40 years imprisonment for an American who killed her sister's fiancé with a "game"

Yesterday, a US court sentenced a woman to forty years in prison today who participated in the killing of her sister's fiancé by deceiving him with a game known as "the game of trust."

The "trust game" is based on people confronting dangerous situations, provided that their confidence in other players contributes to their endurance of those situations and their exit from them.

The court convicted Mrs. Anna Marie Choudary, 33, of the second degree murder for her sister and father in the murder of John Thomas McGuire in West Virginia in 2019.

The facts of the crime are related to the attempt by Chaudary, her sister and their father to manufacture the drug "methamphetamine" and their suspicion that McGuire would notify the police about this, which prompted the father and sister to plan to kill him at the father's house.

Chaudary said that they were having dinner at their home and with the victim on the evening of Valentine's Day in 2019, before her father and sister asked McGuire to participate in a "game of trust" that required them to tie their feet.

The sister struck McGuire's head with an empty wine bottle as he tried to loosen the chains, and Pride fell without dying at once.

The injured McGuire remained severely ill for three days, during which the father and sister tortured him before asking Choudary to finish him off.

Indeed, Chaudary attached McGuire's head to a garbage bag that left him suffocated to death.

Both Choudary's father and former sister were sentenced to long prison terms after being found guilty of murder in the same case.