DAMIAN RZESZOWSKI'S HORRIFIC MASSACRE IN ST HELIER LEADS TO 30-YEAR SENTENCE
| Red Rose Database
St Helier Sexual Abuser
In a devastating case that shocked the community of St Helier, Jersey, Damian Rzeszowski, aged 32, was formally sentenced to a lengthy term of 30 years in prison by the Royal Court for his role in a brutal series of killings that took place on August 14 of the previous year.
On that tragic day, Rzeszowski carried out a violent attack within his own home, resulting in the deaths of six individuals, including his wife, Izabela Rzeszowska, aged 30, and their two young children, Kinga, five, and Kacper, two. The violence did not stop there; Rzeszowski also murdered his father-in-law, a close family friend, and her five-year-old daughter, all within the confines of their residence in St Helier.
The court proceedings revealed the harrowing details of the incident, which unfolded in a matter of minutes. After five hours of intense legal arguments, the jury deliberated for two hours before reaching their verdict. Rzeszowski was convicted of manslaughter, not murder, due to diminished responsibility, but was nonetheless sentenced to 30 years for each of the six victims. These sentences are to run concurrently, meaning he will serve the full term in a UK prison.
Judge Sir Michael Birt described the crime as
On that tragic day, Rzeszowski carried out a violent attack within his own home, resulting in the deaths of six individuals, including his wife, Izabela Rzeszowska, aged 30, and their two young children, Kinga, five, and Kacper, two. The violence did not stop there; Rzeszowski also murdered his father-in-law, a close family friend, and her five-year-old daughter, all within the confines of their residence in St Helier.
The court proceedings revealed the harrowing details of the incident, which unfolded in a matter of minutes. After five hours of intense legal arguments, the jury deliberated for two hours before reaching their verdict. Rzeszowski was convicted of manslaughter, not murder, due to diminished responsibility, but was nonetheless sentenced to 30 years for each of the six victims. These sentences are to run concurrently, meaning he will serve the full term in a UK prison.
Judge Sir Michael Birt described the crime as