Police today confirmed that a teenager has died following an incident in Harrogate in the early hours of Sunday morning.
The victim, who was 17, died in hospital after being found with “significant injuries” when police attended a property in Claro Road at about 12.15am.
North Yorkshire Police said today the person had died but did not name him.
A 16-year-old boy, who cannot be named because of his age, appeared before York Magistrates’ Court yesterday charged with attempted murder.
The boy, who was remanded into youth custody, is due to appear at Leeds Crown Court on March 14.
But in an update today, Detective Superintendent Wayne Fox, head of North Yorkshire Police’s major investigation team, said the 18-year-old had now died: He said:
“North Yorkshire Police are, sadly, able to confirm that the teenage boy who was seriously injured in an incident at Claro Road, Harrogate, in the early hours of Sunday 19 February, died in hospital on the afternoon of Tuesday 21 February 2023.
“I can now confirm that the enquiry has been declared a murder investigation. North Yorkshire Police will not, at this stage, be taking steps to name the victim, however, our thoughts are very much with his family and friends.
“A large enquiry team has been formed to progress the investigation, this includes specialist officers who will offer support to the victim’s family.”
Social media plea
Det Supt Fox added:
“I am aware that that significant information is being shared on various social media platforms, I would ask members of the public to respect the privacy of affected family members and refrain from speculating on the personal information of the victim at this difficult time.
“A 16-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was charged with attempted murder on Monday 20 February and appeared in court on Tuesday 21 February. He was remanded in custody to appear again on 14 March.
“This is a live enquiry and I would remind the public that any form of shared rumour or speculation may have a significant impact on future criminal justice processes.”
Read more:
- Teenager charged with attempted murder on Claro Road
- Boy, 16, arrested for attempted murder in Harrogate
Murderer fell asleep after ‘brutally’ killing man in Harrogate
Police have revealed they found murderer Vitalijus Koreiva asleep in the same flat as his victim when they went to investigate.
Gracijus Balciauskas, 41, was killed on Mayfield Grove on December 20, 2021.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 37, and Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, were jailed for murder and manslaughter respectively at Leeds Crown Court this morning.
After the sentencing, North Yorkshire Police described how the shocking incident unfolded.
Supermarket staff dialled 999 after being approached by a man who told them “someone is dead”.
Rutowicz took officers to the flat on Mayfield Grove where they found the body of a man wrapped in a large rug in a bedroom. A post mortem later showed he had suffered severe injuries to his head and torso.
Koreiva, who was asleep on the sofa, was arrested along with Rutowicz.

The crime scene at the flat on Mayfield Grove in December 2021.
Police analysed Rutowicz’s phone and found “disturbing and graphic videos” showing assaults on the victim on the day of his death.
In one clip, filmed at 5.52am, the victim was kicked in the head and in the ribs, and cried out in pain.
In another clip, filmed at 7.02am, Rutowicz, who was holding the phone, tried to roll the victim over and give him a cigarette. A clip filmed at 7.21am showed the victim lying on the floor with his eyes closed.
In interview, Koreiva told police he had gone to sleep and when he woke up he found Mr Balciauskas dead on the floor, and got a rug to put over him.
Separately, Rutowicz told officers that Koreiva had assaulted him before attacking the victim. But both Koreiva and Rutowicz were charged in connection with his death.
North Yorkshire Police today released CCTV showing Koreiva and Rutowicz buying alcohol hours before the attack happened.
Read more on the case:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Man sentenced to life in prison for Harrogate Mayfield Grove murder
Jailing Koreiva for life this morning, Judge Rodney Jameson KC told him the attack need not have been fatal “had you not tried to drunkenly cover up what you had done”.
Rutowicz was jailed for 12 years for the manslaughter of Mr Balciauskas.

Guilty: Jaroslaw Rutowicz (left) and Vitalijus Koreiva.
DCI Jonathan Sygrove, from North Yorkshire Police’s major investigation team, said:
“The level of violence used against Gracijus Balciauskas was nothing short of brutal. The victim was subjected to a horrific assault, which led to his death. And shockingly, Mr Balciauskas was filmed with a mobile phone while he lay dying.
“When they were interviewed, Koreiva and Rutowicz blamed each other, but ultimately the evidence showed their involvement. It is right that they have now been brought to justice, and must face the consequences of their actions.”
‘A friendly and jovial person’
In a statement issued following today’s sentencing, Mr Balciauskas’ family said:
Man sentenced to life in prison for Harrogate Mayfield Grove murder“As a family we have been deeply affected by Gracijus’ death. We will always remember him as a friendly and jovial person. Even as the months pass, the pain of his loss still remains.
