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Kemi
ADEYOOLA
Classification:
Homicide
Characteristics:
Juvenile (17) - Burglary
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: March 19, 2005
Date of birth: 1987
Victim profile:
Anne Mendel, 84
Method of murder: Stabbing with knife 14 times
Location: Golders
Green, north-west London, England, United Kingdom
Status:
Sentenced to life imprisonment (minimum 20 years) on June
27, 2006
When 81-year-old retired postal
worker Leonard Mendel opened the front door of his home in Golders
Green in March 2005 it was to find his wife of fifty years, frail
84-year-old Anne, lying injured in the hallway. She had received
fourteen stab wounds and later succumbed to her injuries. DNA
profiling of traces found on Mrs Mendel led the police to Kemi
Adeyoola, a former neighbour of the Mendels.
Adeyoola, a prolific shoplifter
and the daughter of a millionaire estate agent, had recently served
time in Bullwood Hall young offenders' institute and while there had
written an eighteen-page outline on how to rob and kill elderly people
so she could get rich. The document, which she had entitled Prison
and After: Making Life Count, had been uncovered during a search
of her cell.
At her trial at the Old Bailey
Adeyoola tried to claim that the document was a crime novel she was
writing and that she had an alibi on the day of the murder. Her DNA,
she claimed, had got on Mrs Mendel's hand when she had scratched it
trying to help her cross the road the previous day. The jury preferred
to believe the prosecution's assertion that the document was a
blue-print for future crimes and, on 26th June 2006, they found
eighteen-year-old Adeyoola guilty. Adeyoola was sentenced to life
imprisonment with the recommendation that she serve a minimum of
twenty years.
Murder-uk.com
Murder manual girl gets 20
years
BBC News
June 28, 2006
A millionaire's teenage daughter who wrote a murder
manual before killing an elderly woman has been jailed for life.
Kemi Adeyoola was 17 when she stabbed 84-year-old
Anne Mendel 14 times during a burglary in March 2005 at her home in
Golders Green, north-west London.
"You are a remorseless and cold-blooded killer who
is a danger to the public," said Judge Richard Hone.
Setting a minimum sentence of 20 years in jail, the
judge said Adeyoola might have gone on to kill again.
Judge Hone said: "I think you actually wanted to
experience what it felt like to kill someone in cold blood, possibly
so you could write about it, but more probably so you could boast
about it and possibly even do it again."
The judge said he had had the opportunity to
observe Adeyoola's "performance" during the trial
"You are intelligent, manipulative and skilled in
deceit way beyond your years," he told her.
The Old Bailey heard Adeyoola hatched a blueprint
on how she would kill an elderly victim after robbing them.
Mrs Mendel, who was a former neighbour of Adeyoola,
was found by her husband covered in coats in the hallway of their
home.
'Soft target'
Leonard Mendel, 81, told the court he tried to give
his wife of 50 years the kiss of life when he returned from an errand
to find the hall phone wires cut and blood on the walls.
The prosecution said Adeyoola had chosen Mrs Mendel
as a "soft target" on which to practise before finding a "rich,
elderly and defenceless" woman to kill for her money.
Adeyoola, now 18, had written plans for the killing
while serving a sentence for shoplifting. Her aim was to make £3m.
But she claimed that the 18-page neatly-written
murder manual found in a cell search at Bullwood Hall, Essex, was the
draft of a crime thriller.
Adeyoola, who disposed of her bloody clothing,
might have got away with murder but for a tiny speck of DNA found on
Mrs Mendel's hand.
Henry Blaxland QC, defending, said: "The court has
before it somebody who is, on the face of it, emotionally damaged.
"She finds herself utterly alone in the world given
that her family have entirely washed their hands of her."
The teenager's father, Bola Adeyoola, who runs a
property management company, said: "What she did was evil."
Tidy notes detail murderous
intent
BBC News
June 28, 2006
A millionaire's daughter was sentenced to a minimum
of 20 years in jail on Wednesday after being found guilty of killing
an elderly woman. What lay behind the killing of Anne Mendel?
Eighteen pages of neatly hand-written notes found
in Kemi Adeyoola's prison cell describe in graphic detail her
murderous plan to get rich quick.
Entitled "Prison and After. Making Life Count", the
manual talks of finding a wealthy and elderly victim who she would rob
and kill.
"She must be wealthy, quite elderly and
defenceless," it said of the potential victim.
