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This chilling scene captures a blood-covered murderer singing and dancing naked after brutally killing a couple in their London residence and discarding their dismembered remains on Clifton Suspension Bridge.
Today, Yostin Andres Mosquera, 35, was found guilty of the murders of civil partners Paul Longworth, 71, and Albert Alfonso, 62, at their apartment on Scotts Road, Shepherd’s Bush, west London, on July 8 of last year.
The Colombian porn actor first shattered Mr Longworth’s skull by bludgeoning him over the head with a hammer before hiding the body in a divan bed.
Later that same day, he viciously stabbed Mr. Alfonso in the torso, face, and neck during a filmed sexual encounter after Mr. Alfonso returned home from work, unaware that his partner had already been slain.
CCTV released after Mosquera was convicted today offers the clearest timeline yet of his calculated plot to cover up the double murder before he was arrested outside Bristol Temple Meads station following a police manhunt.
The brutal killing of Mr Alfonso was captured on a camera which had been set up in his bedroom to record a sex session with Mosquera. With the camera still rolling, it also showed the killer’s twisted reaction to his second murder of the day.
Casually walking across the bedroom, he rips off a face mask and gloves before he starts singing and dancing ‘in elation’ with his arms and hands visibly covered in blood.
He then threw a towel over the body and made his way to his victim’s computer, accessing his online banking and withdrawing cash with his card in the early hours of the morning.
In a bid to cover his tracks, he cut off his victims’ heads and hid them in a chest freezer at their flat where he had been staying.
Two days later, Mosquera hired a man with a van who unwittingly drove him from London to Bristol so he could dump a suitcase and a trunk containing their chopped-up bodies on Clifton Suspension Bridge.
The grisly deaths were first discovered when the luggage was found on the iconic bridge at 11.30pm on July 10 last year. One of the suitcases had a tag on it linking them back to an address on Scotts Road where police found the heads in the freezer.
Chilling footage shows Mosquera struggling to drag a red taped-up suitcase towards Clifton Suspension Bridge at around 11.23pm. It was bursting at the seams with blood leaking out, which Mosquera had claimed was oil when locals quizzed him.

July 8: This is the chilling moment naked Colombian porn actor Yostin Mosqeura sings and dances over a dead body after barbarically murdering him and his partner

July 10: Mosquera drags a suitcase containing human remains along to Clifton Suspension Bridge at 11.23pm

July 13: Police have also revealed footage of the moment that Mosquera was arrested outside Bristol Temple Meads station

July 9: More grim footage shows Mosquera (grey tousers) being delivered a chest freezer to the Scotts Road flat at 11.57am on July 9 – the day after the murders. He put his victims’ heads in here
Mosquera was then approached by two members of staff who manage the bridge, while a cyclist followed him to take a video of his face which was shared by police during their manhunt at the time.
At Woolwich Crown Court today, Mosquera was found guilty of both murders after jurors deliberated for five hours and three minutes.
Revealed for the first time today, a series of chronological CCTV clips shows Mosquera’s victims’ last moments and the immediate bid to dispose of their bodies.
At 10.17am on July 8 last year – one of the men, believed to be Mr Longworth, can be seen closing a window and putting a curtain up. CCTV shows Mosquera looking out of the window at 12.30pm, drawing the curtains.
They remained shut until about 1pm, when Mosquera opened them again which prosecution suggested was when Mr Longworth had been killed. CCTV shows Mr Alfonso – wearing a green hoodie – returning home from work at around 6.43pm on a bike, unaware his partner has been murdered.
Later that day, at 7.21pm, Mosquera and Mr Alfonso are seen walking into the house after an outing. This was a matter of hours before they had extreme sex and Mosquera stabbed him to death on camera.
In graphic footage shown to the court, and released today, naked Mosquera is seen singing and dancing with blood on his arms and hands after murdering Mr Alfonso.
What followed was Mosquera’s chilling plot to cover up the murders. At around 11.57am the following morning, two men arrived at the flat in a white van, where they handed Mosquera a huge chest freezer, where he hid his two victims’ heads.
The trial had heard that on the day of the murders, at 11.07am, Mosquera viewed an image of a chest freezer.
The rest of the bodies were chopped up and put in suitcases to be transported to Bristol.
Mosquera told the court how he had originally chosen to take the bodies to Brighton and had contacted a man with a van to arrange transport.
However, he later decided to take the bodies to Bristol instead. On July 10, at around 6.35pm, a man driving a red van belonging to Corney & Barrow – an independent wine retailer which serves King Charles and Queen Camilla – arrives at the flat.

