A judge remanded in custody Tuesday a Spaniard suspected in the killing of a Dutch volleyball player and her boyfriend, whose bodies were reportedly found dismembered in a shallow grave, a court said.
The judge in Valencia remanded the suspect after questioning in a closed-door investigation into the killing of the Dutch couple, said a court official who asked not to be named.
Spanish media reported that the suspect was the former manager of a volleyball club in which the dead woman, Ingrid Visser, had played.
The bodies were found buried in a lemon grove in Murcia, southeastern Spain. Police said Monday they arrested three people, including two Romanians, in Valencia.
The court in Valencia was expected to question the two other suspects on Wednesday.
Police were waiting for the results of DNA tests to confirm whether the bodies were those of Visser, 35, and her partner Lodewijk Severein, 57.
The couple disappeared on May 13 shortly after checking into a hotel in Murcia.
The city's police chief Cirilo Duran told a press conference on Monday that they had suffered a violent death.
Spanish media, citing sources close to the investigation, reported that the two were found in a shallow grave, cut into pieces, and may have been tortured.
Duran said investigators suspected the couple had "business disagreements" with the suspects that had led to the killing.
Visser was part of the Netherlands's gold medal-winning team at the European Championship in 1995 and played for a volleyball team in Murcia between 2009 and 2011.