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Two coloured men convicted for murder: handcuffed, tortured, strangled German employer Erich Poll

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German employer Erich Poll, 46, an immigrant from Cologne, Germany, was murdered on April 9 2013 - handcuffed, tortured and then strangled to death by two coloured workers Victor Jacobs and Neville Martin - and then his body was thrown down a mountainside. On June 16 2014 his two killers were found guilty of the murder by Cape Town judge Gamble. TORTURED: Judge Pat Gamble said it was probable that they had become “greedy”, forcing Poll to give them his banking pin numbers. “He (Poll) had to be threatened and probably tortured,” he said. While he was originally from Cologne in Germany, Mr Poll co-owned a wood and metal furniture design business in Cape Town. Judge Pat Gamble on Monday found Victor Jacobs and Neville Martin guilty of Poll’s murder in the Western Cape High Court, saying there was “overwhelming” evidence that they were the killers. Poll was strangled. He was robbed of his bakkie, iPhone, iPad and R16 000. According to Judge Gamble’s findings, there was little doubt that Poll was murdered in the factory, probably in his office. He had been killed that morning and his body had been thrown down the mountainside at the Du Toit’s Kloof Pass six to eight hours later. Judge Gamble said both Jacobs and Martin had been at the factory that day. If the incident had been the work of one or more “outsiders”, he said, they would have seen what was happening and hastened to Poll’s assistance. He found that the two had acted together in beating up, handcuffing and strangling Poll. The court was "unable to say whether the killing was premeditated as it was uncertain whether the pair had gone to work that day with the intention to kill their employer." (NOTE: There is no indication in this story as to whether the killers had brought the handcuffs to work, and indeed how these handcuffs came to be on the premises. The two killers had handcuffed their employer before torturing and killing him. Which would most certainly prove 'premeditation'. ...) http://praag.org/?p=14085

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