Gay man kills wife and burns her body after marrying her to hide his sexuality
A bank worker who married to conceal
his homosexuality strangled his wife a few months later with a metal
vacuum pipe, a court heard yesterday.
Jasvir
Ram Ginday throttled Varkha Rani and tried to destroy her remains in an
incinerator after going through with the arranged marriage to please
his parents.
The couple tied
the knot in a lavish ceremony in India last March – even though Ginday,
30, had confided in a friend years earlier that he was attracted to
men, the jury were told. Continue...
The
defendant had travelled to the subcontinent with his mother to find a
bride and met several women before a match-maker known to both families
introduced him to Miss Rani.
Prosecutor
Debbie Gould told a jury the couple became engaged ‘at the end of a
meeting which lasted several hours’, with Miss Rani’s family believing
Ginday to be ‘a perfect match for their intelligent, well-educated, and
attractive young daughter’.
The
bride, who had completed a degree and a master’s degree in science and
information technology in India, moved to the UK to live with Ginday in
August after being granted a visa.
But
just a month later, police discovered the unrecognisable remains of the
24-year-old bride in the back garden of the home they shared with other
members of Ginday’s family.
Miss Gould said that after killing his
wife, Ginday had forced her body into a 22-inch deep metal incinerator
in an alley beside their home.
He called police that night to report her
missing – claiming she had walked out after assaulting him and had only
married him for a visa to get into the UK.
Miss
Gould said: ‘His ultimate intention was to play the role of victim,
safe in the knowledge that he could rely on his married status as a
permanent excuse for never having another relationship with a
woman...his respectability and that of his family’s would be secured.’
She
said Miss Rani was ‘in all senses a stranger in a strange land’
following her arrival in the UK last August, and appeared to be
isolated, friendless and alone.
The
financially secure defendant, meanwhile, was ‘staring reality in the
face’ and would have had to explain any attempt to divorce his new
bride.
‘His marriage was motivated by a desire to please his parents and conceal his homosexuality from them,’ Miss Gould said.
‘Over
the years the defendant made contact with gay chat lines to discuss his
sexuality, he developed a network of gay male friends and he attended
gay clubs in the Birmingham area.’
The
court head Ginday and his wife had been alone in the house at Walsall,
West Midlands, on September 12, the day of the murder.
That
afternoon, neighbours saw smoke and likened the smell to that which
comes from a crematorium.
When one concerned resident knocked on
Ginday’s door, he claimed he was simply burning rubbish
Police searched
the property that night after Ginday made the missing persons report,
but they did not look in the garden.
They returned the next night after neighbours reported seeing black smoke for the second day running.
Although
Ginday had attempted to destroy his wife’s body, Wolverhampton Crown
Court heard that a woman police constable ‘lifted the lid (of the
incinerator) and found herself looking down on a human skull which was
severely burnt’.
Miss Gould
said the skull was not complete and had only a few teeth, while the
body was described as being ‘folded up and foetal-like’.
Officers also discovered Miss Rani’s wedding ring inside the 22-inch deep incinerator.
An
examination of computer equipment showed that somebody at the property
had searched for incinerators online around four weeks before Miss
Rani’s death.
CCTV images
also showed Ginday filling up a water bottle with petrol at a service
station just hours before the body was discovered.
Pathologists
later confirmed the human remains were that of Miss Rani and that she
had died from strangulation by a metal pole being placed across her
throat.
Miss Rani’s father,
Surjit Singh told the jury he had no idea his son-in-law was gay, and
didn’t even know what the term meant. He said through an interpreter
that he had been ‘shocked and distressed’ after British police had
explained it to him.
He
added: ‘Of course I wouldn’t have let her marry him if I had known. I
have never heard of it before. No, Varkha didn’t know about gay either.’
Ginday
denies a charge of murder but has admitted manslaughter and a further
charge of perverting the course of justice by lying to police. The trial
continues.
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