Abiodun David John, 33, has been arrested for allegedly trying to hack into the bank accounts of a British engineer murdered in the Alps alongside family members.
Reports said John tried to access money belonging to Saad Al-Hilli, 50, who was shot dead close to Lake Annecy, in eastern France, on September 5. According to reports, John tried to access Al-Hilli’s Royal Bank of Scotland and HSBC accounts within a few days of the quadruple murders where Al-Hilli’s wife and mother-in-law were also killed and a French cyclist gunned down nearby.
John’s arrest by Greater Manchester Police in Salford followed a request by Annecy magistrates and Surrey Police, who are leading the hunt for the killer.
A raid on his flat yielded numerous mobile phones and documents, said an investigating source.
John, in turn, insists he is innocent, and told the Manchester Evening News: ‘I believe that people have been tapping into my phone and accessing my internet.
‘When the police came into my house I did not know what they were talking about. They were talking about a dead man and said that I did it – took some money from a dead man’s account.
Somehow they connected this to me. I do not know where this has come from.
‘They took me to the police station and they explained why I had been arrested.
‘I was completely shocked. I did not know where the police were coming from. I am totally innocent.
‘I do not know where this whole thing has come from.’
Murdered Saad Al-Hilli |
John is due to answer bail at Guildford police station in Surrey on Tuesday.
More than 150 officers are involved in the Anglo-French operation to try and find the Annecy killer, but so far there have been no arrests.
Detectives have been baffled as to why Al-Hilli, his wife Ikbal, 47, and mother-in-law Suhalia, 74, were shot dead.
A variety of theories have emerged regarding the motive for the killings.
Media reports have linked Al-Hilli with a secret trust account thought to include £15million in illegal kickbacks to Saddam Hussain’s regime. But French police last month denied any link between the British engineer and Saddam Hussain.
The idea that the killer may have been a lone psychopath was ‘gaining ground’ according to police. Officers suggested that the type of gun the killer used – a 7.65mm Luger – is not consistent with the work of a trained assassin.
It has also been suggested that the cyclist killed may have been the main target and that the family were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Annecy prosecutor Eric Millaud admitted last month that there was no ‘immediate prospect’ of the crime being solved and that the investigation would be a long process.
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