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Mørkeland — episode 360 — Kasper stalking case 2025
Podcast
•
March 17, 2026 at 02:13 PM

When Control Becomes Murder: The Alice Ruggles Case

How a military man's obsessive stalking escalated to a throat-slashing homicide in England

Host
Susanne Sperling
Redaktør
Mørkeland
RadioPlay

On September 25, 2016, Harry Gunn murdered his 24-year-old ex-girlfriend Alice Ruggles at her home in Gateshead, England, by slashing her throat. What preceded this brutal killing was months of systematic stalking, psychological manipulation, and coercive control—a pattern that escalated from apparent obsession to lethal violence.

Gunn, a military colleague who had dated Alice briefly, refused to accept the breakup. Rather than moving on, he embarked on a campaign of intense surveillance and control over her daily life. He demanded that Alice send him Snapchat photos proving her location whenever she went out with friends. The violations of her privacy didn't stop there: Gunn required daily morning photographs of her outfits for his explicit approval before she was permitted to leave for work. This wasn't jealousy playing out in texts or arguments—it was the systematic dismantling of her autonomy.

Alice's attempts to establish boundaries fell on deaf ears. The stalking continued relentlessly, even as she sought legal protection. She obtained multiple restraining orders against Gunn, but he ignored them. The repeated breaches of these court-ordered restrictions demonstrated a chilling disregard for the law and for Alice's safety.

On the night of the murder, Gunn made a phone call that would later serve as chilling evidence of his intent. Unprompted and without context, he stated: "I'm never going to kill you." The defensive nature of the statement—denying something no one had accused him of—suggested premeditation. It was as if he was trying to establish an alibi for thoughts already forming in his mind.

When police arrived at Alice's home, Gunn's narrative immediately contradicted the evidence. He claimed that Alice had killed herself and that he was merely seeking revenge on her family. The story was transparent. Phone data placed him at the scene, and the forensic evidence was overwhelming. His defense crumbled under scrutiny, but not before revealing another dimension of his character: when caught, he turned manipulative, attempting to rewrite the crime itself.

The jury at trial saw through Gunn's deceptions. They heard the evidence of months of stalking, the ignored restraining orders, the controlled photographs, the location tracking. They heard the emergency calls. And they recognized what experts now routinely identify: coercive control is not merely a relationship issue—it can be a precursor to lethal violence.

Denmark
Stalking
The Kasper case
Camilla Bjerregaard Aurvig
Kristine Sofie Højen
violation of restraining order
investigation in Denmark
police work
Danish criminal cases
unsolved
drab
unexplained events
case about female escapee
True Crime Podcast 2026
mordssag
True Crime Society
justitssvigt
partnervold
domstol
justitsmordet
hvidvaskning
cybersikkerhed
mordsager
magtmisbrug

Gunn was convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. His case has since become a reference point in discussions about domestic stalking, the inadequacy of restraining orders without enforcement, and the warning signs that separate unhealthy relationships from life-threatening ones.

Alice Ruggles' death illuminates a critical gap in how society responds to persistent stalking. She had identified the threat, sought legal protection, and informed authorities of the violations. Yet the system's failure to prevent Gunn's access to her—or to impose consequences severe enough to deter his behavior—allowed him to continue until it was too late.

For international audiences, the case underscores a universal truth: stalking is not romantic persistence. Demands for location proof, outfit approval, and constant monitoring are not signs of devotion. They are markers of control, and control can kill.

**Sources**

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-0k7UzS7vI

https://wit.kaspersky.com/antistalking/

Read more

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Susanne Sperling

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Mørkeland — episode 360 — Kasper stalking case 2025
Podcast
•
March 17, 2026 at 02:13 PM

When Control Becomes Murder: The Alice Ruggles Case

How a military man's obsessive stalking escalated to a throat-slashing homicide in England

Host
Susanne Sperling
Redaktør
Mørkeland
RadioPlay
Denmark
Stalking
The Kasper case
Camilla Bjerregaard Aurvig
Kristine Sofie Højen
violation of restraining order
investigation in Denmark
police work
Danish criminal cases
unsolved
drab
unexplained events
case about female escapee
True Crime Podcast 2026
mordssag
True Crime Society
justitssvigt
partnervold
domstol
justitsmordet
hvidvaskning
cybersikkerhed
mordsager
magtmisbrug

On September 25, 2016, Harry Gunn murdered his 24-year-old ex-girlfriend Alice Ruggles at her home in Gateshead, England, by slashing her throat. What preceded this brutal killing was months of systematic stalking, psychological manipulation, and coercive control—a pattern that escalated from apparent obsession to lethal violence.

