
Human butchery ring that made £300k from live castrations and cooking testicles
Six members of a depraved 'human butchery' enterprise were sent to prison for between four and 22 years, but instead of showing remorse, they appealed their sentences
A twisted gang of 'eunuch makers', whose leader kept his penis in a drawer, have shown little remorse for their sick crimes and even appealed the length of their sentences.
Marius Gustavson, Janus Atkin, David Carruthers, Ashley Williams, Damien Byrnes and Jacob Crimi-Appleby were all jailed back in May last year for their horrific crimes related to 'human butchery'. And rather than show remorse for their grave crimes, all six members of the sick 'eunuch makers' gang, led by ringleader Gustavson, even had the cheek to appeal against their sentences ranging from four years to life with a minimum term of 22 years.
Gustavson - ' the eunuch maker' - was found guilty of carrying out depraved body modifications, including the removal of penises, testicles and legs. These bloody operations were mostly carried out in Gustavson's North London flat, or at rented apartments and hotels, sometimes using ordinary household implements rather than medical equipment, causing 'great distress' to victims.
Many of the grotesque surgeries were filmed and uploaded to Gustavson's 'eunuch maker' website, where some 22,841 'likeminded' subscribers across the globe would pay to watch the gruesome content. Over the course of four years, Gustavson made nearly £300,000, and was involved in at least 30 procedures linked to a subculture known as 'nullos' - an abbreviation of genital nullification - whereby men have their penis and testicles removed.
Users of the site could even pay a VIP access price to watch a live penis amputation take place, while penises were put up for online auction with a 'buy it now' button. Detailing the disturbing footage made available to anyone who 'had the inclination', prosecutor Caroline Carberry, KC, said: "Users could pay to subscribe or buy individual videos. There is evidence the victims were promised a sum of money from the video revenue. Gustavson recruited like-minded individuals to assist him in his large-scale, dangerous and disturbing enterprise.
'He was a manipulator of victims, who were themselves vulnerable. It is impossible to know how many procedures took place in the years when the Eunuch Maker website was active."
The Old Bailey heard how in one Facetime call with a victim from Sweden, Gustavson told the man to 'maim himself' by cutting off his testicles, telling him: 'You know what to do come on, just push it.' Then, three days later, Gustavson encouraged the man to cut off his penis.
In another chilling incident, a victim's calf was branded with the letters 'EM' for eunuch maker. This individual later complained to police about Gustavson and his 'circle of acolytes', prompting an investigation.
Norweigan-born Gustavson is a wheelchair user after his own leg was frozen and then amputated. He received £18,500 worth of disability benefits after forcing NHS staff to amputate his left leg by placing it in dry ice for two hours. He has also had his nipple and penis removed and is known to have kept his own severed phallus in a drawer at his home for years after it was cut off.
After one nightmarish procedure, Ms Carberry told the court that Gustavson had 'cooked some testicles for lunch' which he ate as part of a salad, taking a number of photos demonstrating his repulsive recipe from 'raw ingredients to an artfully arranged salad platter'.
Gustavson pleaded guilty at his trial to conspiring to commit grievous bodily harm, five counts of grievous bodily harm with intent, one count of making an indecent photograph of a child, one count of distributing an indecent photograph of a child and possession of criminal property contrary to Section 329(1) of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. The 'Arch manipulator' was handed a life sentence, and must now serve a minimum of 22 years before he is eligible for release.
Meanwhile, Atkin, Carruthers and Williams, of Newport, Gwent, as well as Ion Ciucur of Gretna, Scotland, Peter Wtes of Purley, Surrey, and Stefan Scharf of no fixed address, pleaded guilty to conspiring to commit grievous bodily harm. Former surgical assistant Carruthers, who stored his own testicles in his chest freezer, was jailed for 11 years while his husband Williams, 32, was given a sentence of four years and six months for helping him remove one of Atkin's testicles.
Former veterinary science student Atkin, who was involved in eight procedures, was given a 12-year sentence, Scharf was jailed for four years and six months for removing a testicle from a man in Gustavson's flat. Ciucur was sentenced to five years and eight months.
