First pics of victim killed in ‘grisly love-triangle murder’ before ‘Google Street View caught body being shoved in car’

First pics of victim killed in ‘grisly love-triangle murder’ before ‘Google Street View caught body being shoved in car’

THE first pictures of the victim who was tragically killed in a suspected love triangle murder have been revealed.

Cops claim they were able to find Jorge Luis Perez Ochandarena’s body buried in a Spanish cemetery using Google Street View pictures.

FacebookThe victim of the alleged murder Jorge Luis Perez Ochandarena[/caption]

FacebookCops found his body with the help of Google Street View images[/caption]

SolarpixOther pictures show a man appearing to put a body into the boot of a red car in the same hamlet[/caption]

Police then revealed they had been helped by Google Street View when the pictures led them to focus on the victim’s wife and her new partner.

Pictures from Google Maps showed a man cramming what looked like a dead body into the trunk of a red car.

Another chilling image showed someone dressed in similar clothes at the top of a nearby hill holding what could be a wheelbarrow – possibly transporting the body to the car.

He was seen stuffing a body-shaped package, wrapped in white plastic, into the boot on a deserted road.

Spanish police said the first car picture was one of the clues they worked with to “resolve the crime” after a missing husband vanished last year.

They believe the human remains are of Jorge Luis who they believe was killed after disappearing last year.

Local reports suggest he was killed after flying to Spain and discovering his Cuban wife had been cheating on him with a man described as the second person being held in custody.

Wiretaps later revealed his wife and her ex-love alleged involvement in Jorge Luis’s sudden disappearance.

They were arrested on suspicion of murder.

The male suspect is a Spanish bar owner apparently nicknamed ‘The Wolf of Tayueco’ after the small village of just 56 inhabitants.

It is just a 15-minute drive from the cemetery where the remains were found.

In their first comments about the investigation and arrests overnight, a spokesman for Spain’s National Police said: “National Police officers have detained two people allegedly involved in the disappearance and death of a man who was reported missing in November last year by a relative.

“That relative had grown suspicious about messages he had received purporting to be from the missing man.

“Part of the victim’s remains have been found buried in a cemetery in Andaluz in Soria using ‘advanced techniques.’

“One of the clues investigators were working with were images from an online search location application.”

The force added in a statement: “The messages the missing man’s family received said he met a girl and was leaving Soria and getting rid of his telephone.

“This made the relative suspect someone else was sending the messages and that led to him alerting police.

“The police investigation focused on the missing man’s closest circle and led to the arrest of the two suspects believed to be responsible for his disappearance on November 12.

“They were the missing man’s partner and a man who had been her partner.

“They were initially held on suspicion of unlawful detention for failing to explain his disappearance.

“Searches of the pair’s homes and vehicles were subsequently authorised by police, where evidence relevant to the investigation was uncovered.”

The force also said that the image “was an additional piece of evidence” and that “both suspects have been remanded in prison by an investigating judge”.

The spokesperson added : “The discovery of human remains buried underground in the cemetery in the province of Soria occurred on December 11 after they were sent to jail.

“Those remains have yet to be fully identified by coroners but we believe they correspond to those of the missing man.

“The investigation is ongoing.”

Jorge Luis disappeared aged 32 in the province of Soria on November 7 last year according to the Spanish missing persons’ association SOS Desaparecidos.

The association’s president Joaquin Amills made a new appeal for information on his whereabouts in August, nine months after he vanished.

Google Maps A Google Street View picture possibly shows someone transporting a dead body in a wheelbarrow down a street in Spain[/caption]

Police recovered the remains from a nearby cemetery

Police used diggers to retrieve the body

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