She talked of finding a victim to rob and kill.
This would involve staking out houses worth millions of pounds in
isolated areas.
The teenager said it was a work of fiction inspired
by her fascination for crime writers James Patterson and Martina Cole.
But an Old Bailey jury disagreed in favour of the
prosecution's view that it was a blueprint for murder.
They found the 18-year-old, of Camden, north
London, guilty of murdering 84-year-old Anne Mendel at her home in
Golders Green in north-west London.
Grisly plan
Sir Allan Green, QC prosecuting, said the
significance of the "horror" script was only appreciated when Adeyoola
was linked to the brutal attack.
"We say there is written evidence that Kemi had
earlier written out plans to murder an elderly woman and steal from
that woman's home," he told the court.
The prosecution said Adeyoola had chosen Mrs Mendel
as a "soft target" on which to practise before finding a "rich,
elderly and defenceless" woman to kill for her money.
It listed items required for her grisly plan,
including guns, silencers, bullet-proof vests, drugs, two sharp
knives, a Jamie Oliver baby blue scooter and handcuffs.
The victim would first be watched: "Visit them
disguised as an A-level student from a nearby school," said the notes.
The victim would be attacked as she arrived home
under the cover of darkness.
"Show the knife to her - then place it against her
throat."
The woman would be injected with a tranquiliser and
quizzed about bank account PINs and safe combinations.
She would be forced to write a letter telling her
husband she was leaving him for someone else.
She would then be killed - her head and limbs cut
off with a butcher's knife and put in cling film and black bags and
dumped in bins.
An alternative plan was to drive the victim to the
top of a cliff, slit her throat, set fire to the car and send it over
the edge.
Defensive and arrogant
Adeyoola was quizzed by prison authorities who were
concerned after finding the notes in her cell at Bullwood Hall in
October 2004.
Forensic psychologist Lydia Sear said: "There was
concern what was behind it. She would not explain herself."
But Adeyoola refused to be drawn on her book.
Miss Sear said: "She was defensive, arrogant and
assertive. She was asked 'Is this something you are going to do?'
"She said: 'I want it back - it's a story'. I asked
whether she had considered what the intention was before writing the
book.
"She refused to answer. She left the room."
A psychiatric report carried out after the
discovery of the document said there was nothing to suggest she was
capable of such violence.
"The psychiatric report did not predict any likely
occurrence of this," said a spokesman for Barnet Youth Offending Team.
"Once her supervision was completed, there was no
mechanism for stopping her re-offending."
The schoolgirl who was born to
kill
By Michael Seamark -
DailyMail.co.uk
June 28, 2006
An 18-year-old former public
schoolgirl who wrote and executed a 'blueprint' for the murder of an
elderly woman was sentenced today.
Kemi Adeyoola wrote the document
in a young offenders' institution and on her release stabbed
84-year-old Anne Mendel 14 times in a 'fiendish' murder. She was
convicted at the Old Bailey yesterday and was sentenced today with a
recommendation that she serves at least 20 years behind bars.
Their worlds could not have been further apart.
All that elderly Anne Mendel and multimillionaire's
daughter Kemi Adeyoola shared was a brief spell as neighbours in a
north London suburb. Grey-haired great-grandmother Mrs Mendel, seven
stone and barely 4ft 10in, had devoted her life to her family, charity
and community and despite her 84 years and increasing frailty would,
say friends, 'travel miles to help people'.
Public schoolgirl Adeyoola cared only for herself.
She had served time for shoplifting, boasted of working as a £500 a
night prostitute and, most chillingly of all, written a 'blueprint for
murder'. Over 18 pages written while she was in a young offenders'
institution, she dreamed up a plan to make £3million by killing a
'wealthy, quite elderly and defenceless' victim.
The dossier was found in her cell and a council
monitoring team was set up to supervise her for three months after her
release. But psychiatrists decided Adeyoola did not pose a risk and, a
month after supervision expired, she struck. Adeyoola adhered to
virtually every word of her manual, stabbing the Jewish pensioner 14
times at her home in Golders Green, North London.
The victim was discovered by her 81-year-old
husband Leonard, lying under a pile of clothes in her blood-soaked
pyjamas and pink dressing gown.
Adeyoola, daughter of a property tycoon reputed to
be worth £10million, faces a life sentence when she is sentenced today
after an Old Bailey jury found her guilty of the 'fiendish' murder.
