Eloise Parry death: Diet pill seller jailed after retrial Published duration 11 March

image copyright West Mercia Police image caption Eloise Parry died in 2015 after taking eight dinitrophenol (DNP) capsules

A businessman who sold toxic tablets as slimming pills which caused the death of a student has been jailed for seven years.

Eloise Parry, 21, from Shrewsbury, died in 2015 after taking eight dinitrophenol (DNP) capsules.

He had previously been convicted of killing Miss Parry, but the Court of Appeal last year ordered a retrial.

Rebelo, of Gosport in Hampshire, had already served almost 10 months of his previous sentence - also seven years.

He was accused of buying the yellow powder from a factory in China and selling it on, in tablet form, to people around the world - including Miss Parry, who had been diagnosed with bulimia.

image caption Bernard Rebelo was jailed for seven years at the Old Bailey

Sentencing Rebelo, Mrs Justice Whipple said he had shown a "blatant disregard for risk of death" by selling the substance that was "not fit for human consumption".

"Eloise Parry had a distorted body image and a morbid desire for thinness. She had been a regular customer of yours in the weeks leading up to her death," she said.

"By selling her the DNP, you caused her death - it is that simple."

She said Rebelo had "encouraged" other customers to buy his product using "reckless sales talk", despite acknowledging the dangers in online posts, and used "dishonest" business methods such as disguising the packages of DNP with false descriptions before selling them.

DNP is often advertised as a slimming product but known side effects include multiple organ failure, coma, and cardiac arrest.

During World War One it was used as a base material for munitions products.

Rebelo's retrial heard how Miss Parry, a Wrexham Glyndwr University student, became "psychologically addicted" to the chemical after she started taking it in February 2015.

In a victim impact statement read to the court, her mother Fiona said her hopes for her daughter had been "destroyed".

image copyright Parry family image caption Miss Parry, from Shrewsbury, had been studying at Wrexham Glyndwr University

"Eloise had many problems in her life but I always hoped they would be sorted," she said.

"In the latter part of her life there were positive signs that things were getting better.

"When Eloise died, her life was undone and her plans were unravelled."

Speaking after the sentencing, she said: "At the end of the day, the sentence doesn't bring Eloise back. She doesn't get another chance, and as a family we have to go away and live with that.