Crimi-Appleby, from Epsom in Surrey, pleaded guilty to causing grievous bodily harm with intent to Gustavson in February 2019, and was sentenced to three years and eight months in prison. Nathan Arnold, a nurse from South Kensington, west London, admitted to having partially removed one of Gustavson's nipples with a scalpel in 2019. Meanwhile, retired chemist Peter Wates, who was involved in nine of the grim procedures, was jailed for 12 years.
However, Gustavson was regarded as the 'mastermind' of the gang, with one of his victims telling the court that he was a 'lunatic' who created a 'slick, professional website' through which he could share his gory content. Judge Mark Lucraft, KC, the Recorder of London, said at the time: "Gustavson you are very much the mastermind behind this grisly and gruesome enterprise. It was a business which was both busy and lucrative.
"You came to the UK from Norway around 2012 and through your Eunuch Maker website began to advertise so-called body modification procedures. Many of the procedures carried out were filmed and over time the films were produced to an increasingly professional standard.
"The footage uploaded was extremely explicit and made available to paying subscribers no doubt so they could watch it for their sexual gratification. It was a large-scale, dangerous and extremely disturbing enterprise.
"It appears the victims consented - but as the law in this country makes clear consent is not a defence to what took place. It may be some mitigation, but the performing of such medical processes by the unqualified is eminently dangerous and many may face lifelong issues.
"All the procedures were carried out by the medically unqualified in environments far from sterile. They were conducted in amateurish and dangerous ways. In some instances, it is little more than human butchery.
"In some cases, medical equipment is used, in others normal household implements were used. In some equipment was used which is usually used to castrate livestock. Many videos were overtly sexual or had clear sexual overtones, many caused great distress and some resulted in the need for immediate emergency medical treatment.
"I am entirely satisfied the motivations of all involved was a mix of sexual gratification as well as sexual reward. In many of the filmed procedures, the consequence is severe blood loss and many are in clear and acute pain. One is heard on film saying he does not want to die. To many of those looking at this case the activity at the very least will appear to be disgusting and abhorrent."
However, common sense prevailed and all six gang members lost their appeal to have their sentences reduced at an appeal last month.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ITV News
10 hours ago
- ITV News
Who is Ian Paterson the butcher surgeon and what did he do?
An ITV documentary, Bodies of Evidence: The Butcher Surgeon, uncovers the shocking story of Ian Paterson and his victims. Paterson, who was based in Birmingham, is currently serving a 20-year sentence for his crimes, after carrying out needless operations over a 14-year period. While working as a breast surgeon consultant, he was diagnosing cancer when there wasn't any and cutting patients open for no reason. He was found guilty in 2017 of 17 counts of wounding with intent and three counts of unlawful wounding. This film from the ITV Exposure strand talks to victims, fellow doctors and a key whistleblower to tell the extraordinary story of how the system allowed Paterson to perform unnecessary and damaging surgery on so many for so long. Here's a guide to who Ian Paterson is and how he performed damaging surgeries: Who is Ian Paterson? The breast surgeon, 62, is currently serving 20 years for his 14-year campaign of botched operations he carried out in the West Midlands. Paterson, who is due to be freed in 2027, was jailed in 2017 for wounding with intent and unlawfully wounding nine women and one man he treated between 1997 and 2011. He convinced cancer patients to undergo operations in NHS and private hospitals by inventing or exaggerating the risks of tumours to earn extra cash and maintain a successful reputation. Where did Ian Paterson work? Paterson was a consultant breast surgeon in the West Midlands, working in both NHS and private practice at Heartlands Hospital, Solihull Hospital, Good Hope Hospital, Spire Hospital Parkway and Spire Hospital Little Aston. When was Ian Paterson suspended? Ian Paterson was not suspended from carrying out his NHS or private work until 2011. Whistleblowers said they reported concerns about Paterson years before this. What is the Paterson inquiry? The Paterson inquiry investigated how the surgeon was able to carry out unnecessary surgeries undetected for so many years. In 2020 it found "patients were let down over many years" by the NHS and private hospitals and opportunities to stop Paterson were "missed, time after