A lawyer for the Selamaj confirmed that Koci accepted being the person caught on CCTV and that he had hit Ms Nessa a number of times.
The murder
of Ms Nessa heightened concern for the safety of women and girls in the capital
following the stranger murders of Sarah Everard, and sisters Bibaa Henry and
Nicole Smallman. A “predatory” man has
pleaded guilty to murdering primary school teacher Sabina Nessa.
Koci Selamaj,
36, drove to London from his home in Eastbourne on the south coast to carry out
a pre-meditated attack on a woman with “extreme violence”.
The garage
worker lurked around Cator Park in Kidbrooke, south-east, London, before
targeting 28-year-old Ms Nessa as she passed through on her way to meet a
friend on September 17 last year.
CCTV
footage captured the moment Selamaj swiftly overwhelmed Ms Nessa by repeatedly
striking her with a 2ft long weapon believed to be a traffic triangle, before
carrying her away unconscious.
It is
alleged that Selamaj then strangled her in undergrowth in what was suspected to
be a sexually-motivated attack.
The body
of Ms Nessa, who taught a year one class at Rushey Green Primary School in
Catford, was found nearly 24 hours later covered with grass near a community
centre in the park.
Selamaj,
from Eastbourne, East Sussex, was arrested in the seaside town and charged over
her death days later.
At an Old
Bailey hearing on Friday, Selamaj, an Albanian national, pleaded guilty to
murder.
At a
previous hearing, Alison Morgan QC said: “The prosecution allege this was a
premediated and predatory attack on a stranger.”
Ms Morgan
said the attack was carried out with “extreme violence”.
The
defendant had no previous convictions and was not known to his victim.
Ms Nessa
had made plans to meet a friend at The Depot bar in Kidbrooke Village on the
evening of September 17.
From her
home, her route took her through Cator Park where Selamaj was waiting.
Ms Morgan
said: “Some of her movements through the park and the attack on her were
captured on CCTV footage.
“The male
shown on that CCTV footage is alleged to be this defendant.”
Three days
before, the defendant put his plan into action by booking a room at the
five-star Grand Hotel in Eastbourne, the town where he already had
accommodation.
His
reservation was for the night of September 17 and he arrived earlier in the day
to check in.
He spoke
to hotel staff and was captured walking through the lobby wearing the same
clothes as the suspect later caught on CCTV in Kidbrooke.
The
defendant’s Nissan Micra was tracked by ANPR cameras and cell site evidence was
gathered to identify his movements from Eastbourne to south London later that
day.
The
evidence showed the defendant also used his bank card at Sainsbury’s in
Kidbrooke.
He was
captured in footage wearing “distinctive” trainers with a thick white sole
which were later seized from his house and found to have blood traces on them.
The
defendant entered Cator Park shortly after 8pm and lay in wait for half an hour
before Ms Nessa arrived.
Ms Morgan
said: “The defendant is seen in effect loitering in locations around the park
before spotting the deceased, checking to see if anyone else was nearby before
turning and running after her.
“He is
then seen to move towards the deceased and striking her repeatedly using a
weapon which was approximately 2ft in length.
“In fact
it was a weapon which appeared to break up during the course of the many
strikes on the deceased.
“The CCTV
footage shows the defendant then carrying the deceased, who appeared to be
unconscious by that point, up a bank and effectively out of sight.”
Selamaj’s
actions afterwards were out of camera shot, but Ms Nessa was not seen alive
again.
The prosecutor said: “The male did appear after 10 minutes.
“He is
seen to pick up pieces of the weapon that had broken on the ground and then
moved back to the area the deceased was located for another 10 minutes.”
Shortly
before 9pm, Selamaj was seen using wet wipes to clean a bench.
Ms Nessa
was discovered dead the following day covered in grass.
Phone data
and traffic cameras captured the defendant returning to Eastbourne, arriving at
the £170-a-night Grand Hotel just after midnight.
He stayed
the night at the hotel and checked out in the morning.
Selamaj
was arrested at his home in Eastbourne on September 26.
In a
police interview, the defendant made no comment except to deny murder when
asked directly if he was responsible for killing Ms Nessa.
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