“We want to deeply thank the officers and investigators at North Yorkshire Police with the investigation and doing everything they could to bring justice for him and for all of us too. We also give thanks to Victim Support for supporting us through something that no family should ever go through.
“We also thank everyone at the Harrogate Homeless Unit for supporting Gracijus any way they could when he was still alive.”
A man has been sentenced to life in prison after brutally murdering Gracijus Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate last year.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 37, was jailed at Leeds Crown Court this morning after being found guilty of murder by a jury in July.
Polish national Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, was sentenced to 12 years in prison for manslaughter for his part in the crime.
Mr Balciauskas, from Lithuania, was just 41 years old when he was killed.
Wrapped in a rug
The sentencing comes as a trial in July heard that Mr Balciauskas’s body was found wrapped in a rug after a lengthy drinking binge involving the three friends turned violent on December 20, 2021.
CCTV footage was shown of the men leaving the flat to buy more alcohol on several occasions in the hours leading to the murder.
Rutowicz told the court how Koreiva, who is Lithuanian, erupted during a drunken game of chess with Mr Balciauskas at 5am, which led to Koreiva punching and then kicking him.
Read more on the trial:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Doubt cast on Harrogate murder suspect’s claim
- Harrogate man ‘out of his mind’ on alcohol admits attacking friend
Harrowing video footage taken on Rutowicz’s phone of a bloodied and bruised Mr Balciauskas was shown in court. The clips showed him being kicked by Koreiva whilst he was laying defenceless on the floor pleading for help.
In one of the videos, Rutowicz was heard shouting at Mr Balciauskas in Polish:
“Why the f*** did you send us there? Now you look like this.”
During the trial, Rutowicz said he had been threatened by Koreiva with his life if he called 999 after Mr Balciauskas died. He said Koreiva’s nickname in Harrogate was the “crazy Russian” and he had an unpredictable character.

Murder victim Gracijus Balciauskas pictured in Knaresborough.
However, prosecuting barrister Peter Moulson QC poured scorn on his claim and accused Rutowicz of lying.
Mr Balciauskas died of internal bleeding after being kicked in the spleen and suffering multiple injuries to the torso.
‘Drunken cover up’
Judge Rodney Jameson KC told Koreiva this morning that Mr Balciauskas’ injuries would not have been fatal “had you not tried to drunkly cover up what you had done”.
Addressing Rutowicz, Judge Jameson described his actions as “calculating” and that he wanted to “avoid responsibility”.
He said:
“You could have prevented this from happening, but instead you chose to encourage it.
“You spent many hours considering how to avoid responsibility.”
Koreiva will serve a minimum of 13 years in prison before he is considered for parole. Should he be released, he will spend the rest of his life on licence.
Knaresborough man sentenced to 13 years in prison for manslaughterKnaresborough man Dean Kilkenny has been sentenced to 13 years in prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter following the death of a man at a pub.
Kilkenny, 47, and Moverley, 44, were involved in an altercation with 43-year-old Darron Bower at the Pier Hotel in Withernsea, East Yorkshire, on March 11.
Emergency services attended but Mr Bower died at the scene.
The two men pleaded not guilty to his murder at Sheffield Crown Court last month.
However, Kilkenny, of Whiteley Yard in Knaresborough, admitted manslaughter, whilst Moverley pleaded guilty to inflicting grievous bodily harm and affray on another man during the altercation.
Read more:
- North Yorkshire Police to send officers to Queen’s funeral
- Harrogate solicitor who rammed car into wife’s home spared jail
After accepting their guilty pleas, Kilkenny was sentenced at Hull Crown Court today to 13 years in prison, with an additional four years on licence. Moverley received a 20-month custodial sentence.
Humberside Police DC Fay Woodhouse said:
“I would like to thank Darron’s family for their patience and courage during the judicial process. Nothing can bring Darron back, but I hope they feel a sense of justice after today’s sentencing.
“This was a violent attack fuelled by alcohol that occurred in a public place and resulted in a man losing his life. I hope this tragic incident causes people to reflect on the devastating impact that such actions can have.”
Mr Bower’s partner said:
‘Crazy Russian’ found guilty of murder at Harrogate’s Mayfield Grove“The men responsible for this left myself and Darron’s two youngest children living in a nightmare, with the biggest hole in our family’s heart. I have to explain nearly every day to my two little girls why their daddy isn’t coming home.”