time". Inquiry chairman the Rt Rev Graham James, Bishop of Norwich, said there was a culture of "avoidance and denial", which allowed the breast surgeon to carry out unnecessary and botched operations on hundreds of women. The inquiry recommended that the NHS Trust, which employed Paterson, and private health firm Spire Healthcare recall all of Paterson's patients. How many victims did Ian Paterson have? A total of 675 out of 1,207 women who underwent the unregulated treatment had died by 2017. More than 750 victims have already successfully claimed after receiving unapproved and life-threatening surgery from Paterson, who treated more than 11,000 patients. Will they get compensation? Public and private hospitals Paterson worked for have already paid out millions of pounds to those he operated on and their families. Spire Healthcare, which runs the private hospitals where Paterson operated, has paid out £13.1 million in compensation and set aside an additional £4.6 million for "future costs". Spire Healthcare told ITV News: 'An additional £4.6m has been set aside to complete the ongoing patient reviews and settle future claims and costs. Spire continually reviews the level of the fund's provision, which is dependent on the amount and size of claims received and any new information gained.' The latest investigations Five investigations into Patterson's practices have been conducted following two independent reports, a criminal trial, and one government inquiry. The most recent, which has been suspended, is examining the deaths of 62 women who were operated on by Paterson and later died of breast cancer. How much will it cost? Despite the fact that the inquests are due to finish in 2026, the Birmingham City Council is allocating funding until 2028. More than £2.5 million has already been spent. The costs all relate to the administration of the inquests, including fees for the coroner, legal counsel, solicitors and legal teams representing the NHS. What has happened at the inquests into the deaths of his patients? Ian Paterson refused to attend the first of more than 60 inquests touching on the deaths of his former patients because he believes the coroner's investigation is "biased", the court has been told. The breast surgeon was ordered by coroner Richard Foster to appear remotely at Birmingham and Solihull Coroner's Court to give evidence at the inquest of Chloe Nikitas, who died at the age of 43 in April 2008. Mr Foster issued a ruling on the 21st October saying he could 'find no reason' why Paterson could not attend the inquest and give evidence remotely from prison, and said it was 'disappointing' to the families of the victims that he had decided not to appear. Paterson had been accused of attempting to delay the hearings after lodging an application to have his witness summons revoked the day before the first inquest was due to start on October 10. He cited health concerns, a lack of legal representation, and 'inadequate facilities to prepare.' The first inquest into the death of one of Paterson's patients heard on the 22nd October that a mother who was given a "cleavage-sparing" mastectomy then had her breast cancer return. Chloe Nikitas, an environmental consultant from Tamworth, was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2002 and was treated by the West Midlands"butcher" surgeon. He told her he could perform a mastectomy, which would leave some skin behind to ensure her cleavage would look normal. She then discovered a lump in the same breast in 2005, which was the same type of cancer she had three years earlier. That cancer diagnosis was terminal, and she died at the age of 43 at the Priory Hospital in April 2008. The inquest into the death of Ms Nikitas is the first of 62 into the deaths of Paterson's former patients scheduled to be heard at Birmingham and Solihull Coroner's Court over the next eight months. The second inquest into the death of another of Paterson's victims opened on the 29th of October. Elaine Turbill, who was 63 and from Solihull, was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a mastectomy carried out by Paterson the following month. The inquest in Birmingham heard that Elaine, who worked as a legal secretary, had been married for 40 years and had two children. In a statement, her daughter Gemma said her mother was a "kind, loving and friendly person whose smile lit up a room. She enjoyed going to church, cooking and gardening and loved family trips to Mablethorpe to "smell the sea air". Elaine Turbill died in 2017. Her daughter said seven years on, the pain never goes away. She said she feels her mother's death could have been prevented, which would have given her the opportunity to see her second grandchild. These inquests are currently suspended, and not a single inquest has been heard so far this year, with several hearings cancelled. Birmingham City Council has been contacted for a response.


