
BBC News, Manchester United

A man has been charged with 27 pieces of murder and fragmentation of his companion and threw his body parts over a city.
Marsin Majorkevich, who had a “scary grave and a terrible horror”, killed Stuart, 67, with a knife weapon before cutting off his body with a knife.
Some of the remains of Mr. Evert were first discovered for the first time by a member of the people at a left abandoned center in a natural province in Salford in April last year.
Majorkevich, 42, refused to kill him between March 27 and
Notice: This story contains tragic details
Mr. Evert’s brother Richard Zimaki said his family was “numerous, loved and loved” because of the murder of his relative.
The investigation into the murders began after Evert’s body was found on April
Majorkevich had put his body parts in the bags and had traveled to Salford and Manchester to throw the evidence.
He was seen on the CCTV channel that was fighting to carry a heavy bag on Bry New in Pishtwetch and then throw it away.

Police didn’t know the man’s identity in the video, but three weeks later, Majorkivic was seen by an officer who accidentally passed by him, saying he looked like a CST man.
The remains of Mr. Evert were also found in Leninsha Coleire Wods, Bogart Hall Cloo, Blacklecic Store, Wordley Woods and Chesterfield Close.
The trial heard only one-third of his body found.
Mr. Evert, a derby and born in Zimak from Polish parents, and Majerkivic, from Poland, lived together with another man at his home in Winton in Salford.
According to the trial, Mr. Evert met his killer for the first time while teaching English when he recently arrived in Polish immigrants and Majorkevich in

He found a forensic examination on carpets, walls and palace boxes in the bedroom of Majorkevich and cleaning evidence.
Manchester police said Majorkvich used a professional carpet cleaner but when he couldn’t clean the blood from part of the carpet, he had cut a square piece of Mr. Evert’s room to replace it and cover it.
The nails used to secure alternative carpets include DNA, which has led the official to hide the crime.
The original carpet covered with blood, which was equivalent to Mr. Evert’s DNA, was found outside the house in a crossing.

GMP in the days after Majorkevich’s murder, GMP said he had called a “white white van” to help him move furniture from the house to a lock in the city of Burri, including a sofa place and a refrigerator.
Mr. Evert’s blood was found on the sofa place, which seems to be where his life was taken. The refrigerator’s refrigerator also contained its DNA refrigerator.
After checking his cell phone, the investigations were able to find other organs in remote areas.
A forensic medical doctor said Mr. Evert was killed with a knife and several injuries were undermined.

Mr. Evert’s family first had no idea that he was dead.
Majorkevic had seized his finances and mobile phones.
He even sent a short letter and a birthday card to his family to be in Mr. Evert.
“In order for anyone to be treated, in the way that my brother was brutally killed and systematically thrown away, it meant that our family was suffering from oppression,” Zimaki said.
‘Reforming in horror’
Before his arrest, Majorkevich was looking for property online to be rented in the Spanish area of Alikante.
The court heard that he worked as a manager at the fast food shops in the center of Traford but was unemployed during the murder and his debt was about £60,000.
Manchester City police have said Majorkvich had an urgent sword for a terrible horror and a tattoo of the Slashr-Film Jason Voruhis since Friday.
Det Supt Lewis Hughes said, “It has a horror and grave repair, but the team had “not clear motives” and said: “This is all the reasons for what they may have happened.

“You killed Marsin Majorkivich Stuar before making a cursed and uncomfortable attempt to cover up his footprints by throwing away the remains of Mr. Evert,” said Rebecca Makawlai-Adison of the Crown Prosecutor’s Office.
“He left and put a false network to hide his barbaric crime.
In three weeks, the swearing-in-offs were convicted of murder by the Manchester Crown court for murder.
The trial judge, Mr. Judge Cavana told Majorkevich that he faced a compulsory life sentence but must determine the shortest time before parliamentary immunity, which will take place on March