A man nicknamed the ‘crazy Russian’ has been found guilty of brutally murdering Gracijus Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove, Harrogate in December last year.
After two days of deliberation, the jury at Leeds Crown Court found Vitalijus Koreiva guilty by a majority verdict of 11-1.
Polish national Jaroslaw Rutowicz was found not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter by a majority of 11-1. Judge Rodney Jameson QC told him he will also receive a “substantial custodial sentence”.
Mr Balciauskas, from Lithuania, was just 41 years old when he was killed.
Body wrapped in a rug
The trial began last month with the court hearing how Mr Balciauskas’s body was found wrapped in a rug after a lengthy drinking binge involving the three friends turned violent.
CCTV footage was shown of the men leaving the flat to buy more alcohol on several occasions in the hours leading to the murder.
Rutowicz told the court how Koreiva, who is Lithuanian, erupted during a drunken game of chess with Mr Balciauskas at 5am, which led to Koreiva punching and then kicking him.
Read more on the trial:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Doubt cast on Harrogate murder suspect’s claim
- Harrogate man ‘out of his mind’ on alcohol admits attacking friend
Harrowing video footage taken on Rutowicz’s phone of a bloodied and bruised Mr Balciauskas was shown in court. The clips showed him being kicked by Koreiva whilst he was laying defenceless on the floor pleading for help.
In one of the videos, Rutowicz was heard shouting at Mr Balciauskas in Polish, “Why the f*** did you send us there? Now you look like this”.
‘The crazy Russian’
During the trial, Rutowicz said he had been threatened by Koreiva with his life if he called 999 after Mr Balciauskas died. He said Koreiva’s nickname in Harrogate was the “crazy Russian” and he had an unpredictable character.
However, prosecuting barrister Peter Moulson QC poured scorn on his claim and accused Rutowicz of lying.
Last week, Koreiva pleaded guilty to manslaughter after telling the court he had been an alcoholic since he was 13. He argued he was not in control of his actions on the night Mr Balciauskas died, which the jury ultimately rejected.
Mr Balciauskas died of internal bleeding after being kicked in the spleen. The prosecution told the jury he could have been saved if either man had called an ambulance sooner.
Instead, the pair carried on their drinking session.
Koreiva and Rutowicz will be sentenced next month.
Harrogate man ‘out of his mind’ on alcohol admits attacking friendVitalijus Koreiva has admitted punching and kicking Gracijus Balciauskas during a drunken argument but that he was “out of his mind” on alcohol during the weekend he died.
Mr Koreiva, 36, and Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, are accused of murdering Mr Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate on December 20 last year.
Yesterday afternoon and today at Leeds Crown Court, Mr Koreiva was cross-examined by defence barrister Simon Kealey QC and prosecuting barrister Peter Moulson QC.
The court heard how Mr Koreiva, who is Lithuanian, had abused alcohol since he was 13 and there were periods during his life when he was drinking a litre of vodka a day or “until I get knocked out”.
He moved to Harrogate in 2017 to move in with his sister in a failed attempt to get sober and had previously been in prison in Germany for drug offences.
Mr Koreiva said he was working at the Morrison’s factory in Flaxby packing onions and carrots and had developed a friendship with both Mr Rutowicz and Mr Balciauskas whilst living in Harrogate.
Read previous articles on the trial below:
- Doubt cast on Harrogate murder suspect’s claim
- Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
Game of chess
Mr Koreiva disputed Mr Rutowicz previous claim that the argument took place over a game of chess but said he could not remember how it began.
The court heard how on in the early hours of December 20, Mr Koreiva erupted after Mr Balciauskas told him to “go f*** himself”.
Mr Koreiva then said he raised his fists in aggression and punched Mr Balciauskas four times in the face.
A video was again shown in court, taken on Mr Rutowicz’s phone, that showed Mr Koreiva kicking him whilst Mr Balciauskas was laying bloody on the floor and semi-conscious.
When asked why he kicked a defenceless man, Mr Koreiva said:
“I was in such a state I didn’t know what I was thinking or doing.”
He then said he “did not remember” what happened after he kicked Mr Balciauskas.
‘I was in shock’
After several hours passed without either man calling an ambulance, Mr Rutowicz felt his pulse and told Mr Koreiva that he was dead. Mr Koreiva said he attempted CPR to try and save him.
“I had two hands on his chest and I was doing CPR. I saw the blood in his mouth at that moment Rutowicz said, ‘It’s too late, leave it, leave it.
