Lorraine Cox: Murderer Azam Mangori jailed for at least 20 years

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Azam MangoriImage source, Devon and Cornwall Police
Image caption,

Azam Mangori murdered Lorraine Cox at his flat

A man who followed and murdered a woman on a night out before disposing part of her body in an alleyway has been jailed for life.

Azam Mangori, 24, killed Lorraine Cox, 32, in his flat above a kebab shop in Exeter in September.

Mangori, of Dartmouth Road, Stoke-on-Trent, was found guilty of murder by a jury at Exeter Crown Court, after he admitted preventing a lawful burial.

Judge Justice Garnham said he should serve at least 20 years in jail.

Mangori left Ms Cox's body in his flat for a week before dismembering her.

Her remains were found in bin bags in an alley behind his flat, and in a woodland at Newton St Cyres, about 6 miles (9km) away.

Image source, Devon and Cornwall Police
Image caption,

Lorraine Cox, 32, was described as the "heartbeat" of her family

During the sentencing the judge said Mangori had "ended the life of a bright, vivacious, intelligent young woman with her whole life ahead of her".

He said Mangori's "cowardice" in failing to report her death and attempting to hide the evidence "served to compound the loss and hurt suffered by her partner, her father, her other family and her friends".

Ms Cox's family had "suffered eight days of desperate hope and fruitless searching while you sat on your bed deciding how best to escape being held responsible".

Media caption,

Azam Mangori is shown crossing the road as he follows Lorraine Cox in Exeter

A video that Mangori made of himself vaping and listening to music just hours after the killing showed he had been "remarkably calm", said the judge.

Elise Fallow, Ms Cox's partner, said in her witness statement to the court that her "heart is broken, never to be repaired".

She added: "Nothing will stop the pain I feel that the love of my life is not by my side."

Pippa Moore said after the case that her friend Ms Cox was "quite random" and would "always make you laugh".

"If there was no party she was the party, she always brought the fun to the party."

Image source, Devon and Cornwall Police
Image caption,

A video that Mangori made of himself vaping and listening to music just hours after the killing showed he had been "remarkably calm", said the judge

Speaking after the guilty verdict, Ms Cox's family described her as "the most kind-hearted, loving, generous girl", adding she was "the heartbeat of our family".

"We hope and pray that no other woman or family has to go through what our beautiful girl suffered, or that any other family suffers the brutal, distressing experience we have all been through," their statement said.

Mangori, an Iraqi Kurd who was denied asylum in December 2018, told the court he had panicked because he feared being deported.

But prosecutor Simon Laws QC called Mangori a "fluent and determined liar" and said he had smothered her with a T-shirt.

The court heard after Ms Cox was killed, Mangori used a SIM card from her phone to send messages to her family, partner and friends in an attempt to show she was still alive.

He also looked at amputation videos in the days before her disappearance, jurors were told.

Mangori was caught on camera in shops buying supplies to help him dispose of her body, including bin bags, tape, a suitcase and an air purifier to hide the smell.

Image source, Devon and Cornwall Police
Image caption,

Mangori is seen on CCTV buying bin bags in Exeter

The Home Office said after the case that "foreign nationals who abuse our hospitality by committing heinous crimes should be in no doubt of our determination to deport them".

A spokesperson said its "priority will always be to keep the British public safe" and reforms of the asylum system would "make it easier to return failed asylum seekers who have no right to remain in the UK".

Ms Cox had been sexually assaulted in Exeter in May 2018 by a man called Robert Prout, 35, of Hawthorn Road, Exeter.

He was found guilty of the assault and raping another woman by a jury at Exeter Crown Court and jailed for 10 years in January.

The jury at the murder trial heard that Ms Cox had moved from Exeter to Scotland after the assault, but had returned to visit friends in the city when she was killed by Mangori.

Image caption,

Police investigating the murder sealed off the area around Mangori's flat and the alleyway where he disposed body parts

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