I’m ‘wholly responsible’ for my wife’s death – Rohde
As the court sessions get under way, the property mogul and his defence will need to prove that his wife committed suicide by hanging herself.
Murder accused Jason Rohde during his trial at the Western Cape High Court on February 27, 2018 in Cape Town. Picture: Gallo Images
Today Jason Rohde continued to argue that his wife Susan’s death was a suicide while still saying he “responsible for her taking her own life” through his adultery.
“I can look at my children in the face knowing that I didn’t kill their mom,” he said.
Rohde continued that while he was guilty “of being an adulterer” and having “destroyed the lives” of his three children, he was no murderer.
According to testimony given by Rohde earlier in the week, his infidelity caused their relationship to unravel. Susan discovered he had not been faithful in February 2016, when she found a Valentine’s Day card in his overnight bag on his return from a work trip to Cape Town.
Rohde testified that his spouse became obsessed after learning of his affair with a colleague. He said that resulted in constant marital conflict.
Rohde told the court his wife was devastated when she learned of the affair and wanted to know every detail. He claims to have stopped the affair in an attempt to save their marriage, but admits to rekindling it a few months later.
The accused claims that his infidelity caused her to hang herself. “She couldn’t believe what I had done to her,” he said. He also claimed he told her he would be divorcing her a short while before she allegedly committed suicide.
An uphill battle
Rohde and his defence will need to prove that his wife committed suicide by hanging herself with a hair-iron cord, a difficult task since the state, which believes he murdered her, have as evidence a strong postmortem report that suggests she was strangled rather than hanged.
Severe bruising also seemed incompatible with the defence’s story of suicide. Also, the postmortem suggested she swallowed large quantities of blood in her last hours alive, caused by blunt force trauma on the right side of her chest.
The accused’s lawyer at the time of his wife’s death, Noorudien Hassan, is no longer alive. He was shot several times while in a car outside his home in Lansdowne in late 2016 in an incident that is believed by some to be linked to gangsterism in the Western Cape.
For more news your way
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.