A Darnozel butcher who bit his wife was sentenced to twenty-one years in prison



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He was legally sentenced to twenty-one years in prison for the premeditated murder of his wife by a Darnozel butcher on Friday at the Mansion. N. János He was charged with killing his wife, Judith, in the courtyard of the woman’s workplace on the night of May 27, 2014, then cutting him in the basement of their shared house and grinding the soft parts with a meat grinder. And he scattered his unburned remains a few miles from the house.

The first instance acquittal was issued in December 2016, but the Győr Sentencing Board annulled it. In repeated trials, the Tatabánya General Court acquitted the man because it did not see beyond a reasonable doubt that he had indeed killed his wife. And in his opinion, there was no evidence that the woman’s death was actually caused by alienation.

However, the appeals panel found the man guilty and sentenced him to seven years in prison for a fatal injury. In the judgment of the Curia, the Győr Sentencing Chamber correctly established that János N. was guilty, and in the second instance the appropriate logical conclusions were drawn, which had previously been omitted.

At all times, John N. denied that he had anything to do with the murder of his wife. Ultimately, he said he knew of no facts or evidence to prove his guilt. He said that he had not committed the crime with which he was charged and asked the Mansion to ratify the previous acquittal of the Tatabánya Court.

According to the third instance Curia, it is clear that only John N. could have killed his wife. Therefore, it aggravated both the qualification and the sentence and sentenced the man to 21 years in prison for first-degree murder.

In the basis of the sentence it was stated that the Curia did not have to decide what had happened, but what could be classified as bodily harm or homicide. To decide this, they examined John N.’s conscience and concluded that if the man had not wanted his wife to die, the process would have provided evidence that the man wanted to help his injured wife. The Mansion, therefore, investigated why the man had failed to help his wife save her life.

According to the court, it is clear from the perpetrator’s indifference towards the woman that the intention to kill led the man, and this is based on the disappearance of traces of the crime. The Mansion assessed as aggravating, among other things, the fact that he had committed a serious and offensive homicide to the detriment of the man’s close relative.

Top image: A Darnózsel butcher, accused of killing and cutting his wife, at the trial of János N. (k) N., in the Győr Trial Chamber on October 29, 2019. Photo: Csaba Krizsán / MTI



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