[ad_1]
A woman in Britain who used social media to trap her aunt’s killer 8,000 km away in South Africa has recently spoken of joy when the predator was sentenced to life in prison.
Lehanne Sergison used “romantic seduction” to capture the fugitive suspected of murdering the rape murder of her widow aunt Christine Robinson, 59, in 2014.
Andrew Ndlovu, 32, was jailed today forever for the murder of former teacher Christine in the reserve he managed in South Africa, writes the Daily Mail network.
He was brought to justice when Lehanne, from Kent in eastern Britain, started flirting with her on social media under the pseudonym Missy Falcao, until she discovered who was the killer of her family.
Speaking after Ndlovu was sentenced to a minimum of 22 years, 52-year-old Lehanne said: “Christine Robinson was a loving and kind woman who fought to the last for her life. “She was the complete opposite of Imbayarwo – a violent predator who raped her and killed her just because she could do it, for no reason.”
Christine, a former teacher from Merseyside, England, managed a nature reserve near Marakele National Park, 150 miles north of Johannesburg near the border with Botswana.
After traveling the world, she settled there with her ex-husband Daniel ‘Robbie’ Robinson, until his death from cancer in 2012.
Her stabbed body was found wrapped in a blanket in 2014, along with a portion of her staff’s salary money she had previously withdrawn.
South African police quickly alerted 26-year-old Imbayarwo, a gardener who had worked for Christine for a year.
After the murder he had disappeared from his residence at the plant towards the border with Zimbabwe.
But police interest in catching the killer began to wane and Lehanne was troubled by the idea that her aunt’s killer was free.
She learned that the person was active on the Facebook network named Andrea Druza, and slowly began to make friends with his acquaintances, before writing to him directly.
The couple exchanged dozens of messages as Lehanne says she “mingled” with flirting with her aunt’s killer.
Although he did not show up for an appointment with Lehanne in Johannesburg, he eventually moved to his new job, where he started installing garage doors.
She failed to attend the trial but said: “For eight years there has not been a day that I did not think about the injustice of the murder and the killer who was free.
“The pain never subsided and it made me more determined to find the culprit. My relatives used to drive me crazy but I could not stop. “Aunt Chrissie was a great force, one of those people who make the world a better place.”
top channel
[ad_2]
Source link