of Wight from February 1992 to August 1993.
He was a model prisoner; initially he did menial jobs
such as dishwashing and general cleaning but was later
promoted to be a butcher. He was trained by James
Quigley, a prison caterer with more than 20 years'
experience, and another inmate only identified as "Ginger"
who was a professional butcher. They taught him how to
dismember and remove the bone from animals after
slaughtering them. Martin performed his duties with such
efficiency that he once told Quigley he wished to open a
butcher shop after his release.
On August 20, 1993, Martin was
transferred from Albany Prison to Mount Prison in Hemel
Hempstead, Hertfordshire due to a change in his security
categorisation. In October 1994 he escaped, again while
on home leave. His home leave had been granted only two
days after he had been refused parole.
Even before he was granted leave,
there were signs that doing so would be a mistake;
according to his mother, he had sold all his belongings
to fellow inmates while in prison, a clear notice of his
intention to escape. She asked prison authorities not to
release him. After Martin was sentenced to death, she
reiterated:
The Home Office have buried their
head in the sand over this. They know full well that if
they had done what I told them, none of this would have
ever happened. I begged them not to let him go.
However, she did give him £200 to go
overseas after his arrest. To avoid recapture, he used
the birth certificate of another inmate, Simon James
Davis, to get a passport in Davis' name. Within a month
of his escape, he turned up in Mexico as John Martin. He
reported to the British Embassy there that he had lost
his passport, and managed to get a replacement. Martin
arrived in Singapore from San Francisco at about 2 a.m.
SST on March 8, 1995 (6 p.m. UTC the previous day).
Family
Martin and Maria remained emotionally
close after separating in 1988. Maria had a daughter,
Lara, whom she told Martin he had fathered, although he
initially believed otherwise. After he escaped from
Mount Prison, he went to Mexico to look for them. He was
determined to regain Maria's love and even persuaded her
to move into a flat in Mexico City he had rented. In a
statement made to Singapore police, Martin said:
"I met Maria there [in Mexico] and
she told me that her daughter was actually mine and not
the British police officer's. I believed her as she was
the only woman I had ever loved."
Murder
of tourists
John Martin killed at least three
people in Singapore and Thailand, and may have killed
others in Belize, Mexico and the United States. His
modus operandi was to pose as a tourist and converse
with another randomly-chosen Caucasian, either aboard
their flights or while waiting at airports. He would
stay in the same hotels as his victims in a room near
theirs.
Once he had an excuse to be in their
rooms, he would use an electroshock weapon to immobilise
them before killing them by striking their heads with a
hammer and cutting them up in their bathrooms. He chose
Caucasians as his victims because they were vacationing
far away from their home countries, which made him less
likely to be discovered. His motive evidently was money;
large amounts were withdrawn using the credit cards of
Gerard Lowe and Timothy MacDowall.
Gerard
Lowe
Gerard George Lowe came from
Johannesburg, South Africa. He was a chemical engineer
with South African Breweries. He had gone to Singapore
to shop for electrical and electronic goods. Before he
left Johannesburg on March 7, 1995, he told his wife
Vanessa, a local airlines employee, his exact schedule,
saying: "I will call you the moment I check into the
hotel to give you the contact number. If you do not hear
from me on March 10, it would mean that I would have a
seat on the plane to return to South Africa and would
arrive home on March 11. But if I do call you on March
10, that would mean that I have not managed to get a
seat and would return on March 12."
When Lowe arrived at Singapore Changi
Airport on the morning of March 8, he was accosted by
Martin (under the assumed name of Simon Davis), who
struck up a conversation with him and suggested that
they share a room, to which Lowe agreed. They managed to
book Room 1511 in the River View Hotel off Havelock Road.
The next morning, Martin asked a hotel receptionist to
delete Lowe's name from the room registration system,
saying that he had kicked Lowe out the previous night
for being a homosexual. Martin checked out on March 11
and flew to Bangkok the same day.
On March 13, 1995, a pair of legs,
severed at the knees, was found in a plastic bag
floating off Clifford Pier. Three days later, a pair of
thighs and a torso were found in the same area, also in
a plastic bag. Initially, Singapore police could only
determine that the body parts had belonged to a
Caucasian, but they had a possible name after receiving
a missing person report for Lowe from the South African
High Commission.
Vanessa Lowe had filed the report
because she was distressed that her husband, who used to
make daily contact with his family when overseas, had
not called home or returned to South Africa by March 12.
Lowe's peers at work had also tried to locate his
whereabouts through personal contacts in Singapore. On
April 1, she confirmed that the body parts were her
husband's through visual identification. However, his
arms and head were never found.
Sheila
and Darin Damude
Sheila Mae Damude and her son Darin
Jon Damude came from Saanich, British Columbia. Sheila
was an administrator at the Pacific Christian School in
Victoria, while Darin was a college student. They had
come to Thailand on holiday, with Darin flying to Asia
first before Sheila met him in Bangkok during spring
break.
They flew to Phuket on March 15 with
Martin (still using his assumed name) happening to sit
in the same row as them. He befriended the two and they
checked into Nilly's Marina Inn facing Patong Beach.
Martin was given Room 48 and the Damudes were given the
adjacent Room 43. The Damudes were not seen again after
they ate breakfast the next morning; at about 11 a.m.
THA (5 a.m. UTC), Martin asked the inn's receptionist to
switch his room to Room 43, saying that the Damudes had
left and that he would pay their bill.
Martin checked out and returned to
Singapore on March 19. On that day the skulls of the
Damudes were found in a disused tin mine in Kathu
district. A torso and a pair each of arms and legs were
found along Bahn Nai Trang Road, 9.7 kilometres (6 mi)
away, five days later.
The body parts were so badly
decomposed that visual identification was impossible;
Royal Thai Police used dental records to identify the
skulls and forensic analysis concluded that the torso,
arms, and legs were likely to be Sheila's. The other
parts of Darin's body were never found.
Unconfirmed victims
Scotland Yard suspected Martin of
having separately killed two men from south London,
financial adviser Timothy MacDowall and accountant
William Shackel. In Mexico, Martin had discussed with
his wife about going scuba diving with MacDowall, who
was taking scuba lessons while on holiday on an island
off Belize.
MacDowall disappeared in Belize in
early 1995 but police could not conclusively match him
to body parts later found in that country; the only
suspicious activity they uncovered was the transfer of
£21,000 from MacDowall's bank account to an account in
San Francisco, California under Martin's name. MacDowall
is believed to have been murdered as he slept and his
remains thrown into a crocodile-infested river. Martin
refused to be interviewed by Scotland Yard while he was
on death row in Changi Prison, thus whether he killed
MacDowall remains unconfirmed.
Shackel was reported missing while on
holiday in Cancún, Mexico. Police reports said that
Martin was in Cancún the day Shackel cashed traveler's
cheques worth £4,000, after which he disappeared.
Martin was also wanted in San
Francisco in the United States for the murder of
homosexual prostitute Tom Wenger on March 28, 1994.
Wenger's body was chopped up and drained of blood; it
was found in a garbage skip in Myrte Alley, in the Polk
Street district. Although Martin was supposed to be in
jail in the United Kingdom at the time, his photograph
matched a facial composite picture made by San Francisco
police.
Arrest
and remand
Martin was arrested when he arrived
at Changi Airport on the evening of March 19, 1995 and
produced a passport with his assumed name, Simon Davis.
Police had put the name on their wanted list on March 14
after they determined that Lowe had checked in to River
View Hotel with someone by that name.
In a police interview room in the
airport, Martin smashed a glass panel and cut his wrist
with a shard of glass in a suicide attempt, fearing that
he would be hanged like Flor Contemplacion, a Filipino
who had been hanged two days before for a double murder.
He was taken to Alexandra Hospital for treatment.