“I was in shock. I couldn’t believe it. It was unexpected really.”
Mr Koreiva then said the pair had a drink of alcohol together “to give our last respect for Gracijus, a drink for our friend.”
Speaking about the assault on Mr Balciauskas, he added:
“If I was sober it would never have happened. I was out of control.”
‘Out of our minds’
Mr Koreiva also admitted to putting Mr Balciauskas’s dead body in a rug after he died. He said both himself and Mr Rutowicz were “absolutely out of our minds and in madness”.
He added:
“We didn’t know what we were doing. You can’t imagine me and Rutowicz carrying a dead body through Harrogate town centre? It was a situation when you are drunk, lost and don’t know to do.”
During cross-examination, Mr Rutowicz claimed that Mr Koreiva threatened him with his life he called 999, which he denied.
He said:
“He is trying to get out of prison. I wasn’t holding him or threatening him. He was free to go. He’s lying. He’s a good actor.”
Police interview
In Mr Koreiva’s original statement given in the days after the incident took place, he told police that he saw Mr Rutowicz strike Mr Balciauskas twice.
However, in court, he admitted this was not true and he initially tried to “create another version” of events because he feared Rutowitc would pin the murder on him.
Mr Koreiva confirmed that he did not see Mr Rutowicz be violent towards Mr Balciauskas on the night that he died.
He told the court, “I’m taking my responsibility for the death of Gracijus” who he called a “good man”.
Mr Koreiva added:
“I want to apologise to Gracijus’ family for everything that happened. He did nothing wrong and he didn’t deserve this”.
The trial will continue tomorrow.
Doubt cast on Harrogate murder suspect’s claimDoubt has been cast on a murder suspect’s claim that he was not involved in the death of Gracijus Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate last year.
Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, and Vitalijus Koreiva, 36, are accused of murdering Mr Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate on December 20 last year.
The trial at Leeds Crown Court began two weeks ago with the prosecution giving evidence. The court heard how Mr Balciauskas’s body was found wrapped in a rug.
Mr Rutowicz took the stand last week to begin his defence. He claimed Mr Koreiva violently killed Gracijus Balciauskas after a drunken game of chess turned ugly — and then threatened to do the same to him if he dialled 999 for help.
Today Mr Rutowicz was cross-examined by Mr Koreiva’s barrister, Peter Moulson QC, who suggested his version of events was “simply a lie”.
‘In shock’
Much of Mr Moulson’s questioning focused on why Mr Rutowicz did not call the police until almost 18 hours after the alleged murder took place.
The court had previously been shown CCTV footage of Mr Rutowicz leaving the flat and returning several times to buy alcohol in the hours after Mr Balciauskas died.
Mr Moulson QC said:
“For almost 18 hours after your friend sustained his injuries, you went backwards and forwards to the flat voluntarily. You were never being threatened by Mr Koreiva, that is simply a lie.”
Read more:
During today’s hearing, Mr Rutowicz repeatedly said that he was in shock after witnessing the death of Mr Balciauskas.
Mr Rutowicz repeated his previous claim that he had been threatened by Mr Koreiva with his life if he called the police. He said Mr Koreiva’s nickname in Harrogate was the “crazy Russian” and he had an unpredictable character.
He said:
“It was that fear. Nobody had threatened me before in my life like that, that he would find me and kill me. As long as that aggression was there I kept coming back.”
Harrowing images
The court was again shown harrowing video images, filmed on Mr Rutowicz’s phone, of Mr Balciauskas bloodied and barely conscious after being assaulted at the flat on Mayfield Grove.
Mr Moulson QC suggested the reason he filmed the encounter was to use it as a threat against Mr Balciauskas if he “crossed” the pair again, which Mr Rutowicz denied.
He said:
“[I filmed it] so I could report to police what Vitalijus had done. I didn’t kill him. I didn’t beat him.”
The afternoon finished with Mr Koreiva on the stand beginning his evidence. The trial continues tomorrow.
Harrogate murder trial adjourned until next weekThe murder trial of Vitalijus Koreiva and Jaroslaw Rutowicz has been adjourned until Monday due to problems finding a Lithuanian translator.
Mr Koreiva, 36, and Mr Rutowicz, 39, are accused of murdering Gracijus Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate on December 20 last year.
The trial began on Monday last week at Leeds Crown Court and was set to continue until at least the end of this week.
Mr Koreiva, who is Lithuanian, was due to take the stand this week but his translator is unavailable until Friday and the court has been unable to find another one.
