Hear the call that Marcus Volke made to the unassuming electrician on the night the murder-suicide was discovered.
KILLER chef Marcus Volke worked around the world as a male prostitute before moving to Brisbane just weeks before he murdered his wife and cooked her on their up-market apartment's stovetop.
Volke, who was found with Mayang Prasetyo's dismembered body on Saturday night, had once been obsessed with nutrition and health but friends sensed something had changed and some suspected drugs — a connection police are investigating.
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Previously, the couple had both worked in a Melbourne brothel and Volke had also made a living from sex work in Copenhagen.
After moving to Brisbane he was working under the name of Heath XL while his wife was selling herself as a "top high class Asian shemale" for up to $500 an hour.
Marcus Volke as pictured on an escort site. Source: Supplied
"I'm very open to all kinds of people, ages and backgrounds but if you are cool, serious and generous then we can be a match!"
Volke fled police when they responded to complaints of a putrid smell from his apartment and was found shortly afterwards in a wheelie bin with fatal self-inflicted wounds.
Asked whether Volke had seemed capable of harming Ms Prasetyo, their former boss said: "Yes he would."
Marcus Peter Volke and Mayang Prasetyo Source: Supplied
He said Volke had a black belt in karate and was interested in nutrition.
"He has always been polite and nice. He would always open the door for you," he said, adding his former friend's devotion to fitness meant he had never known him to do drugs.
"It was mostly karate and just working as a chef. That's what his world revolved around. I've heard he was depressed for a while and stuff like that."
Mr Sinclair said he noticed changes in photographs posted to social media websites.
"The last two profile pictures you can kind of see in his eyes that it has gone," he said.
"I don't know what happened to him but it looks like all the life has been dragged out of him," he said of recent photographs posted online.
Mr Sinclair said Volke never spoke about his partner who he married overseas in August last year.
"Something must (have) happened to him while he was overseas, that desensitised him or caused him to spiral into that depressive state.
"He was very isolated the whole time he was overseas."
Human remains and a man's body have been discovered by police in Brisbane's inner suburb of Teneriffe.
"G'day, is this a 24-hour electrician?" Volke asked electrician Brad Coyne in a recorded telephone conversation on Saturday night, obtained by Ten Eyewitness News.
"Yeah, I've got a bit of a problem. I was cooking on my stove."
He went on to ask whether Mr Coyne could fix the problem that evening but when Coyne arrived at the apartment he felt a "squelch" underfoot and was struck by a bad smell.
Mr Coyne told Ten Eyewitness News Ms Prasetyo's husband told him that he was cooking pigs broth.
He noticed a pair of rubber gloves and a bleach odour.
A WOMAN WILLING TO DO ALL FOR HER FAMILY
SHE worked hard to buy herself and her family a better life, sending money home regularly to Indonesia to put her two younger sisters through an education they could not otherwise have had.
Mayang Prasetyo was a trusting person who never lost her faith in people, one person who knew her said yesterday.
She should have felt safest of all with the person she should have been able to trust the most — husband Marcus Volke. Instead she is now a victim of violence.
Mayang Prasetyo Source: Supplied
"She was a beautiful soul who worked for us for many years," the owner of the legal brothel where Ms Prasetyo worked, said.
"She was a beautiful, peaceful person that was kind and trustful."
One of Ms Prasetyo's friends from her native Indonesia described her as a "cheerful person, easy to make friends".
Her best friend Priska Geraldin said she was shocked over the death.
On Monday, Ms Prasetyo's mother said she was devastated at the loss of her eldest child — who she referred to as her son Febri, the family's breadwinner.
Febri sent money home to Lampung in Indonesia to support the family, including two sisters aged 15 and 18.
She met the husband who would later kill her while working on a cruise liner and the pair married overseas in August 2013. Working on the ship was yet another one of the ways she could support her family back in Indonesia.
"He put the sisters through school," mother Nining Sukarni said, referring to the two younger sisters who possibly could not have been educated without their sister's efforts.
The family want her brought home to be buried close to them in her native Sumatra, an Indonesian government official was reported as saying.
VICTIM'S MEMORY SHOULD BE VALUED
MAYANG Prasetyo was the innocent victim of a horrendous crime, killed by the man she should have been able to trust the most.
She should be remembered — as we reported yesterday — for her cheerful and friendly disposition, and for the care she had showed her family and loved ones in Indonesia.
Many believe that yesterday we presented Mayang's story in a way that was disrespectful to her memory.
The Courier-Mail had no intention of diminishing the value of Mayang's life, or to add to the grief being felt by her family.
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