Gunn, a military colleague who had dated Alice briefly, refused to accept the breakup. Rather than moving on, he embarked on a campaign of intense surveillance and control over her daily life. He demanded that Alice send him Snapchat photos proving her location whenever she went out with friends. The violations of her privacy didn't stop there: Gunn required daily morning photographs of her outfits for his explicit approval before she was permitted to leave for work. This wasn't jealousy playing out in texts or arguments—it was the systematic dismantling of her autonomy.

Alice's attempts to establish boundaries fell on deaf ears. The stalking continued relentlessly, even as she sought legal protection. She obtained multiple restraining orders against Gunn, but he ignored them. The repeated breaches of these court-ordered restrictions demonstrated a chilling disregard for the law and for Alice's safety.

On the night of the murder, Gunn made a phone call that would later serve as chilling evidence of his intent. Unprompted and without context, he stated: "I'm never going to kill you." The defensive nature of the statement—denying something no one had accused him of—suggested premeditation. It was as if he was trying to establish an alibi for thoughts already forming in his mind.

When police arrived at Alice's home, Gunn's narrative immediately contradicted the evidence. He claimed that Alice had killed herself and that he was merely seeking revenge on her family. The story was transparent. Phone data placed him at the scene, and the forensic evidence was overwhelming. His defense crumbled under scrutiny, but not before revealing another dimension of his character: when caught, he turned manipulative, attempting to rewrite the crime itself.

The jury at trial saw through Gunn's deceptions. They heard the evidence of months of stalking, the ignored restraining orders, the controlled photographs, the location tracking. They heard the emergency calls. And they recognized what experts now routinely identify: coercive control is not merely a relationship issue—it can be a precursor to lethal violence.

Gunn was convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. His case has since become a reference point in discussions about domestic stalking, the inadequacy of restraining orders without enforcement, and the warning signs that separate unhealthy relationships from life-threatening ones.

Alice Ruggles' death illuminates a critical gap in how society responds to persistent stalking. She had identified the threat, sought legal protection, and informed authorities of the violations. Yet the system's failure to prevent Gunn's access to her—or to impose consequences severe enough to deter his behavior—allowed him to continue until it was too late.

For international audiences, the case underscores a universal truth: stalking is not romantic persistence. Demands for location proof, outfit approval, and constant monitoring are not signs of devotion. They are markers of control, and control can kill.

**Sources**

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-0k7UzS7vI

https://wit.kaspersky.com/antistalking/

Read more

Mørkeland — episode 358 — The Murder in Amsterdam's Red Light District
Podcast Episode

Amsterdam Stabbing: 40 Wounds, Self-Defense Claim

Mørkeland — episode 306 — Marie Nielsen and the robbery in Valby
Podcast Episode

Masked Man in the Basement: A Danish True Crime Case

Danish Murder Cases — episode S13E14 — The Torso on the Conveyor Belt
Podcast Episode

Danish Murder Cases Podcast Explores Forensic Medicine in Q&A

Related Content
Mørkeland — episode 358 — The Murder in Amsterdam's Red Light District

Amsterdam Stabbing: 40 Wounds, Self-Defense Claim

Mørkeland — episode 306 — Marie Nielsen and the robbery in Valby

Masked Man in the Basement: A Danish True Crime Case

Danish Murder Cases — episode S13E14 — The Torso on the Conveyor Belt

Danish Murder Cases Podcast Explores Forensic Medicine in Q&A

Danish Murder Cases — episode S13E13 — Myths about the Police

Stine Bolther Examines Police Investigations in Danish Crime Podcast

Advertisement
SS

Susanne Sperling

View all stories →
Share this post: