[imagesource: Sky News]
Those are the keys that David Fuller, a serial killer and necrophiliac working in a hospital, used to access the mortuaries where he would commit heinous crimes.
When the mortuary staff weren’t on shift, Fuller would enter under the guise of being there for maintenance, only to sexually assault the dead bodies and video it.
He also admitted to murdering two young women, Wendy Knell, 25, and Caroline Pierce, 20, in separate attacks in Tunbridge Wells in 1987.
Finally, after a 20-year investigation, Fuller was arrested with the possibility of being jailed for the rest of his life without a chance of parole:
This video shows the moment he was arrested in December 2020, and his admitting to his offences:
Sky News reported that after he was finally arrested, his “distraught” wife Mala Fuller left him for good, saying that she “couldn’t carry on in that relationship”:
“I’m too upset to even think about what was going on, I couldn’t live with it.
“You can’t imagine how distraught I am.”
She added: “I could not stay in that house knowing what he did and what went on in there. I wanted to be alone and want to live my life alone.”
She moved out four months ago but had been living with her husband and his secrets for 20 years in their Heathfield, East Sussex home.
These are the two women he murdered:
The 67-year-old admitted to abusing nearly 80 corpses, ranging from a girl aged nine through to a 100-year-old woman.
The assaults would take place at either the now-closed Kent and Sussex Hospital or the new Tunbridge Wells Hospital at Pembury.
He would hide videos and notes detailing his crimes in his home, which were discovered soon after his arrest.
One of the dead bodies he sexually assaulted numerous times was Azra Kemal, 24:
Her mother Nevres told Sky News her daughter had been “violated” three times by Fuller – both before and after she had visited her in the mortuary.
The final assault lasted 35 minutes.
Police have reason to believe that there are many more victims as people have contacted a helpline since the shocking details emerged.
Further investigations and enquiries have been opened to try and understand how these crimes went on for so long without detection, as well as putting in more regulations to stop something similar from ever happening again.
[source:skynews]
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