He also stabbed three other workers, leaving them with serious injuries
uae6 hours ago
The jail term of a Dubai- based former editor, convicted of hacking his 63-year-old wife to death with a hammer, was reduced from 15 years to seven years by the Dubai Court of Appeals on Wednesday.
It is the second time the court ruled in the case of 62-year-old British journalist Francis Matthew as it held a fresh trial by a new panel of judges, other than the one that had stiffened the penalty from 10 to 15 -year imprisonment on October 7, 2018, after it modified the charge of assault resulting in his wife's death to premeditated murder. The appellate court upheld the deportation order.
The new ruling may be challenged by both the defendant and the public prosecution at the Dubai Court of Cassation.
Matthew had his 15-year prison term reversed by the Dubai Court of Cassation last December. The top court had then referred the case back to the Court of Appeals for a re-trial by different judges.
Ali Al Shamsi, the defense lawyer of Matthew, earlier solicited the court to grant mercy.
The Briton, who is in detention, had been convicted of hacking his wife Jane to death with a hammer.
Al Shamsi earlier argued in court that his client has been feeling a great amount of remorse. "His act happened in a moment of rage. It was a mere result of verbal provocation rather than a deliberate act to hurt his wife. The whole thing has been tormenting him. He lost her (the victim), it affected the entire family and its stability and it cost him his career as well."
The lawyer then requested the presiding judge to be lenient towards his client and reduce his jail sentence to two years since 2019 was declared Year of Tolerance.
Earlier, Al Shamsi presented papers showing that the victim's father passed away and that her son already relinquished his right to pursue the case against his father.
The lawyer told the court that the son is now the sole heir of the victim after his father's death.
He requested then from the Presiding Judge to exert leniency towards his client stressing on the fact that he did not have any intention to kill his wife.
The journalist, a former editor of a local newspaper, was sentenced by the Court of First Instance to a 10-year prison term, to be followed by deportation, on March 25, last year, on a modified charge of assaulting his wife and causing her death. Prosecutors had initially accused him of premeditated murder.
The case dates back to July 4, 2017, when the former editor called the police to report that his wife was killed by thieves who had broken into his villa in Umm Suqeim 1 while he was away.
The husband eventually confessed to the police that he fatally assaulted his wife, following a heated argument, claiming it was not intentional.
He also stabbed three other workers, leaving them with serious injuries
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