One of the 12 jurors has also caught covid, so Judge Rodney Jameson QC today adjourned the trial until Monday morning.
Read more:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
-
Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assault
The trial began last week with the prosecution giving evidence.
The court heard how Mr Balciauskas’ body was found wrapped in a rug and CCTV footage was shown of the three men buying alcohol in the hours leading up to his death.
This week, the defence began with Mr Rutowicz claiming Mr Koreiva violently killed Mr Balciauskas after a drunken game of chess turned ugly — and then threatened to do the same to him if he dialled 999 for help.
Harrogate murder suspect claims he feared for his own life after ‘brutal’ assaultA man on trial for murder claimed his friend violently killed Gracijus Balciauskas after a drunken game of chess turned ugly — and then threatened to do the same to him if he dialled 999 for help.
Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 39, and Vitalijus Koreiva, 36, are accused of murdering Mr Balciauskas at a flat on Mayfield Grove in Harrogate on December 20 last year.
The trial at Leeds Crown Court began last week with the prosecution giving evidence. The court heard how Mr Balciauskas’s body was found wrapped in a rug and CCTV footage was shown of the three men buying alcohol in the hours leading up to his death.
Mr Rutowicz took the stand today to begin his defence.
Speaking through a translator, the Polish national said he came to the UK in 2004 and worked as a bricklayer.
After moving to Harrogate in 2019, he developed a friendship with Mr Koreiva and Mr Balciauskas through work.
The three men ended up living together at 6 Mayfield Grove. Mr Rutowicz described Mr Balciauskas as a “brother” and said they would meet in the evenings after work to drink and talk about their future plans.
‘Brutal’ assault
The drinking session that ultimately led to Mr Balciauskas’ death began on December 19. Mr Rutowicz said tensions flared after Mr Koreiva shaved off some of Mr Balciauskas’s hair as a practical joke whilst he was sleeping.
Mr Rutowicz said in the early hours of the next morning the three men ran out of alcohol so Mr Koreiva and Mr Rutowicz took a taxi to Pannal’s BP petrol station to buy more.
They returned to Mayfield Grove at around 5am when Mr Balciauskas challenged the two men to a game of chess, which they often enjoyed playing together while drinking.
Mr Rutowicz said Mr Koreiva erupted in anger during his game with Mr Balciauskas and described the ensuing beating of Mr Balciauskas by Mr Koreiva as “brutal”.
He said:
“Vitalijus was shouting more than Gracijus. At one point Vitalijus got up and threw Gracijus onto the floor from the stool. He started to beat him with his fist and with the heel of his foot.”
Mr Rutowicz then filmed a bloodied and bruised Mr Balciauskas with his mobile phone. He claimed this was to stop the fight and provide evidence that he was not involved in case it was later needed by police.
He said:
“I then decided to start filming. It was brutal. I wanted to use that in order to stop the fight. I approached and started to pull Gracijus away. Vitalijus was beating him and kicking him.”
Read more:
- Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rug
- Man denies murder at flat on Harrogate’s Mayfield Grove
‘If you call the police, I will kill you’
After the assault, Mr Rutowicz said Mr Balciauskas was still alive but fading out of consciousness.
He said he wanted to call 999 but was stopped by Mr Koreiva who said he would kill him if he did.
Mr Rutowicz said:
“He started to threaten me. Gracijus was lying on the floor. I could hear him saying something. I was afraid to approach because Vitalijus told me to stay away or he would kill me.
“At a certain point, Gracijus’s head was drooping. I approached to film him and recorded what he was saying to me.
“I had my phone in my hand and turned towards Vitalijus. I said I was going to call the police. He raised his fist to me and said if you call the police or ambulance, I will kill you.
“That terrified me. I felt fear as if my body was paralysed by it.”
Mr Rutowicz said he and Mr Balciauskas “loved each other like brothers” and maintained that he did not strike or kick him during the assault.
He then went to check his pulse, which was faint. He said:
“Gracijus whispered to me, ‘it hurts’
“I said to him, “brother, everything will be fine, hang in there.”
“He knew I wanted to help him, he said ‘thank you’.”
Mr Rutowicz, who was tearful in court, described the moments after Mr Balciauskas died.
“It was a shock to me. I had lost my brother. I turned my head towards Vitalijus and said, ‘You’ve killed Gracijus. Gracijus is dead.’
“I said, ‘If I had called the ambulance when I wanted to, he would still be alive’.
