Moment ‘cruel’ man is handed abortion capsules he later makes use of to pressure a lady to miscarry by spiking her orange juice – as he’s jailed for 12 years

A video shows the moment a man was handed abortion pills which he later used to force a pregnant woman to have a miscarriage by secretly spiking her drink. 

Stuart Worby, 40, secretly spiked the orange juice of the victim with an abortion-inducing drug.

He was found guilty of sexual assault and administering a poison or using an instrument to procure a miscarriage and has been jailed for 12 years.

Worby, of Dereham, Norfolk, crushed a tablet of mifepristone into the drink of his victim then inserted another abortion drug inside her, after sexually assaulting her while she was blindfolded. 

She had a severe physical reaction within a few hours, suffering vomiting, diarrhea, a high temperature and bleeding.

Portuguese-national Nueza Cepeda, was caught on CCTV giving Worby the drugs that he used to spike the victim.

The pair were seen meeting in a pub garden, where Cepeda then passes a bag containing the drugs to Worby. 

The woman, who is entitled to lifelong anonymity as the victim of a sexual offence, was 15 weeks pregnant when she miscarried. 

A team of detectives who investigated the crime described it as one of the most shocking cases they had ever seen. 

Stuart Worby (right) pictured with a bag containing the drugs that were used to spike the victim. The bag was passed to him by Nueza Cepeda (left)

Stuart Worby, 40, obtained two types of abortion drugs by persuading a friend’s partner to pretend she was pregnant so she could get prescribed them privately and give them to him

A photo issued by police of an example of the blue packet containing Mifepristone which was never recovered. Worby crushed a tablet of mifepristone into his victim’s drink on the night of August 3, 2022, without her knowledge or consent 

Cepeda had obtained the drugs by calling a London clinic posing as a pregnant woman who already had a family and wanted to terminate her pregnancy. 

Cepeda, 39, of Dereham, pleaded guilty to supplying an instrument to procure a miscarriage, and was given a 22 month jail sentence suspended for two years.

The video, released by police also shows officers at Worby’s home where he was arrested. 

Worby accepted he had obtained the medication unlawfully but denied he ever gave it to the woman. One of the drugs used was found in foetal tissue following a post mortem examination.

Initially the victim thought she had miscarried spontaneously but contacted police when she saw messages on Worby’s phone to his friend Wayne Finney saying ‘It’s working’ and ‘There is a lot of blood’.

Following today’s sentencing Det Insp Duncan Woodhams who lead the investigation described it as one of the most shocking cases he and his team of detectives had seen.

He said: ‘Our thoughts remain with the victim who has suffered greatly as a result of Worby’s merciless actions and the subsequent trial.

‘It is difficult to imagine a more despicable crime. This took detailed planning and manipulation of the victim to inflict such lethal violence on her unborn child.

‘Worby has shown no remorse and there is no mitigation. He wanted to exert control in the most heinous manner and has now deservedly been punished for it.’

Stuart Worby seen entering a pub on CCTV in a video which has been released by Norfolk Police

Nueza Cepda is also seen entering the pub where she then meets Worby in the garden, where she passes him the drugs

Later in the video, police officers visit Worby at his home, where he was arrested

 At first, Worby refused to take the victim to Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, but he later did so and the following day she miscarried her healthy baby. 

As she lost her baby, Worby text a friend saying, ‘it’s working’ and, ‘there is lots of blood’.

In a victim impact statement read to the court the victim said she felt she had ‘failed to protect my baby’. She said she had ‘gone from fertility clinic to fertility clinic’ and ‘being a mother was a dream to me’.

She added: ‘This pain will never leave me knowing that this baby could have been my only chance to be a mother in this lifetime. I haven’t been able to conceive and have another baby.’

Worby obtained two types of abortion drugs by persuading a friend’s partner to pretend she was pregnant so she could get prescribed them privately, then give them to him.

He crushed a tablet of mifepristone into the drink of his victim – who was around 15 weeks pregnant – without her knowledge in what was described by prosecutors as ‘deliberate, well planned and callous’.

Worby, of Dereham, Norfolk, later inserted a number of tablets of another abortion drug – misoprostol – inside the woman after using deception to engage in sexual activity with her.

Mr Justice Joel Bennathan jailed him for 12 years for administering poison or using an instrument with intent to procure a miscarriage, and a concurrent eight years for sexual assault by penetration.

At Norwich Crown Court Worby was also ordered to pay £10,000 compensation to his victim. He had denied both charges, but was found guilty at an earlier trial.

