September 21, 2024

His girlfriend was also locked in a toilet of the restaurant for two days

A popular DJ was kidnapped and tortured to death by a bunch of “sadistic thugs” before they left his body to fester in the woods in Essex, a court heard. Koray Alpergin was walking home from a restaurant in Mayfair with lover Gozde Dalbudak when they were both kidnapped in central London in October 2022.

Mr. Alpergin, a well-known DJ and the proprietor of the Turkish radio station Bizim FM, was brought to a restaurant near the White Hart Lane stadium of Tottenham Hotspurs, where he suffered 94 horrifying injuries. Meanwhile, Ms Dalbudak, 34, spent two days imprisoned in the restaurant’s lavatory. The corpse of Mr. Alpergin, 43, a well-known local person with ties to P Diddy and celebrity chef “Salt Bae,” was later dumped in woodland in Loughton.

The Old Bailey heard that a dog walker found his naked corpse, which had multiple injuries, including 14 fractured ribs, severe head trauma, a neck ligature, and injuries to his private areas. A court heard that two men absconded from the UK and are still at large, while four men were found guilty in December of last year of the kidnapping. According to The Mirror, two more people are currently on trial for allegedly taking part in the kidnapping and murder.
Dylan Weatherley, 20, and Isay Stoyanov, 43, are charged with two charges of kidnapping and two counts of false imprisonment in addition to the murder of Mr. Alpergin, all of which they deny. A different guy, 31-year-old Kyle Mitchell-Peart, guilty to two counts of kidnapping and two counts of false imprisonment, the jury was informed.

Crispin Aylett, KC, prosecuting, told the court on Monday: “On the evening of Thursday 13 October 2022, getting on to two years ago, the victims in the case, Mehmet Koray Alpergin and his girlfriend, Gozde Dalbudak went to an expensive restaurant in Mayfair in central London. As Koray Alpergin got out of his Audi car, a man ran towards him, that man was followed by three others, although Mr Alpergin tried to run away, they quickly caught him.

“He was frogmarched past his own car and bundled into a white van parked nearby. Ms Dalbudak had remained in the car, she was later to tell the police that she heard the sound of a scuffle. A masked man appeared at the window of the car, he had a knife, he told Ms Dalbudak to be quiet.”

Mr Aylett added: “She got out of the car and he led her over to the van. The van was driven away with Mr Alpergin and Ms Dalbudak in the back. The prosecution suggest that no less than eight men had driven in two vehicles, a white van and a Volkswagen Polo.

“The occupants of those two vehicles had waited for Mr Alpergin’s Audi to arrive. Four men were convicted of the kidnap of Koray Alpergin and Gozde Dalbudak. Two other men have fled the country, they are believed to be in Turkey. The seventh man was Kyrie Mitchell-Peart.”

Jurors heard that a tracking device had been placed on the car allowing the group to follow it. Having waited and kidnapped both Mr Alpergin and Ms Dalbudak, the two vehicles drove back to the Tottenham area, arriving at around 11.20pm. The van went down an alleyway, which was connected to the back of a restaurant named Stadium Lounge.

“It was here, in the Stadium Lounge, that Koray Alpergin was murdered,” Mr Aylett continued. “As for Godze Dalbudak, she spent almost two days shut up inside a lavatory at the Stadium Lounge. The door to the lavatory was blocked by a large refrigerator. It was not until late on the Saturday afternoon, Ms Dalbudak was released.

“In the early hours of Saturday, the Renault Megane was driven to Loughton in Essex. There, the naked body of Koray Alpergin was dumped in some woods. A few hours later, the body was found by a man walking his dog.” The post mortem revealed the nature of the injuries Mr Alpergin had suffered, with several cuts and bruises, stab wounds to the soles of both of his feet, and scalding injuries to his skin added to the more severe head, chest and neck injuries.

Mr Aylett added: “From the number and nature of the injuries that were sustained, the prosecution suggest that it is not hard to envisage a group of sadistic thugs taking it turns to inflict injury, whether with punches and kicks, hitting him with a bat, scalding him with boiling water or stabbing his feet.

“The only mercy, if mercy it be, was that the pathologist considers that Koray Alpergin could not have survived these terrible injuries for very long and certainly not for more than a few hours.” The court heard how Mr Alpergin had been expecting trouble for some time. On 24 September 2022, he and a friend were driving back to his address in separate cars.

Mr Alpergin told his friend that his car was making “odd noises” to which his friend asked: “Are you sure your car was not bugged?” It turned out that the tracking device was fitted to his car just the day before, the court heard. As his friend was leaving later that evening, he asked them to let him know if there was a white van parked outside. “Koray Alpergin must have had some idea of what was in store for him,” said Mr Aylett.

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