A man held over the hotel killings of two Australians and their Filipina companion in the Philippines claimed he had wanted to retaliate against the business for firing him, officials say.
The suspect also said he had randomly barged into the victims’ room because its window was open, authorities added.
The victims, whose hands and feet were tied, were found sprawled on the floor in a street-level room at the Lake Hotel in Tagaytay city south of Manila on July 10, Tagaytay Mayor Abraham Tolentino said.
In a pre-dawn news conference at the city hall, Tolentino and police officials presented the handcuffed suspect, who was wearing a hoodie, dark eyeglasses and a face mask.
The man, whose identity was not released, will face criminal complaints for the killings and robbery, Tagaytay police chief Charles Daven Capagcuan said.
The mayor repeated an apology to the victims’ families and to Australia for what he called the senseless killings.
"We are pleased to present to you the main suspect in this brutal crime and as promised that within a week, we will resolve and give justice,” Tolentino said, without identifying the victims as requested by their families.
In a Southeast Asian country where many criminal suspects have managed to evade arrest for months or years before getting captured, Tolentino commended the police for rapidly identifying and locating the suspect, who was then apparently pressured to give up.
Capagcuan told The Associated Press ahead of the news conference the breakthrough came when the suspect was identified by at least three hotel employees based on his image, which was captured by security cameras showing a part of his face when his mask slid down.
The identification and information from witnesses eventually led authorities to the suspect’s Batangas home province near Tagaytay, where he decided to surrender on Tuesday, the police chief said.
"He wanted to get back at the hotel management for his dismissal,” Capagcuan told reporters, adding the suspect used to work as a swimming pool cleaner but was fired by the hotel in March after he was linked to a robbery in one of the rooms.
Police officials planned to file criminal complaints of robbery in addition to the killings against the suspect.
The man acknowledged taking the watch and shoes of the Australian man after attacking him with a knife and suffocating his partner, a Filipino-Australian woman, and her Filipina daughter-in-law, Capagcuan said.
"He barged randomly with a knife into the room because its window was open,” Capagcuan said.
The Filipino-Australian woman and her daughter-in-law are to be buried in their family’s home province in the Philippines while the remains of the Australian man would be flown to Sydney, Tolentino said.
The Australian couple had planned to fly back to Australia on July 10, the day they were killed, but decided to briefly take a vacation in Tagaytay, the Filipino son of the slain Filipino-Australian woman told AP.
He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was fearful after what happened to his mother and his wife.
During the news conference, the son, who concealed his identity with a white facial mask and a cap, thanked police and the mayor for quickly locating the suspect. He asked the suspect, who was standing near him, what made him commit the gruesome crime but the man did not respond.
Tagaytay is popular among local and foreign tourists who flock there for its cool weather and to view one of the world’s smallest active volcanos in a lake from elevated ridges teeming with restaurants, viewing decks and hotels.