
Chilling search history revealed of man who dumped remains on Bristol Suspension Bridge
Yostin Andres Mosquera also froze some of the couple’s remains in the ‘strategic and premeditated’ attack
A man accused of “decapitating and dismembering” a couple before taking their remains from London to Bristol had allegedly made various concerning internet searches in the days leading to the murders.
Yostin Andres Mosquera, 35, is said to have searched “serial killers” and researched into a Jack the Ripper film ahead of his gruesome murders last summer, on July 8th.
Mosquera is currently on trial for the murder of Albert Alfonso, 62, and Paul Longworth, 71, BBC reports.

Yostin Andres Mosquera (via SWNS)
Mr Alfonso and Mr Longworth were killed in their home in Shepherd’s Bush, West London, where Mosquera had previously visited as a friend of the couple.
Mosquera denies the murder of both men, however admitted the manslaughter of Mr Alfonso by way of loss of self control, which the prosecution rejected.
The court heard that Mosquera knew the couple and engaged in sexual acts with Mr Alfonso, in exchange for money. The two had previously travelled to Colombia to meet with him.

Albert Alfonso and Paul Longworth (via Metropolitan Police)
Between June and July last summer, Mosquera had been searching for the value of the couple’s property, as well as browsing Facebook marketplace for a chest freezer.
Police later found the heads of Alfonso and Longworth in a chest freezer in their flat, where the rest of their remains were concealed in a suitcase and taken to Bristol’s Suspension Bridge.

via SWNS
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The Colombian national denies the murder charges against him as a loss of self control on Tuesday (30th April). However, prosecutors argued he was in fact “in complete control” and that the Bristol Suspension Bridge killings were “strategic and premeditated.”

via SWNS
The murders were caught on camera in the London flat, as it is believed that Mr Alfonso and Mr Longworth were having sex at the time of the attack which was being filmed.
Following the Bristol Suspension Bridge killings, Mosquera is captured to be singing and dancing in the aftermath.
The footage shown to the jury has been described as a “violent assault”, whilst Mosquera seems to remain “calm” and “in control” throughout.
Two days after the murders on July 10th, the two suitcases holding the rest of the couple’s bodily remains were found. Mosquera was found by police during a manhunt and appeared in court for the first time on 17th July 2024.

via SWNS
As the trial continued on Tuesday, the court also heard he attempted to access Mr Alfonso’s bank accounts to transfer money, as he tried to send £4,000 to his own account in Colombia.
Deanna Heer KC, prosecuting, said: “Indeed, so unconcerned does he appear by what he has just done that, as Mr Alfonso lies on the floor dying, the defendant starts singing and breaks into a dance and then makes his way directly to the desktop computer in Mr Alfonso’s room and starts using it… to look at information about Mr Alfonso’s finances.”