Lodger guilty of murdering Edinburgh OAP Jadwiga Szczygielska after she gave him a home

A killer lodger who brutally battered a frail Edinburgh pensioner to death after a priest asked her to take him in is facing life behind bars.
Defenceless Jadwiga was slain by FrackiewiczDefenceless Jadwiga was slain by Frackiewicz
Defenceless Jadwiga was slain by Frackiewicz

Jadwiga Szczygielska, 77, suffered horrific injuries in the frenzied attack by fellow Pole Roman Frackiewicz.

The 44-year-old killer, an Edinburgh City Council refuse collector who paid just £200 a month for a room in Mrs Szczygielska’s house, downed vodka before launching his attack during which she suffered 14 fractured ribs, a broken breastbone and collapsed lungs.

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Mrs Szczygielska let him stay after he was convicted of a domestic assault in 2018 and a court imposed a non-harassment order preventing him contacting the victim of the attack.

The High Court in Edinburgh heard that the priest at her church asked her to take him in.

Advocate depute Alex Prentice QC told the court: "She gave him her bedroom and extended great kindness towards him."

Mrs Szczygielska came to Scotland from Poland in 2013 to live with her son. He had a workplace accident and returned to Poland but she stayed on in Scotland where she had made many friends.

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She continued to work as a childminder and sent money back to her family in Poland. Mr Prentice said her son, Krzysztof, "indicated he could not find words to express how this terrible crime affects his life and his family, observing that this traumatic event will be with him for the rest of his life".

But on April 17 last year Frackiewicz repaid his landlady's generosity by launching the merciless attack in her home at Pirniefield Bank, Seafield.

Mr Prentice told jurors that they might think the council worker was extremely drunk after consuming a substantial amount of vodka before a quarrel broke out and Frackiewicz "simply lost it and inflicted terrible injury upon the deceased".

The court heard that the injuries suffered by the victim were of a type found in serious road traffic collisions.

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The jury was told that the rupture to her heart could have proved fatal, but that the fractures and lung injury she suffered could also have killed her.

Mr Prentice said: "The Crown is unable to specify precisely what was done to her because there were only two people in that flat when those injuries were sustained. The accused himself said nobody came to the flat."

Frackiewicz, who is also a Polish national, came to the UK in 2012 and after moving in with his victim paid her pounds 200 a month while he slept in the bedroom at the flat and she bedded down on a sofa.

He had denied murdering Mrs Szczygielska by repeatedly inflicting or causing to be inflicted blunt force injuries to her head and body by means to the prosecutor unknown. He was unanimously convicted of the murder by the jury.

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The morning after the crime he contacted an employee with a community alarm service and said he needed an ambulance as he thought she was dead.

He phoned an acquaintance and said: "Jadwiga has passed away". He later claimed it was "probably a heart attack".

Following the verdict the judge, Lord Braid, told him: "You have been convicted by the jury of the crime of murder and there will be only one sentence which I can impose, which is life imprisonment."

But he adjourned sentencing on Frackiewicz until next month for the preparation of a background report as he has to set the minimum term the murderer must serve in jail before he becomes eligible to apply for release on parole.

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Frackiewicz, who has two previous convictions for assault, was remanded in custody until his next appearance at the High Court in Aberdeen on February 18.

The judge told jurors that some of the evidence in the trial was "disturbing to hear and to look at".

Following the guilty verdict, Detective Inspector Bob Williamson of the Police Scotland Major Investigation Team in Edinburgh said: "Jadwiga Szczygielska was a generous and caring woman who was well liked within the community. She allowed Roman Frackiewicz to stay in her home at a time when he had nowhere else to live.

“Frackiewicz repaid Jadwiga by taking advantage of her within her own home and abusing her kindness. We will never know why he chose to attack her that night but his actions were violent, brutal and cruel resulting in the catastrophic injuries suffered by Jadwiga. He left her to die on her kitchen floor while he went to his bed.

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"This guilty verdict will never bring Jadwiga back but I sincerely hope it will bring some sense of justice to her family.”

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