Ghaxaq double murder: 'I’ll show you where but I’m not coming with you because it’s not a pretty sight'

Police recount gruesome discovery of Ghaxaq murder victims as compilation of evidence against Joseph Bonnici continues

The compilation of evidence against Joseph Bonnici (centre), accused of murdering his mother Maria Lourdes Bonnici (left) and sister Angele Bonnici continued in court on Tuesday
The compilation of evidence against Joseph Bonnici (centre), accused of murdering his mother Maria Lourdes Bonnici (left) and sister Angele Bonnici continued in court on Tuesday

Investigators looking into reports of the disappearance of Maria Lourdes and Angele Bonnici had smelled a rat when they examined the Ghaxaq house the two women shared with Joseph Bonnici and found their phones and personal effects and documents still inside.

Had the women left the house they must have left in a hurry, the court heard officers say, as the mother’s phone was found on a chair still switched on, and a mug of coffee, half finished, was in the kitchen. A plugged-in laptop was recovered from inside the daughter’s room where clothes were found strewn across the bed together with a handbag containing a purse with Angele’s personal documents still inside.

This didn’t add up, according to a number of police officers who testified about the investigation into the double homicide, when the compilation of evidence against Joseph Bonnici resumed this afternoon.

Police officers from the Zurrieq and Zejtun police stations testified about the investigations which had started following a missing persons report filed on 27 March.  The manhunt had eventually turned into a homicide inquiry after Joseph Bonnici, who had filed the report, confessed to having murdered the two women.

Bonnici had initially claimed to have last seen his mother at around 7am on 27 March when she had allegedly waved to him from her balcony.

But after an absence of just seven hours, at around 2.30pm, the man had gone to file a missing persons report at the local police station. This, he had said, had been prompted by his father who was worried because his routine phone calls home from prison were not being answered.

One police sergeant who had visited the missing persons’ home, told magistrate Joe Mifsud how he had accompanied Bonnici as he searched the house, saying that he had sensed something amiss that he could not quite articulate at the time.

The home was clearly inhabited by the missing women up till very recently, he said, as evidence by the women's belongings still being in the house. 

Inquiries made to the Passport Office returned with the reply that neither of the two missing persons had ever registered for a passport.

The CCTV monitor beside the mother’s bed had been switched off and its four cameras were unplugged, the Court was told.

Officers observed that a stone slab had been removed by Bonnici to gain access to his mother’s adjacent residence. He explained that he had done so because “he was concerned about his relatives.”

The mother had taken to barring her door with a wooden plank for extra security, he said. Asked why, he replied that it was “because they were scared,” but had answered “I don’t know” when asked what they were afraid of.

That reply, reiterated several times by the man throughout the house inspection, had made an impression on the officer, causing him to suspect that something was wrong.

Bonnici had later confessed to the murders. “This is true but the rape thing is completely false,” he had told interrogators. “I was still going to end up there,” he had said, meaning prison.

After the spontaneous confession, the Inspector had recalled a heavy silence in the police car, broken only by Bonnici’s directions to the Ghaxaq field where he had buried the women. He had refused to accompany the officers to the burial site.

“I’ll show you where but I’m not coming with you because it’s not a pretty sight,” he had said. Bonnici then indicated a spot next to a rubble wall where the bodies were found.

Another officer recalled how after the accused’s arraignment, whilst custody was transferred to prison officials, the man had said, “Now I need to start everything from the beginning. There’s nothing that can be done seeing as the mind worked like that,” before breaking down in tears.

The manager of a florist where the accused used to work, described his former employee as an exemplary, hard working man who had never caused any trouble and who had always excelled at the tasks he was given.

Several people had expressed shocked disbelief about the charges to the accused’s former boss over the past few days, he said. The florist said that he had heard about the women’s disappearance on the news but had thought that everything had turned out fine as Joseph had turned up for work as normal. 

He recalled how on the Wednesday morning after the murder, Bonnici had gone to work looking tired and sick, and then asked for the day off. He had later called in asking for the following day off too, saying that his sister needed something.

The case will continue next week.

Inspectors Keith Arnaud, John Spiteri and Roderick Attard prosecuted.

Lawyers Franco Debono and Marion Camilleri are defence counsel.