The police found five passports on
Martin in addition to his own—two British passports
issued to Simon Davis, two Canadian passports issued to
Sheila and Darin Damude, and a South African passport
issued to Gerard Lowe—each with Martin's photograph
affixed. They also found credit cards belonging to
Sheila Damude and Gerard Lowe.
In addition, police found Simon Davis'
birth certificate, and items that Martin had used to
immobilise and kill: a hammer weighing 1.5 kilograms
(3.3 lb), a battery-operated Z-Force III electroshock
weapon, a can of mace, two pairs of handcuffs, a pair of
thumbcuffs, two Police brand foldable knives, an
oilstone, and two Swiss army knives.
On March 21, 1995, Martin was taken
to court on an initial charge, naming him as Simon James
Davis and accusing him of forging Lowe's signature on a
DBS Bank credit card transaction slip to obtain S$6,000
in cash on March 9. Three days later, he was charged
under his real name for the murder of Gerard Lowe in a
River View Hotel room some time between March 8 and 9.
In subsequent hearings, he was
slapped with additional charges of forgery (forging
Lowe's signature five more times to obtain cash and
goods worth S$3,200), vandalism (smashing the glass
panel), possession of an offensive weapon (the
electroshock weapon), and possession of a controlled
drug (he had 24 sticks of cannabis at the time of his
arrest).
On September 18, a preliminary
enquiry in a district court was held to determine
whether there was sufficient evidence for a trial to
proceed. The magistrate overseeing the enquiry ordered
Martin to stand trial for Gerard Lowe's murder on
October 2 after hearing statements from 39 witnesses,
and looking at more than 100 exhibits and 100
photographs that the prosecution had prepared as
evidence.
Trial
Before the trial, Martin made a
statement explaining that he killed Lowe in self-defence.
He said he had fallen asleep after checking in, but woke
up after someone touched his buttocks; it was Lowe, who
was clad only in his underwear and smiling at him. To
him, this behaviour made Lowe appear to be a homosexual,
so he kicked Lowe away. This angered Lowe, who threw
Martin's hammer at his stomach. Martin then grabbed the
hammer and "hit [Lowe] several times on the head until
he collapsed onto the carpeted floor."
A friend later helped him to dispose
of Lowe's body by throwing it into the Singapore River.
Martin continued, "I am not sure what was the next thing
I did… everything was such a blur to me after this
incident that I was walking around in a dream world for
the next few days." He refused to identify his friend,
saying, "I cannot tell you his identity because if he
knew he would harm my family back in Britain."
On March 15, he flew to Phuket, where
he met his friend again. His friend gave him the
passports and other items belonging to the Damudes, whom
he never met.
In court, Martin argued that he was
by nature not a violent person. "I may have worked in
the (prison) butchery, but cutting up a human body is
another thing. When I saw the photographs (of Lowe's
body parts), it made me feel sick."
He maintained that he had killed Lowe
after the latter made homosexual advances that caused
him to "freak out"; he had previously fended off
homosexual attacks twice while imprisoned: in Israel in
1978, and in England in 1994.
When Deputy Public Prosecutor
Jennifer Marie asked him what he did after killing Lowe,
he said that he could not remember anything because he
had drank heavily and consumed Valium after Lowe's death
until he was arrested. He repeated that he had not
killed the Damudes, and that he had came back to
Singapore from Phuket to clear his conscience about
Lowe's death.
On November 7, Judge T.S. Sinnathuray
adjourned the trial for three days to consider his
verdict. (Singapore abolished jury trials in 1969.) When
the trial resumed, the judge was satisfied that the
prosecution had made its case and dismissed Martin's
version of events. In his verdict, he said:
"I'm satisfied beyond a reasonable
doubt that Martin had intentionally killed Lowe. After
that, he disarticulated Lowe's body into separate parts,
and it was he who subsequently disposed of the body
parts by throwing them into the river beind the hotel.
