Woman, 38, ‘decapitated friend, 67, before making herself beneficiary of her will and dumping body 200 miles away’
A WOMAN has been accused of decapitating her friend moments before making herself the beneficiary of her will.
Jemma Mitchell, 38, wanted £200k from 67-year-old Mee Kuen Chong's estate to pay for repairs to her dilapidated home.
When Ms Chong refused to give her £200k as a cash gift, Mitchell allegedly chopped her head off.
Mitchell moved the body to her half-derelict house - which was missing a roof and was piled high with rubbish - and kept it there for two weeks.
She then carried out a 500-mile round trip from Willesden, north-west London, to Salcombe in Devon in a rental car to dump the remains last June, a court heard.
Ms Chong's head was found several days later with a grey woollen headband.
Once home, Mitchell - an award-winning medical student and former osteopath - began forging a will on her computer so she could inherit the bulk of Ms Chong's wealth, the prosecution claims.
The fake will was uncovered in a search of Mitchell's home, Deanna Heer KC told jurors at the Old Bailey on Wednesday.
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Ms Heer told jurors: "In this case, the motive is clear: money.
"A large sum was needed to complete the repairs on the defendant's house and, in Mee Kuen Chong, the defendant found someone from whom she thought she could get it, if not when she was alive, then by forging her will after she had killed her."
The prosecutor said Mitchell killed Ms Chong last June 11 at the victim's home - after taking a large blue suitcase with her.
Ms Chong suffered a skull break "suggestive of an impact with a hard implement or weapon," she said.
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Ms Heer went on: "Having killed or at least fatally injured the deceased, she needed to get rid of her body and so she removed it in the blue suitcase.
"That is why, when she left... it was so much heavier than when she arrived and why, on June 26 2021 the defendant travelled over 500 miles to Salcombe, taking it with her.
"And it is why she drove to... the area in which the deceased's mutilated body was to be found."
Jurors saw pictures of Ms Chong's clothed body and head after they were found about 10 metres apart in woods.
The court was also shown CCTV footage allegedly charting the defendant's activities in the wake of the murder.
At 1.13pm on June 11, Mitchell was caught on camera walking from Ms Chong's home with a suitcase that appeared to be "a lot heavier" than when she arrived, Ms Heer said.
She was also pulling another suitcase, belonging to Ms Chong, which allegedly held paperwork relating to her financial affairs.
Later that day, Mitchell was treated at St Thomas's Hospital for a broken finger, claiming she shut it in a car door - which the prosecution said was a lie.
On learning from Ms Chong's lodger that she was missing, Mitchell allegedly told him "she was going to stay with family friends for a year to clear her head... somewhere close to the ocean", the court was told.
The defendant allegedly hired a car last June 26, giving the phone number registered to a neighbour who died earlier that year.
HORROR KILLING
Mitchell picked up the rental Volvo and was allegedly caught on CCTV stowing the large blue suitcase in the boot before setting off for the South West.
The Volvo was seen on CCTV at a garage in Marlborough, close to the South Devon coast.
The footage showed the front passenger side tyre was "shredded", jurors were told.
Mitchell borrowed a customer's phone to call a recovery firm, saying she had come to Salcombe for a "scenic drive".
The repairman noticed luggage in the boot but it did not match the description of the blue suitcase, which the prosecutor suggested had been removed beforehand.
Ms Heer said the repairman opened a back door and noticed an "unusual smell - sort of musty and damp, a smell which he had never smelled before and could not describe".
Later that evening, the car was seen on CCTV near the spot where the body was dumped, jurors heard.
Mitchell arrived back at her London home shortly before 7am the next day with the blue suitcase, it is claimed.
Ms Chong's body and handbag were found by holidaymakers shortly before 5pm last June 27.
Inside the bag was a piece of orange rope similar to a piece later found at the defendant's home.
A post-mortem examination revealed a broken skull caused by "significant blunt force" and 20 rib breaks "most likely" inflicted before death.
Police investigating Ms Chong's disappearance tried to contact Mitchell last June 26, jurors were told.
Three days later, she emailed back - claiming the victim was "planning to stay with friends near her sister's family on the coast".
Mitchell was arrested last July 6 and told officers: "I know that she has gone away."
In a search, police recovered the blue suitcase from the top of a neighbour's shed, with tests matching blood on a tea towel inside a pocket to the victim's DNA, it was claimed.
In a bedroom was the fake will, dated October 2020, which purported to leave 95 per cent of Ms Chong's estate to the defendant for her house project and 5 per cent to the Mitchell's mother, the court also heard.
One of the forged signatories was Mitchell's neighbour who died last March, jurors were told.
Ms Chong's signature was also "extremely unlikely to be genuine" and appeared to have been copied from her UK passport, Ms Heer suggested.
An examination of Mitchell's computer revealed a Word document of the same will had been created on July 1 - after Ms Chong was already dead.
The court heard Mitchell and Ms Chong were devout Christians who met through the church and had known each other since about August 2020.
Within a month Mitchell began talking to her Ms Chong about her finances and suggested she could sign her home in Wembley to her to avoid inheritance tax.
Ms Chong decided against it but Mitchell continued to pressure her for almost a year, the court has heard.
Six months before she died, the victim agreed to give £200,000 for repairs, providing the house was used for Christian worship.
But by June 7 she had decided against it and told Mitchell when she came to her home, it is claimed.
On June 8, the victim she sent her a message saying 'Until you sold house, I won't want you to come to me or my house I am stress to the core.'
When Mitchell suggested she visit Ms Chong on the day she vanished, June 11, the victim was so fed up of her friend badgering her for money that she said in a text: "[Do] not talk about house or money, stresses them both out."
Mitchell was captured on CCTV going to Ms Chong's house in Chaplain Road at 8am with an empty blue suitcase, which was full when she left at lunchtime to take a cab home.
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She also took a case belonging to the victim full of her personal documents, it is claimed.
Mitchell has denied murder, claiming the death had nothing to do with her, and the trial continues.