The blister pack found in Worby’s bin after he drugged his victim, causing her to lose her baby

The mother-of-three’s partner Wayne Finney, 41, of Swaffham, Norfolk, was found not guilty of intentionally encouraging or assisting others to commit a crime

The woman who miscarried described her anguish at losing her baby in an emotional victim impact statement, saying she was now unable to have children after being diagnosed with an ovarian deficiency.

She said that her miscarriage had left her suffering ‘grief that will never heal’ knowing that she ‘had failed’ to protect her baby.

The woman said in her statement: ‘I keep thinking what I could have done to protect my baby, but I have the deep pain of knowing that I have failed.

‘This pain will never leave me, knowing that this baby could have been my only chance of being a mother in this lifetime.

‘Although I now have a wonderful partner, we have been unable to conceive. I have to face the knowledge that the only baby I could have had was lost.’

The victim described being cross examined at Worby’s trial as ‘a horrible feeling’ which had made her ‘more upset’.

She added: ‘I had a healthy pregnancy and was looking forward to giving birth to a beautiful baby. Becoming a mother was a dream that I was always hoping for.’

The woman said she had been left suffering ‘relentless nightmares’ and sleepless nights, and had been further traumatised by having to wait two years ‘to give my baby the right to have a funeral’.

The trial heard how the woman had found messages on Worby’s phone to Mr Finney which commented on the effect of the abortion drugs on her, saying ‘it’s working’ and ‘there is lots of blood’.

The woman realised then that she had not suffered a spontaneous miscarriage, but what was described by police as a ‘deceitful and planned termination’.

The court heard how Worby had persuaded Cepeda to make a telephone appointment to a gynaecology centre in London to say she was pregnant, already had a family, and wanted to terminate the foetus.

His bank statement showed he had paid her the £470 fee for the drugs and her consultation to have a medical consultation that resulted in the drugs being delivered to her home.

CCTV showed her handing over the packets to Worby on a table outside the George Hotel in Swaffham, despite having been told by at the gynaecology centre that it was a criminal offence to give the medication to anyone else.

Prosecutor Edmund Vickers KC said it was ‘quite clear’ that the victim wanted to have her baby.

Stuart Worby, of Dereham, Norfolk pictured outside Norwich Crown Court on October 29

He said that a post mortem found the abortion drugs in her baby’s body, and gave the cause of death as abortion drugs in the mother’s system.

Cepeda initially claimed that she did not believe the abortion drugs would be used with the consent of the victim.

The trial heard how she had made internet searches before getting her prescription for ‘abortion home remedies’ and ‘abortion home treatment’.

Andrew Oliver KC, defending Cepeda, who works as a cleaner, said she had only met Worby through Mr Finney, and had acted ‘through a degree of pressure and panic’.

He added: ‘She has gone against her better judgement as a result of trying to help, although in a completely misguided way.

‘She knew the reasons why he was asking her to acquire medication. But she has been utterly conned by Mr Worby. He not only deceived (the victim) in the most cruel way, but she was also taken in by his lies.

‘She is devastated that she has played a part in the harm and suffering that this case has caused. She did not intend harm. She thought she was trying to help. It was misguided loyalty to someone who was a friend of her partner.

‘It has landed her in serious trouble and caused graphic misery for which she is truly sorry. She did not receive any financial or other benefit from the part she played. I accept she played a critical role.

Worby’s friend Wayne Finney (pictured on October 29), of Swaffham, denied intentionally encouraging or assisting in the offence. He was found not guilty by the jury

‘She was a subordinate in this incident and did not think out the horrific consequences.’

Mr Justice Bennathan told Worby that he had been ‘anxious’ to terminate the woman’s pregnancy. He added: ‘You are a selfish man and you set about planning to abort the baby.

‘In the end you used your friend’s partner to get abortion drugs. You must have known this was dangerous as the pills were designed for use in the early weeks of pregnancy.’

The judge added that ‘any normal person’ would be shocked to hear the victim’s impact statement.

But he told Worby, who has no previous convictions: ‘I am sure your thoughts are only about yourself as they always were.’

Worby asked if he could say something before being taken down, but the judge refused his request. Worby then added: ‘Thanks for your time.’

Mr Justice Bennathan told Cepeda: ‘Your actions have caused huge suffering and a great loss to another woman. I accept you only became involved due to the pressure or badgering of Stuart Warby.

‘I accept that you thought he might not go through with it, and that you feel remorse and pain about what happened.’

The judge also ordered her to do a rehabilitation activity requirement of 20 days and 40 hours of unpaid work.

Worby was given a concurrent 14-day jail sentence after he admitted possessing cannabis.