Lurid sex tapes, twisted power plays, and betrayal explode in a gruesome double murder that left two men butchered and stuffed in suitcases
It was supposed to be a luxury getaway. Three men, a sun-kissed Colombian backdrop, cocktails, sex, and speedboats. But beneath the Instagram-worthy smiles and sparkling blue waters was a festering nightmare of lust, money, control—and murder.
On 8 July 2024, the bodies of Albert Alfonso (62) and Paul Longworth (71) were found dismembered, hidden in suitcases and stashed in a chest freezer. The man responsible? 35-year-old Colombian escort and amateur porn actor Yostin Mosquera, whose double life of sex work and online depravity ended in bloodshed.
The trio’s relationship was far from ordinary. Albert and Paul, former civil partners who still lived together, shared a bond forged in hardship—they were both fostered and leaned on one another as family. Quietly domestic on the outside, their West London life hid an undercurrent of dark secrets.
Albert, a swimming instructor and former luxury hotel manager, had a double life. While Paul spent evenings at the local pub in Shepherd’s Bush, Albert scoured the internet for extreme porn and paid Mosquera for explicit videos—many of which he uploaded to the dark corners of the web.
The pair met online as early as 2012. Over the years, Albert paid Mosquera more than £5,800, funded his flights to the UK, and bankrolled his lifestyle. He even enrolled him in English classes and gym memberships. In return, Mosquera performed increasingly violent and humiliating sex acts, sometimes filmed, sometimes livestreamed, all for money.
But behind the submissive persona was a man growing cold with resentment—and an obsession with control.
In June 2024, days before the killings, Mosquera began researching “chest freezers,” “arsenic,” and “industrial liquidisers.” When he flew to the UK that July, he already had murder on his mind.
On the night of 8 July, Mosquera waited for his moment. Paul was killed first—bludgeoned with a hammer, his skull shattered. His body was stuffed under a divan bed.
Then came Albert’s turn.
Embed from Getty ImagesDuring what was meant to be another filmed sex session, Mosquera turned violent, stabbing him to death. Chillingly, he was seen singing and dancing around the room afterward—giddy with triumph.
He then attempted to wire £4,000 from Albert’s accounts, failing that, he visited cashpoints across London, draining the dead man’s money.
Days later, he dismembered both bodies. Their heads were placed in a freezer; other parts packed into suitcases. He then hired a man-with-a-van and travelled 116 miles to Bristol, planning to throw the remains from the city’s iconic suspension bridge.
Police were alerted when the driver noticed blood leaking from the suitcases. Inside was a horror scene no one could forget.
Despite his cold-blooded planning, Mosquera claimed in court that he was a victim—that Albert had raped him daily. But the jury saw through the lies. Evidence showed consent forms, financial agreements, and even Mosquera’s own profit from videos he posted online under various aliases.
Mosquera was convicted of both murders at Woolwich Crown Court. His sentencing is scheduled for October.
The community remains shattered. Locals remember Paul as warm, generous, “one of the boys.” Albert, though more private, was known to colleagues as witty and hardworking. Their friends never imagined the quiet couple’s lives would end in such brutality.
As police piece together the extent of Mosquera’s manipulation and deception, one question remains: Was this pure revenge—or a premeditated slaughter for money, power, and escape?
What’s certain is this: behind one smiling photo on a Colombian speedboat was a storm no one saw coming.