A British boxer has been convicted of murder for stabbing a Spanish teenager after binging on alcohol and cocaine
A 24-year-old British boxer has been convicted of murdering a Spanish teenager following a drug-induced road rage in Costa del Sol back in 2020
Briton Lewis Briggs hung his head in court on Tuesday, October 1, as he was found guilty of jumping out of his Mercedes and fatally stabbing his “defenceless” victim in a “surprise” attack after turning around and deliberately hunting him down in his car following a run-in moments earlier.
Young Ulrich died after being kicked and then stabbed in the heart just after 2.30pm on November 18, 2020. He had berated Briggs less than two minutes earlier for driving too fast towards a zebra crossing he was standing by.
The Courtroom
Victim Ulrich Perez’s family were not in the courtroom in Malaga at the end of the six-day-long trial to hear the jurors return their verdict, just over 24 hours after they were sent out to deliberate.
But the expat’s mum, Michelle, burst into tears after hearing her young son could be jailed for nearly 25 years in the next few days, as two police officers led him away into custody, pending sentencing.
The nine jurors ruled by a 8-1 majority after it had been proven that British boxer Briggs murdered Ulrich, 19, near his home in Diana Park between the holiday resort towns of Marbella and Estepona, as his victim returned from running a short errand for his mum.
The jury foreman announced in a short speech to the court they had also unanimously concluded that Briggs, a personal trainer and boxer from a gym linked to suspected crime boss, Daniel Kinahan, had changed the number plates on his rented UK-plated Mercedes in an attempt to cover up his horror crime.
The expat, who said he had boxed professionally after taking the stand on the first day of his trial last Monday, claimed he accidentally stabbed his victim despite admitting to turning around in his car and taking a knife out from his glove compartment.
But the jury foreman rejected Briggs’ defence lawyer’s closing speech to downgrade the crime to a manslaughter conviction with just a 15-month prison sentence, stating: “We find it proven by an 8-1 majority the accused kicked his victim and stabbed him in a surprise and unexpected attack he had no chance of defending himself against.”
He added: “The victim wasn’t prepared for the attack and the proof was that he still had a shopping bag in his hand. He didn’t let go of the bag until the other man kicked him before stabbing him in his left side. The attack from the moment the defendant got out of his car to the moment he got back into his vehicle and drove away only lasted about 10 seconds.”
The Guilty Verdict
Public prosecutor Pablo Ibanez reacted to the guilty verdict by asking judge Francisco Javier Soler, who reserved sentencing, to jail Briggs for 22 years for murder and another two years for fraud for replacing his Mercedes number plates with those of a neighbour in the apartment block where he lived before fleeing Spain and sparking an international manhunt.
Rocio Amigo, a private lawyer acting for the victim’s family who prosecuted the Brit as part of the same trial, demanded similar prison sentences with the same 22 years for murder.
Defendant Briggs’ lawyer Ana Maria Hidalgo Perez asked the judge, who warned the convicted killer in open court he would get “at least 15 years”, to sentence him to the minimum terms for each crime.
Her attempts to extend his pre-trial conditional bail, following his release from prison at the start of last year after two years on remand, were refused after the prosecutors persuaded the judge that Briggs represented a “high flight risk” following the jury verdict.
The Defendant
Ulrich’s family had to sit through CCTV footage showing the murder during the trial at the Audiencia Provincial Court in Malaga. The vital footage is believed to have played a key role in the jury verdict along with a police report into the crime.
Briggs turned to his victim’s family from the stand soon after the start of the trial and said to them: “I want to say sorry. It was never my intention to kill anyone. It was an accident.”
After claiming he had been binging on alcohol and cocaine at an all-night party before the murder and wasn’t “thinking straight.”
Although he admitted to killing his victim in a “stupid error”, he blamed his late dad in court for stealing his neighbour’s number plates and arranging to have his Merc shipped back to the UK before helping him flee Spain via Portugal.
He also used his time on the stand to paint his victim as the more aggressive man on the day of the murder.
The Prosecution
Trainee chef Ulrich’s tearful mum, Tatiana Perez Martinez, said when giving her evidence in court: “My son left our home because I sent him to buy some washing up powder we needed. I’d grounded him a few days earlier because he’d lost his ID and, given the Covid restrictions still in place, I didn’t think it was a good thing to have happened.
“A neighbour told me something had happened to Ulrich and because I knew he was a bit clumsy I thought at first he’d fallen on the stairs and broken a bone. When I reached the street it was full of police and I saw someone over him trying to revive him.”
Ulrich’s Nicaraguan-born father, Juan Carlos Espinoza, reacted to yesterday’s verdict: “Today is a day justice has been done. I hope he gets the longest jail sentence possible. And let him suffer whatever he has to suffer in prison.”
The family’s lawyer said outside court: “I’m satisfied with the result.” Briggs, who also faces being ordered to pay Ulrich’s mum up to £250,000 in compensation, is expected to appeal after sentencing.
No date has yet been announced for the sentencing ruling, which will be notified in writing rather than in open court.
BBN would like to offer their deepest condolences to Ulrich’s family and friends during this difficult time.