ITV News
14 hours ago
- ITV News
'Concerning jump' in antibiotic resistant gonorrhoea
There has been a "concerning jump" in cases of gonorrhoea resistant to strong antibiotics, health officials have warned. New figures from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) show there have been more cases of the sexually transmitted infection (STI) that are resistant to the antibiotic ceftriaxone so far in 2025 than the whole of last year. Overall, there was a 16% drop in gonorrhoea cases in 2024 in England, with 71,802 diagnoses, compared with 85,370 in 2023. However, ceftriaxone-resistant gonorrhoea cases are being detected more frequently - with 14 in the first five months of 2025 compared with 13 in the whole of the previous year. Six of the 14 cases this year have been "extensively drug-resistant", which means that they were resistant to ceftriaxone and then to second-line treatment options, according to the UKHSA. What is gonorrhoea? According to the NHS, Gonorrhoea is a sexually transmitted disease caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae. It is often symptomless, but symptoms can include unusual discharge from the genitals, pain during urination or sex, a sore throat, or redness in the eyes. Untreated gonorrhoea can cause serious complications which can lead to infertility in both men and women. If you think you might have gonorrhoea you can get tested for free through the NHS, either with a self-test kit or by going to a sexual health clinic. Gonorrhoea is treated with a single dose of antibiotics, which can be an injection or tablets. You would need to go back to your GP or clinic about a week later to check you no longer have gonorrhoea. Ceftriaxone is a strong antibiotic and the main treatment for gonorrhoea. Experts are therefore concerned when infections fail to respond to it. Most of these drug-resistant cases are linked with travel to or from the Asia-Pacific region, where the prevalence of ceftriaxone resistance is high. Elsewhere, among people in England, early-stage syphilis diagnoses rose 1.7%, from 9,375 in 2023 to 9,535 in 2024. The overall figure for syphilis, including late-stage syphilis or complications from the infection, increased 5% from 12,456 in 2023 to 13,030 in 2024. Chlamydia fell 13%, from 194,143 diagnoses in 2023 to 168,889 in 2024, while people diagnosed for the first time with genital warts also dropped. Among women aged 15 to 24 who are recommended to be screened through the National Chlamydia Screening Programme (NCSP), there was a 10.7% decrease in the number of chlamydia tests carried out, from 673,102 to 601,295. Dr Hamish Mohammed, consultant epidemiologist at UKHSA, said: "Levels of STIs in this country remain a big threat to sexual wellbeing. "These infections can have a major impact on your health and that of any sexual partners - particularly if they are antibiotic resistant. "If you've had condomless sex with new or casual partners - either in the UK or overseas - get tested for STIs and HIV at least yearly, even if you don't have symptoms. Regular testing protects both you and those you're having sex with. "From August, eligible people will also be offered vaccination to reduce the risk of gonorrhoea and we expect to see the immunisation programme have an impact on diagnoses of this infection in coming years - please take up the vaccine if you are offered it."


The Independent
16 hours ago
- The Independent
Paramedic told suicidal student he couldn't wait to have sex with her after rushing her to hospital
An NHS paramedic told a vulnerable student he could not wait to have sex with her after he had rushed her to hospital. Former South East Coast Ambulance worker Alexander McDowell, then 27, was called out to the teenager's home after she tried to take her own life in January 2022. In March 2022, Mr McDowell messaged the 18-year-old on Instagram saying she looked 'familiar' and he remembered her pink-coloured Crocs footwear from her bedroom. He later told her he could not wait to 'f*** her' and got angry when she confronted him about having a girlfriend, a watchdog panel heard. Mr McDowell was struck off last week after the Health & Care Professions Tribunal Service (HCPTS) found he had committed "seriously sexually motivated misconduct" with a "vulnerable service user". The tribunal heard the young student, who was not identified, was estranged from her family after growing up with childhood trauma and had depression and anxiety. After messaging the student on Instagram, Mr McDowell encouraged her to use Snapchat as a 'quicker' way of communicating, the panel found. He then used this to post photos of himself half naked and within a 'compositionally posed position' while in bed, the panel heard. But when the student asked him 'if he told all of his vulnerable patients how special they were and planned futures with them to cheat on his girlfriend', Mr McDowell got angry and blocked her, the panel heard. The HCPTS said: 'The fact of such a sexual relationship, with such a vulnerable individual was, in the Panel's view, inappropriate and unacceptable conduct. [This] fell far below that expected of a registered practitioner. 'Fellow paramedics, aware of the circumstances in which the Registrant had first encountered [the student] someone who had attempted to take her own life, would fully appreciate she was a very vulnerable individual. '[Mr McDowell] is recorded as being remorseful, but in his testimony to this Panel there was nothing to indicate that this was the case, nor that he had identified the need for an apology or regret for his conduct. 'It was clear to the Panel that he was still very concerned and angry about the Trust investigation process and the impact it had had upon him.'