On the evidence, I had no difficulty
to find that it was Martin who was concerned with the
deaths of Sheila and Darin and for the disposal of their
body parts found in different sites in Phuket. The
disarticulation of the body parts of Lowe, Sheila and
Darin have the hallmark signs of having been done by the
same person. Altogether, this similar fact evidence
reinforces the decision I have made, for it puts beyond
doubt that Martin is guilty on the charge of murder.
The sentence of this court upon you
is that you will be taken from this place to a lawful
prison and taken to a place to be hanged by the neck
until you are dead. And may the Lord have mercy on your
soul."
Appeal
and hanging
On November 15, 1995, Martin
announced he would appeal the sentence. He later dropped
the appeal without giving an explanation on January 4,
1996, four days before it was to have been heard. He
turned down a subsequent chance to petition the
President of Singapore for clemency, saying that he was
impatient to be executed.
In the days before his hanging,
Martin wrote of an "emptiness" inside him and lamented
that no one had loved him besides his family and his ex-wife
Maria, in a series of misspelt notes:
"One day poor. One day reach. Money
filds the pane of hunger but what will fill the emteness
inside? I know that love is beyond me. So do I give
myself to god. The god that has betrad me. Can I be a
person again? Only time will tell me.
You may take my life for what it is
worth, but grant thows that I love, pease and happiness."
He complained that in prison, "You
are told every day that you are not a member of the uman
rase [a misspelling of human race]." The week before he
was due to hang, he dreamed that he had avoided the
sentence by committing suicide:
I tied the rope around my little neck
before I got up on the old creaky chair. I reached down
and picked up a handful of earth and put it in my mouth.
Then I crawled up to the old creaky chair and pulled the
rope tighter and tighter still. I was on tiptoe, just
one more pull, then my feet left the chair knocking it
over and darkness embraced me as the heavens opened. I
woke up in darkness and felt a heavy weight on my chest.
I cried out, "Mummy, I am here."
Martin's mother remarked, "Whoever he
is now, he's the person the prison service trained him
to be. These bastards have no right to take my son's
life. I brought him into the world. I am the only person
who can take him out of it." However, no one formally
protested against the hanging. At dawn on April 19,
1996, Martin was hanged in Changi Prison together with
two Singaporean drug traffickers.
On that day, the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police and the Royal Thai Police closed their
files on the murders of Sheila and Darin Damude,
declaring the case effectively solved.
When Martin's ex-wife Maria heard
that he had been hanged, she said:
"John disappeared on several trips
and went to the United States and Southeast Asia. I knew
something awful was happening, but I could not believe
he had started killing people.
I knew this would happen to John but
I didn't know it would hurt so much. The last memory I
have of him is a message he sent promising we would meet
in the next life and that he would never let me go again."
Post-death coverage
In May 1996, Tan Ooi Boon, a reporter
from The Straits Times who had covered Martin's
case from start to finish, wrote a book on the case,
titled Body Parts: A British Serial Killer in
Singapore. He wrote the book in three months using
material he had prepared for the newspaper. It mixed
fictional narrative with fact and vividly described how
Martin disposed of his victims' bodies.
In July 1996, the story of how Martin
murdered Gerard Lowe, and the investigation that
followed, was featured in an episode of the Singapore
television series Crimewatch, which was shown on
Television Corporation of Singapore's Channel 5 and
Channel 8.
In the episode, actual photographs
from the autopsy were shown, causing the series to be
the first current affairs programme in Singapore to be
given the PG (Parental Guidance) warning tag. Police
justified their use of the photographs, saying that they
wanted to "give an accurate account of the case to the
public." The story was also re-enacted in an episode of
MediaCorp TV's Channel 5 docu-drama True Files in
April 2002.
On January 31, 1997, eight police
officers who made significant contributions towards
Martin's conviction were awarded commemorative plaques
by the High Commissioner for Canada in Singapore, Barry
Carin. Back in Canada, the deaths of the Damudes served
as a warning to travelers not to readily accept offers
to share rooms from strangers.