Parents of woman strangled by billionaire boyfriend in South Africa hope he goes ‘straight to hell’

The parents of a woman strangled by her billionaire boyfriend have spoken out about finally seeing justice in their daughter’s murder three years later.

In June, 44-year-old Diego Novella was found guilty of strangling and smashing in the skill of 39-year-old Gabriela Kabrins Alban at a $1,300-per-night resort in Cape Town, South Africa, back in the summer of 2015.

The Guatemalan playboy told investigators he had downed a massive cocktail of drugs that made Alban appear as a ‘demon’, admitting that he launched a ferocious attack to ‘kill it’.

A month after a judge slapped Novella with a guilty verdict, his victim’s parents revealed the overwhelming number of emotions they’ve experienced since Alban’s death.

Billionaire Diego Novella was convicted of the brutal 2015 strangling and desecration of girlfriend Gabriela Kabrins Alban, above, at a hotel in Cape Town, South Africa, in June

Billionaire Diego Novella, left, was convicted of the brutal 2015 strangling and desecration of girlfriend Gabriela Kabrins Alban, right, at a hotel in Cape Town, South Africa, in June

A month after Novella was found guilty, Alban's parents Howdy Kabrins, left, and Doris Weitz, right, have spoken about the horrifying murder and finally seeing justice for their daughter

A month after Novella was found guilty, Alban’s parents Howdy Kabrins, left, and Doris Weitz, right, have spoken about the horrifying murder and finally seeing justice for their daughter

For Alban’s father Howdy Kabrins, the nightmare began when he received a phone call from the US State Department in the middle of the night on July 29.

The New York Post reports the 70-year-old fought back tears as he recounted learning not only had his Gaby been killed in a brutal manner, but her body had also been desecrated.    

‘That same day Gaby’s stepmother, Linda, and I were on a plane to Cape Town,’ Kabrins told the Post. ‘My ex-wife, Doris Weitz, and her husband flew there, too.

‘That’s when our campaign began for justice for Gaby.’

Alban grew up in Century City outside of Los Angeles, the only child of Kabrin and Weitz.

‘We had a special bond,’ Kabrins said. ‘I used to expose her to my world — the ocean and the outdoors. 

‘She was a tomboy, who loved horseback riding, fishing and water-skiing.’

Alban was the only child of Weitz and Kabrins (above). She grew up in Century City, California

Alban was the only child of Weitz and Kabrins (above). She grew up in Century City, California

Alban first met Novella while studying at Pepperdine University and the two dated for a few weeks before she ended things because of his substance abuse problems, according to her mother Weitz.

Novella then reportedly fled the US after being arrested for offenses including drug possession and driving while intoxicated.

After graduating college Alban went on to found her own marketing company before marrying pediatrician Dr Blake Alban in 2003, whom she divorced eight years later.

In 2013, Novella and Alban reconnected online. 

Weitz testified during the murder trial that Alban told her Novella couldn’t travel to the US because of outstanding arrest warrants, so the young entrepreneur met up with him in Guatemala and Mexico while traveling for work instead.

The couple fell deeply in love, drawing concern from Alban’s friends and family. 

Weitz recalled meeting Novella at a wedding in 2014 and thinking he was ‘strange’.

‘He had the number 13 tattooed on the left side of his neck, two or three inches high,’ she said.

‘He’d clearly done it to rebel against his extremely religious family, part of the Opus Dei [an organization within the Roman Catholic Church].’

Novella was also still struggling with addiction, and in January 2015 he flew to Cape Town to undergo ibogaine therapy, a treatment that is illegal in the US but is used in other countries to treat opioid addiction.

The therapy usually involves taking pills made from a psychoactive African shrub and can trigger intense hallucinations.  

‘Proponents of ibogaine say it helps with depression and drug abuse, but it wasn’t a serious commitment for him,’ Kabrins said. ‘It was just part of his [playboy] lifestyle. He did it recreationally.’

Alban dated Novella (pictured together) while studying at Pepperdine University, but ended the relationship because of his substance abuse problems

Alban dated Novella (pictured together) while studying at Pepperdine University, but ended the relationship because of his substance abuse problems

Novella and Alban reconnected in 2013 and quickly struck up an international romance 

Novella and Alban reconnected in 2013 and quickly struck up an international romance 

At the same time Alban was dealing with her own serious health problems.

She had long-suffered crippling aches, pain and exhaustion that was originally misdiagnosed as Addison’s disease but was later identified as Lyme disease.  

After visiting several doctors on the West Coast and in Germany but not finding an adequate treatment for her rapidly deteriorating condition, Alban decided to accompany Novella to South Africa for ibogaine therapy.  

‘She was very ill and desperate for a cure,’ said Kabrins of Alban’s decision to try the controversial treatment in June 2015.

According to court records, Novella became angry with Alban when she wasn’t adhering to the pre-treatment guidelines such as cutting out sugar and processed foods. 

That anger spiraled out of control on July 28 when Novella choked Alban to death, smashed her skull into the bathroom floor and fulled her mouth with the foods she wasn’t supposed to be eating before the therapy.

Witnesses indicated that Novella then went down to the hotel lobby and told a staffer ‘my lovely lady is dead’ before heading toward the ocean. 

Soon after police arrived at the ‘sickening’ scene in the couple’s suite.

 Novella attacked his fiancée at their $1,300-a-night hotel villa in Cape Town (pictured)

 Novella attacked his fiancée at their $1,300-a-night hotel villa in Cape Town (pictured)

Staff at the Camps Bay Retreat boutique hotel in Cape Town ocean found Alban's body

Staff at the Camps Bay Retreat boutique hotel in Cape Town ocean found Alban’s body

A forensic expert testified in court that the evidence suggested Novella may have ‘done this [behavior] before’.