June 29: Mosquera (right) is seen leaving the Scotts Road flat with Mr Longworth (left) and Mr Alfonso (centre). They went for a trip to Brighton

June 29: They return home to the Scotts Road flat after a day out in Brighton

July 7: Footage shows Mosquera entering the Scotts Road property at 2.09pm the day before the murders

July 8: The day of the murders. A man believed to be Mr Longworth is seen closing the windows and curtain

July 8: CCTV shows Mosquera looking out of the window at 12.30pm, drawing the curtains. They remained closed until about 1pm when he opened them again, which prosecutors suggested was the time Mr Longworth was killed.

July 8: Mr Alfonso returns home from work. He was unaware his partner had been murdered and that he would be next

July 8: Later that day, at 7.21pm, Mosquera and Mr Alfonso are seen walking into the house after an outing. At this point, Mr Longworth is believed to already be dead

July 8: Mosquera rips off a face mask and gloves before singing and dancing naked after killing Mr Alfonso

July 10: Mosquera and a man he hired with a van carry a suitcase containing human remains. There is no suggestion the man knew what was inside

July 10: Mosquera and the man load up a trunk into the van. The trunk was also later found at the suspension bridge

July 10: Mosquera carries the large suitcase containing human remains to Clifton Suspension Bridge
He and Mosquera are seen putting a trunk and a suitcase – which it is now known to have contained the bodies – into the back of the wine merchant’s red van. MailOnline has contacted Corney & Barrow for comment.
Hours later, at 11.23pm, Mosquera is now in Bristol, where he is seen on CCTV lugging one of the suitcases towards the Clifton Suspension Bridge.
The court heard that he had planned to ‘hurl’ the suitcases off the bridge but he ‘miscalculated his own strength’.
Police have also released mobile phone footage of cyclist Douglas Cunningham riding after Mosquera and filming him after becoming suspicious.
Mr Cunningham had approached Mosquera, who was standing by a large red suitcase. Another suitcase and a large silver trunk were nearby.
Mosquera told him there were car parts inside the suitcases but they in fact contained the bodies.
Scotland Yard has also released the frantic 999 call made by staff working on the suspension bridge.

July 10: Mosquera disposed of the red suitcase on Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol

Pictured is the chest freezer which Mosquera hid the heads of his victims inside

The murderer hid Mr Longworth in the divan bed, then put the chopped up bodies in suitcases

Graphic pictures show the bloodied divan bed where Mosquera hid the body of Mr Longworth

Mosquera killed Mr Longworth with a hammer, which was found at the scene by police alongside a knife
He is heard on the call saying: ‘We’ve had a gentleman up here dragging a case behind him. A black gentleman. At the time, we were speaking to him, he didn’t speak English, trying to translate and all that malarkey.
‘A guy on the bike actually spoke Spanish so was trying to have a conversation with him. The wheels of the case are broken, he says there are car parts and what have you. The case is broken and it’s really heavy and there’s blood coming out of it.’
‘It looks like there’s blood coming out of it. He then said there were two cases so he went up the road to get the second case. The guy on the bike, just a member of the public, followed him. The guy with the case has now run off.
‘We are now with the case, it might not be blood. He says it is car parts, oil, it doesn’t smell of that at all. It looks like blood to us. Without smashing the case open we are not going to know and that’s for you. We are convinced it’s blood.’
Bodycam footage of Mosquera being arrested on a bench outside Bristol Temple Meads in the early hours of July 13 was also released. He is pinned to the ground and asked to confirm his name by officers.
One of the suitcases had a tag on it linking them back to an address on Scotts Road where police found the head in the freezer.
Mosquera, a Colombian national, met Mr Alfonso online and used the names ‘iamblackmaster and ‘mrd—k20cm’.
The court heard Mosquera visited the couple in London in October 2023 and that they travelled to Colombia in March 2024. He returned to England last June on the promise of English lessons and financial support from Mr Alfonso, whom he had met years earlier on porn websites.

Yostin Andres Mosquera (right) knifed Albert Alfonso (middle) during sex after he bludgeoned his partner Paul Longworth (left) with a hammer

Jurors heard both Mr Longworth, left, and Mr Alfonso, were decapitated and dismembered at the flat they shared in Shepherd’s Bush, west London, before their remains were dumped near the bridge in Bristol

Parts of Mr Alfonso and Mr Longworth’s bodies were discovered on the famous Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol, pictured, on July 10 last year. Pictured: Forensics at the scene
The court heard how he also participated in sex acts and dominated and degraded Mr Alfonso who filmed it and posted the footage online. He was in a paid sexual relationship with Mr Alfonso.
Prosecutors told the trial how Mr Alfonso, a swimming instructor at Mode Gym in Acton, and Mr Longworth, a retired handyman, were in a happy long-term relationship when they were barbarically murdered by Mosquera.
Mr Longworth is believed to have been killed by multiple blows to the head with a hammer between 12.30pm and 1pm on July 8 last year when Mosquera was seen closing curtains to a first floor window on CCTV.
Mosquera shattered Mr Longworth’s skull before hiding his body in a divan bed, the court heard. He later cut his corpse up with a power tool and knife and stuffed it in a suitcase, the trial heard.
Later that day, Mr Alfonso was stabbed to death after he and Mosquera were recording themselves having sex. Jurors were shown the horror footage of Mr Alfonso being killed on camera.
Mr Alfonso was in a ‘submissive’ role and referred to Mosquera as ‘master’ during the recorded session.
‘What is striking, when one considers the footage, is just how calm and in control the defendant remains throughout’, prosecutor Deanna Heer, KC, told the trial.
On the day that the two men were killed Mosquera googled ‘Where on the head is a knock fatal?’ and ‘How long before a corpse starts to decompose?’
‘The post mortem examination of his body revealed that he had suffered severe blunt force trauma to the head which caused his death’, said Ms Heer.

Mosquera (left) is pictured alongside Albert Alfonso (centre) and Paul Longworth (right)

Pictured: Forensics officers at the flat shared by Mr Alfonso and Mr Longworth in Sheperd’s Bush, west London, on July 13 last year

A court artist drawing by Elizabeth Cook of Yostin Andres Mosquera (right) in the dock on May 1
She explained that there were injuries on his hand, which suggested that he had tried to defend himself.
‘When the flat was later searched, a hammer was found lying on the floor in the hallway. It was found to be stained with Paul Longworth’s blood’, she said.
Earlier in his evidence, Mosquera claimed Mr Alfonso cut up Mr Longworth’s body after killing him.
He said he stabbed Mr Alfonso because he was ‘afraid that he would do the same to me that he had done to Paul’.
Mosquera said after seeing Mr Longworth’s dismembered body, he decided to do the same to Mr Alfonso’s corpse.
‘Yes I saw Paul’s body and I cut Albert’s. I don’t know the exact moment but I cut it having seen Paul’s body’.
The trial heard how Mosquera was interrupted by a man while he was attempting to dispose of the suitcases on Clifton Suspension Bridge.
Prosecutor Ms Heer, KC, said: ‘At about 11.30pm on the night of the 10 July 2024 Douglas Cunningham was cycling home across the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol when he saw the defendant, Yostin Mosquera, standing next to a large red suitcase.

Mosquera, pictured, was found guilty of murdering the two men

Mosquera (pictured in the blue shorts) took a zip wire day trip to Brighton on June 29 with the couple before he murdered them on July 8
‘Thinking he was a lost tourist, Mr Cunningham stopped to see if he was okay.
‘A few metres away from where the defendant was standing, on the bridge approach, there was another suitcase, a large silver trunk.
‘The defendant told Mr Cunningham that he was from Colombia and that the suitcase he was standing with contained car parts. That was a lie.
‘In fact, the suitcases contained the decapitated and dismembered bodies of Paul Longworth and Albert Alfonso, which the defendant had taken to Bristol from their home in London where they had been killed two days before.’
The trial heard how Mosquera was visiting Mr Alfonso at the time of the killings, having returned to the UK to stay with the couple on June 9 2024.
On June 29 2024, Mr Alfonso and Mr Longworth took Mosquera to Brighton for the day, with photos showing them at Brighton pier, drinking beer and going on a zip wire.
They also engaged in sex sessions along with another man, known by pseudonym James Smith in the trial.
But on July 8 last year, Mosquera hatched his plan to kill Mr Longworth and Mr Alfonso before attempting to cover up their deaths.
Mosquera had denied both murders and sought to blame Mr Alfonso for killing Mr Longworth.
He claimed during the trial that he feared for his own life and believed he was about to be killed when he stabbed Mr Alfonso.
The case was put to a retrial after incorrect evidence was placed before the jury.