A womanizer drops his business after 40 years.. He got rid of his wife in an unbelievable way

More than 40 years after the disappearance of a young woman named Roxin Boye, a court said on Tuesday that it was now highly suspected that the woman's disappearance was a criminal act by her feminist husband who may have fed her to pigs on a remote Australian farm so he could have an affair. with another woman.

Roxlin disappeared from her home in Walgate, New South Wales where she lived with her husband, John, and their two children, on the night of June 5, 1982. Her body was never found.

But in 2019, after a series of appeals and investigations, police arrested John, 72, and charged him with her murder, noting at the time that the investigations journey was a "long journey" to get to the point where they felt they had evidence of an arrest.

And this week, as the trial began, prosecutors told a Supreme Court jury that John, then an ambulance officer, killed Roxlin on the night in question when the couple's infant children were in bed.

Prosecutors also raised the possibility that John disposed of Roxlin's body by feeding it to pigs at a local pig farm "he was concerned about".

And the police showed other information, according to the “Vice Us” website, according to which the husband had talks before leaving the ambulance service in 1988, with a number of colleagues during which he said that “the pigs leave no evidence,” and “they will never find them.” If you ever want to get rid of anyone, feed them to wild boars because they leave nothing, not even bones.”

According to police, the conversation took place in the dining room of an ambulance station in Sydney when John complained that police were having a "hard time" about his wife, adding, "But the pigs do a good job and don't leave anything behind," prosecutors alleged.

On another occasion, he allegedly told a woman with whom he had a later affair that the police searched everywhere including an old mine pit without finding his wife's body, and admitted that if he would have done something like that he would have "feed her to the pigs, there would be nothing left." to find it.”

 Defense attorney Winston Terracini argued, however, that "the dashed lines in relation to the somewhat false conversations [are not] confessions."

"You know, in your private lives, some people say things lightly but that doesn't necessarily mean they want to do certain things," Terracini told the jury this week.

 Attorney General Alex Morris alleged that John committed the crime so he could commit more seriously to another woman, Jill Clark, with whom he had an affair.

Morris noted that John had previously admitted to having a number of relationships with different women during his stay in Walgate, and considered himself a womanizer.

The attorney general told the court that John forced his missing wife to write two letters before her alleged murder - one that was found at Walgate's home after her disappearance and one that was mailed to her parents two days later.

In the letter to her parents, she allegedly wrote that she was going to South Australia or Western Australia to "start a new life", and "Please don't be hard on John because I left him wasn't his fault".

John, of course, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The trial is expected to last six weeks.

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