Kabrins also said he has his suspicions that his daughter was being abused, but those allegations were never proven in court.  

‘She wasn’t returning our phone calls as frequently in the last six months of her life,’ he said. ‘Looking back, it was a classic sign she was being abused.’ 

Weitz and Kabrins sat through 124 days of evidence and heard hundreds of traumatizing details about the two-hour-long murder and desecration.

In one of the hardest moments of the case, Novella – whose own mother and brother are deceased – said he empathized with Weitz and him because of their loss.

‘Doris and I were sitting on opposite sides of the courtroom, but we both looked at each other and walked out,’ Kabrins said. ‘He had no right to speak to us.

‘We had spent months holding back our rage and grief. At times, I had to be physically restrained by the bailiffs, because I wanted to attack the man who killed our little girl.’ 

Weitz revealed that in May 2018 she was checked into a Cape Town hospital after a nervous breakdown. 

‘I miss Gaby so much, I am broken,’ she said.

Kabrins said he suspected Novella (pictured together above) may have abused his daughter before the gruesome murder

Kabrins said he suspected Novella (pictured together above) may have abused his daughter before the gruesome murder

Finally on June 28 a judge handed down a guilty verdict, with a maximum of 25 years in jail.  

‘I feel ecstatic and numb at the same time,’ Kabrins said.

‘He took away the light of our lives. We will never get over our loss.’

Weitz added: ‘I hope Diego will spend a long life in prison and then go straight to hell where he belongs.’  

Kabrins is now launching a foundation in Alban’s memory aimed at ending domestic violence by teaching young boys to respect women. 

‘I am looking for a silver lining, because this case transcends homicide,’ he said. ‘It’s about privileged men getting away with taking advantage of women and abusing them.’

He is also pursuing a wrongful death civil suit against Novella here in the US.  

THE NOVELLA MURDER TRIAL

Billionaire playboy Diego Novella was found guilty of the horrific murder and desecration of his American girlfriend Gabriella Alban on June 28.

The 44-year-old had strangled and smashed in the marketing executive’s skull after downing a massive cocktail of drugs at their $1,300-a-night hotel villa in Cape Town on July 28, 2015.

The Guatemalan claimed the mind-blowing concoction made Gabriela, the daughter of a Beverley Hills entrepreneur, appear as a ‘demon’ and he admitted launching a ferocious attack to ‘kill it.’

Novella told the Western Cape High Court in Cape Town, South Africa, that he accepted that he had killed Gabriela, but denied murder, blaming the drugs for his actions.

The court heard an expert pathologist estimated that after Gabriela was choked to death, her lover spent up to two hours desecrating her body in a horrific manner.

He smashed in her skull in on the bathroom floor, then jammed her throat full of food before he defecated on her face and sprinkled it with chocolates, sweets, and chips.

The court heard there was clear evidence that he had sex with her and may have sodomized her, but Novella claimed it was consensual and took place before he killed her.

He violated her with curling tongs and laid out her hair extensions between her legs. He also left a note on her breasts reading ‘cerote’ which means ‘piece of s***’ in Spanish.

Hardened detectives admitted what they found ‘shocked them to the core.’ 

Defense lawyer William Booth claimed Novella was not guilty of murdering Gabriela, but had diminished responsibility due to the psychotic effects of the drugs.

He said his client had taken cannabis, cannabis oil as well as an over-the-counter drug called sceletium, which in intoxicating doses it can cause euphoria, initially with stimulation and later with sedation. 

Novella claimed that together, the drugs ‘blew his mind.’

Scientific tests on Gabriela’s body showed no trace of any illegal drugs in her system. 

State prosecutor Mornay Julius argued that Novella was motivated by a deep anger influenced by the drugs adding.

He said top forensic psychiatrist Professor Sean Kaliski believed the accused had been acting with criminal capacity at the time. 

Judge Saldanha delivered a damning judgement, ruling that Novella had effectively made up the story of ‘demons and devils’ in a bid to blame what had happened on drugs.

‘In my view you knew exactly what you were doing at that time and there was a clear intent on your part to murder the deceased and I find you are guilty of murder as charged,’ he said.  

Novella’s sentencing was adjourned until August 7 for the preparation of reports. 

The scion of the billionaire Dougherty Novella family in Guatemala will forfeit a luxurious life of jet-setting and fast cars that lay for a life sentence in one of the most horrific jails in the world.

Pollsmoor Prison in Cape Town was built for 4,336 men but has more than 7,500 locked inside. 

It is run by brutal rival gangs and violent attacks and gang rape is what greets most new arrivals.

With his wealthy background, he is likely to be targeted from the moment he arrives.

Following his conviction, he will shortly be released from the safety of the hospital into the main prison where he will face a daily battle for survival unless he can buy protection.

Cells built to take 30 men are often filled with up to 80 violent prisoners who have to share one filthy communal toilet. Most have to sleep on the floor and many are without any blankets. 

If he is forced to join a Numbers Gang inside – either the 26s, 27s or 28s – he will be expected to be a member’s ‘wife’ and if he does not obey their rules, can face murder, mutilation or gang rape.

If however, he doesn’t join a gang he will not have their protection and will be forced to fend for himself unless he can secure protection. There is only one warder per 100 inmates and at night, the warders leave.

As well as the fear of murder, there is a huge suicide risk and inmates in such cramped conditions often contract tuberculosis or Weil’s Disease from the rats as well as the huge risk of HIV infection.

‘It is a human zoo. I am frightened. Not even the warders inside here are safe,’ actor Ross Kemp said after visiting Pollsmoor for his documentary Ross Kemp on Gangs.

His only hope to survive his life sentence is a transfer to a safer prison.   

 

 



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