After the verdict sources close to the murder inquiry said the
teenager was born to kill - a supremely arrogant psychopath with total
disregard for humanity.
Her father Bola Adeyoola has disowned her. 'Nobody
is born evil but what she did was evil,' he said. 'She is no longer my
daughter. I will never see her again, and don't want her anywhere near
me. I regret the day I ever met her mother.
'When I saw Mrs Mendel's picture I started crying.
As a Christian, I can't believe anyone would do that.'
Mr Adeyoola, 49, a former boxer who has remarried
and lives in a £2million Berkshire home, had briefly given his
daughter a £140 a week job and free accommodation.
'She was staying with me until a month before the
murder, when I found out she had been shoplifting,' he said. 'I do
wonder whether this woman would still be alive if I hadn't kicked her
out.
'At first I couldn't accept that somebody with my
blood in her veins could do this to anyone - but then I saw the
evidence. She should rot in hell.'
The marriage of Mr Adeyoola, who came here from
Nigeria as a child, and Kemi's Barbados-born mother Mercuria, lasted
barely four years and he had little contact during the childrens'
upbringing.
The couple produced three children and Mercuria has
a fourth child from another relationship.
Despite suggestions that Mrs Adeyoola received a
£4million divorce settlement, she and her children led a shiftless
life around the country, moving to a succession of homes in places
including Cheltenham and Peterborough, frequently alienating
neighbours.
At one property in Gloucestershire, Adeyoola killed
the goldfish in a neighbour's pond and blamed a cat.
The teenage killer briefly boarded at
£23,000-a-year Wycliffe College. The independent school at Stonehouse
in the
Cotswolds prides itself on its academic and
sporting achievements, but Adeyoola only lasted a few months because
of a row over who was paying her fees.
The dysfunctional family moved into Elmcroft Road
in Golders Green for several months, living next door to Mr and Mrs
Mendel.
The elderly couple had been married for 50 years
and lived a quiet, rewarding life. They had two children, and 14
grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Their son Yitzhak, appealing for help after the
murder, said: 'My mother spent every day of her week performing good
deeds and charity work. She devoted her
whole life to visiting the sick, helping friends
and neighbours and bringing a smile to everyone she knew - even
complete strangers.'
In earlier years Mrs Mendel had worked as a
hospital secretary and joined the Army during the Second World War to
help track German bombers blitzing the East End of London where the
couple lived.
She offered the hand of friendship to the girl who
was to kill her, letting the teenager into her house after she locked
herself out.
But neighbours said Adeyoola subjected residents to
a 'reign of terror' and racial harassment, abusing young children and
even smearing excrement on windows.
She was arrested for abusing one Asian neighbour. A
resident, who did not want to be identified, said: 'She gave a lot of
trouble to one particular family. Once she lay in wait for the man, an
Asian, behind a bush and punched him in the face, breaking his nose.
'She called his wife a "Paki lover". He said she
tried to poison his dog as well.'
Other neighbours recall Mr Adeyoola sometimes
turning up in his Rolls Royce to see his children, but the visits were
brief and infrequent.
Criminal habits
Adeyoola ignored school and by the age of 15 had
fallen into criminal habits, pilfering goods from high street stores.
'It's a skill,' she told the jury, explaining how she became expert at
altering receipts to secure refunds for stolen goods.
She was not as adept as she thought however and
after a string of convictions found herself facing a custodial
sentence.
Her self-obsession continued and she boasted to a
sibling of her acting talents when being questioned by a youth worker.
She told how she wept, mumbled and arched her back to convince the
woman of her 'innocence and vulnerability' to try to limit her
sentence.
'It worked such a treat I could tell she was
touched,' she wrote. 'I felt she sensed my anguish.'
Again she over-estimated her skill and ended up at
Bulwood Hall young offenders' institute in Essex for three months.
It was there that her thoughts - and writings -
turned to murder.
During a routine cell search, staff unearthed her
blueprint, entitled Prison and After - Making Life Again. It included
a shopping list of sharp knives or butcher's knives, guns, drugs and
handcuffs, and logged in chilling detail plans to kill, dismember and
dispose of avictim in pursuit of £3milion.
She imagined stalking an elderly woman in a wealthy
area, possibly posing as a schoolgirl carrying out a questionnaire for
homework.
'Run lightly and silently behind her and cover her
mouth with a gloved hand,' she wrote.
'Make her so scared she co-operates. Keep calm,
composed and silent. She must co-operate or take a knife to her
throat. Tell her, "This is your only warning".'
She described building a cling-film 'tent' and
wrote graphically about disposing of the body. 'With your butcher's
knife, remove her head. Wrap it in film to contain bleeding, detach
limbs one by one.'
When confronted by psychiatrists and prison staff,
Adeyoola insisted her notes were part of the draft for a novel.
Barnet Youth Offending Team said yesterday a
psychiatric assessment carried out after the document was discovered
'did not indicate any concern that Miss Adeyoola would be pre-disposed
in any way to this type of violence - nor was there any evidence of
this type of violence in her past'.
The report described her as 'a highly intelligent
and sophisticated young person . . . who with
good support should make a good recovery and engage
in her A level studies.' A prison psychiatrist, who believed
Adeyoola's lies that she had achieved four GCSE A grades, said it was
a shame she had been jailed.
After her release in November 2004, education was
the last thing on Adeyoola's mind. She moved into an £800-a-month
Hampstead flat with another teenager, telling the court she paid the
rent by working as a £500 a night 'escort'. 'It is a completely
legitimate and professional business. We earned up to £5,000 a week,'
she said.
In March 2005, with her supervision at an end,
Adeyoola turned her 'novel' into horrific reality.
In the hour that Mr Mendel popped out to pick up
air tickets for a trip to Israel, the teenager struck, inflicting deep
wounds to her victim's torso, right arm and back with a blade at least
1in wide and 5in long.
A spokesman for the Barnet Youth Offending Team
said: 'There was nothing in the file that would have predicted
homicide. The psychiatric report did not predict any likely occurrence
of this.'
During her trial Adeyoola, dressed in pinstriped
suit, pink trainers and spangly belt, appeared unmoved by the gravity
of her crime, smiling and exchanging text messages during court
recesses.
She had lied brazenly to police over DNA found on
her victim, claiming she had visited Golders Green the day before the
murder and the pensioner had scratched her hand as she helped her
across the road.
With the assistance of a 16 year old girl, who
cannot be named for legal reasons, she then tried to construct an
alibi.
Detective Chief Inspector Steve Morris called her
'a callous and devious young woman', adding: 'Her cold, calculated use
of extreme violence beggars belief.'
Police believe more victims may have been in the
pipeline and that the attack on Mrs Mendel may have been a 'dry run'
for a wealthier target. Detective Sergeant Paul Belsham said: 'If she
had got away with this then God knows what she might have done. She is
very very dangerous.'
Mr Mendel, who has moved to Israel to live with his
daughter, described his wife as someone 'whose life was taken up with
kindness and giving up of herself to others.
'The unjust end she met, having so much taken away
in such an undeserving manner, left us in total shock.'
Teenage killer caught testing grisly scheme she
plotted in prison
By Jacqueline Maley - The Guardian
June 28, 2006
Lose weight, lease a two-bedroom flat, find a
wealthy elderly woman to rob and murder. So ran the to-do list of
18-year-old Kemi Adeyoola, who was yesterday convicted of carrying out
in real life the grisly plans she described in an 18-page document
written in jail.
Adeyoola was found guilty of murdering 84-year Anne
Mendel, who was found by her husband in March last year lying in a
pool of blood at the bottom of the staircase in her home. She had been
stabbed 14 times. The DNA of the 18-year-old, who had formerly been a
neighbour, was found on Mrs Mendel's hand, a fact Adeyoola explained
away by saying she had, by chance, helped the elderly woman across the
road earlier that day.
Adeyoola pleaded not guilty, but the prosecution
argued successfully that she had carried out the murder herself,
possibly as a "dry run" for the slaughter of a wealthy woman who would
make a more lucrative "job". It was a killing the teenager had
meticulously planned in a murder manual written a few months earlier
when she was in juvenile custody.
Staff at the Bullwood Hall juvenile offenders'
institution, where Adeyoola was serving a sentence for shoplifting,
found the blueprint in October 2004, during an inspection of her cell.
On being confronted the teenager claimed the whole thing was fiction.
But within the space of a few months the fiction turned into reality.
The handwritten notes, entitled "Prison and After:
Making life count", began innocently, with plans to "lose two stones
from 11 stone eight to nine and a half stone", and "locate two-bed
apartment". Adeyoola, herself the daughter of a millionaire property
developer, went on to outline how she would obtain bank accounts,
"make £2,000" to furnish her apartment, buy a Mercedes and clothes and
DVDs. Despite having been privately educated Adeyoola left school with
no qualifications, and wanted to obtain fake GCSE and A-Level
qualifications over the internet, and mock up a CV stating she had
attended the Chelmsford School for Girls.
But "the main changes for [a] happy future"
depended on Adeyoola getting "a minimum of £3m", according to the
journal. For this she would need to rob and murder an elderly woman,
and frame the woman's husband for the killing. Such a feat would
require equipment: petrol canisters, plastic bags, cling film,
semi-automatic guns, Taser stun guns and a bullet-proof vest were all
duly listed. So were various disguises - wigs, dark glasses, and
bizarrely, a "full body fat suit, approximately 18 stone woman".
She sketched out her ideal victim: "She must be
wealthy, quite elderly and defenceless. Find a candidate and watch
her. Their routine must be closely observed. Follow her. She will
probably be married. See if they get any visitors. Create a survey
questionnaire and visit them disguised as an A-level student. Tell
them it's field work. Ask them: 'Do you have guns to protect
yourself?'"
The attack was imagined in emotionless detail: lie
in wait for the victim, creep up on her, and cover her mouth with a
gloved hand. Once in the house, threaten the victim with a knife,
extract bank account details and the code to her safe, get her to
write a fake 'I'm leaving' note, and then despatch her.
"With your butcher's knife remove her head. Wrap it
in film to contain bleeding, detach limbs one by one," she wrote.
"When you have completed the task, put head, body pieces in black
bag."
The "job" was to be done by February 2005.
Throughout her trial Adeyoola insisted the document
was a work of fiction, notes for a crime thriller she was writing in
the style of a James Patterson book. Following the discovery of the
papers in her cell she was interviewed by a senior staff member and
psychologist, whom she told: "I want them back. It's a story."
In court she dismissed the manual as "the
scribblings of a 16-year-old girl". She said she was fascinated by
writers such as Martina Cole and James Patterson, and wanted to
emulate them.
"I had always considered writing a book. I'd like
to be an author. When I was in Bullwood Hall I thought it would be a
good place to start," she told the court.
In her evidence the teenager also told how she had
set up house with another girl in Belsize Park, north London, and
worked as an escort to pay the rent. "All we had to do was go out on a
date and we could make £500 a night. We could make up to £5,000 a
week," she said. "It was safe because we shadowed each other and it
was easy."
A police source described finding a cache of sex
toys when Adeyoola's flat was raided after she was arrested.
"There were several vibrators, nipple clamps,
lesbian pornographic magazines, edible underwear made of candy,
revealing outfits, handcuffs - all sorts of equipment," the source
said. Police also discovered piles of stolen designer clothes and a
book entitled Great Crimes.
Adeyoola also told the court she had begun stealing
from shops at age 15, something she described as a "skill". She earned
a string of convictions for theft, which culminated in her serving
three months in a young offenders' institution, where she hatched her
murder plans.
The young woman was also charged with two counts of
peverting the course of justice, after she was taped setting up a
bogus alibi for the murder with a 16-year-old accomplice. She and the
16-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were convicted on
one of those counts.
Speaking after the verdict, Detective Inspector
Steve Morris of the Metropolitan police described the case as "a
wicked, premeditated murder committed by a callous, devious young
woman and her cold, calculated use of extreme violence beggars
belief".
Her father, Bola Adeyoola, who runs a successful
property management company, said: "What she did was evil."
Presiding Judge Richard Hone QC suggested she may
have even committed the murder to amass "material" for her future
literary endeavours.
Adeyoola was remanded in custody to await
sentencing next month.
A life of privilege
Kemi Adeyoola is the daughter of Bola Adeyoola, a
property manager and former boxer who is worth an estimated £10m. He
said yesterday that his daughter was a spoilt, cunning girl who had
been obsessed with money from an early age. He lost contact with her
when she was 11. After that, he said, he passed money and messages to
her through her grandparents.
Following her release from Bullwood Hall prison he
set her up in a flat but they fell out when he advised her to "go
straight". According to Mr Adeyoola, she responded by vandalising his
office. Despite the discovery of the "blueprint for murder",
psychologists at Bullwood Hall had held high hopes for Adeyoola on her
release, describing her as an articulate, "intelligent and
sophisticated" girl.