“But I was threatened. It was a complete nervous breakdown for me. Vitalijus sat and looked at what I was doing. I simply got up feeling broken and sat down on the bed.”
‘Total shock’
With Mr Balciauskas now dead in the flat, Mr Rutowisz claimed Mr Koreiva wanted to cover up the crime and suggested wrapping his body up in a rug before burying him. Mr Rutowisz told the court:
“He said, ‘Shut your trap. I was in prison for four years. I will not go back’.”
Mr Rutowisz claimed he was in fear for his life after Mr Koreiva ordered him to go to Asda on Bower Road to buy more whiskey and cigarettes. He said he would “find him and kill him” if he did not return to Mayfield Grove.
He said the reason he returned to the flat and didn’t call 999 was due to fear.
“Never before had I the feeling that someone could kill me. There was a second feeling of realising that my brother was dead. Those two feelings caused total shock in me and a breakdown.”
After Mr Koreiva fell asleep later that evening, Mr Rutowisz went back to Asda at around 11pm.
He called family members in Poland to tell them what had happened before calling 999 to say there was a dead body at the flat.
He strongly denied telling an Asda employee that he confessed to murdering Mr Balciauskas.
The trial is expected to last until the end of this week.
Harrogate murder trial hears that body was found in a rugA court heard today how a suspected murder victim in Harrogate was found wrapped up in a rug in a flat on Mayfield Grove after one of his alleged killers told somebody nearby, “I killed a man”.
Vitalijus Koreiva, 36, and Jaroslaw Rutowicz, 38, are accused of murdering Gracijus Balciauskas on December 20 last year.
The trial at Leeds Crown Court, which began today and is due to last for 10 days, tracked the movements of the three men on CCTV.
The court heard a witness statement from an employee at Asda on Bower Road, who found an agitated Mr Rutowicz sitting on a wall by the supermarket on the evening when Mr Balciauskas died.
The employee said Mr Rutowicz appeared to have been drinking and told her “I think I’ve killed a man.”
The court was also played a recording of a 999 call from Mr Rutowicz that took place when he was outside Asda that evening. He told a call handler: “The guy, he’s dead. No, it was an accident. We drink something.”
Two police officers then met Mr Rutowicz at Asda who then walked with him to Mayfield Grove.
Inside, they found Mr Balciauskas wrapped in a rug dead. Mr Rutowicz, of no fixed address, and Mr Koreiva, of Mayfield Grove, were then arrested on suspicion of murder.
Timeline of events
Detective Constable Christopher Williams, from North Yorkshire Police, was cross-examined by prosecuting solicitor Katherine Robinson who went through a timeline of events that led to the arrest.
CCTV captured the last time Mr Balciauskas was seen alive when he went to the Polish shop next door to the flat at 1pm on December 19.
Mr Rutowicz was seen later that evening collecting a pizza takeaway and returning to the property.
In the early hours of the following morning, Mr Koreiva was seen on CCTV pacing around the property before going back inside. At around 3am the pair were seen buying bottles of alcohol and returning.
The next day, Mr Koreiva was filmed visiting the Polish shop next door in his dressing gown and Mr Rutowicz was seen buying more alcohol using the bank card of the suspected victim.
Videos on phone
This morning the court were shown films retrieved from Mr Rutowicz’s phone, timestamped at 5am and 7am on December 20.
They showed Mr Balciauskas still alive but beaten with bruises all over his hands and face whilst inside the Mayfield Grove flat.
The videos showed the two men attempting to give Mr Balciauskas cigarettes and something to drink.
Police later retrieved a photo of the victim taken at 12.04pm that day where he was apparently dead and wrapped in a rug.
More alcohol
An hour before the videos of Mr Balciauskas beaten but still alive were filmed, Mr Rutowicz and Mr Koreiva were seen on CCTV ordering a taxi to Pannal’s BP petrol station to buy more alcohol before returning to the property.
Mr Rutowicz was seen leaving Mayfield Grove at around 10am the next day to buy more alcohol. He was again seen using Mr Balciauskas’s bank card to buy more alcohol at 2pm.
At around 11pm, Mr Rutowicz was captured on CCTV leaving the flat to go to Asda on Bower Street when the 999 call took place.
Arresting officer PC Joseph Horne gave a statement to the court that said Mr Rutowicz was crying and talking on the way to the police station.
PC Horne said:
“I couldn’t understand what he was saying because of his thick accent. When in custody he said ‘It was an accident, my brother is dead I will show you how he did it’.”
The trial continues tomorrow.