David Hunter sentencing: Brit expat smiles as he walks free from court after smothering cancer-stricken wife in Cyprus | The Sun

A BRITISH pensioner jailed for killing his terminally ill wife after she "begged" him to smiled as he walked free today.

David Hunter, 76, was cleared of murder but instead found guilty of manslaughter after smothering his cancer-stricken wife Janice at their home in Cyprus.



Hunter, originally from Northumberland, was today handed a two-year sentence by judges.

But he has been allowed to return home, having already served 19 months in custody.

Teary-eyed Hunter was pictured smiling as he left Paphos District Court after a trial that has lasted more than a year.

Michael Polak, the British lawyer who heads Justice Abroad, said: "We are very pleased with the sentence of the court today."

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Hunter's legal team had argued he should be given a suspended sentence, in a case which is a legal first in the country.

In mitigation last week, his defence lawyer, Ritsa Pekri, said his motive was to "liberate his wife from all that she was going through due to her health conditions".

Hunter previously admitted to using his bare hands to suffocate his wife of 56 years Janice in December 2021.

But the retired miner insisted he only agreed to do it after the 74-year-old “begged me for weeks” to end her excruciating pain from advanced leukemia.

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In May, the grandad – who has become increasingly frail during the trial – broke down in tears as he relived the moments before Janice died in his arms at their home.

Hunter told the trial that he would "never in a million years" have taken Janice's life unless she had asked him to.

He added: "She wasn't just my wife, she was my best friend."

Hunter showed the court how he held his hands over his wife's mouth and nose and said he eventually decided to grant his wife's wish after she became "hysterical".

He said: "For five or six weeks before she died she was asking me to help her. She was asking me more every day.

"In the last week she was crying and begging me. Every day she asked me a bit more intensely to do it."

Before he finished giving evidence, he asked to address the judge, who he told: "My wife was suffering and she actually said: 'I don't want to live any more,' and I still said no.

"Then she started to become hysterical. I was hoping she would change her mind. I loved her so much. I did not plan it, I swear to God."

After giving evidence Hunter told reporters his time in a Cypriot prison was "nothing" compared to the last six months of Janice's life.

He told the court he tried to kill himself after his wife's death.

At trial, the prosecution said he "had decided to kill her and there was no common consent".

During closing speeches in June, his defence team said it was not a case of premeditated murder and Hunter "acted spontaneously" to end his wife's life "upon her begging him to do so".

They also argued a confession he is said to have made when he was arrested should not have been used against him, claiming he was suffering from dissociation at the time.

The couple, originally from Ashington, were teenage sweethearts and had been together for more than 50 years when they retired to Tremithousa, a popular village outside Paphos.

Hunter tried to commit suicide by overdosing on prescription pills moments after informing his brother, back home, about what had happened.

When police turned up at the villa he was slumped in a white leather chair next to the woman he called the "love of my life".

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Hunter also told the court how his wife’s sister Kathryn had died 30 years earlier from the same disease and how Janice, who had looked after her in hospital, had said: "If I ever have this illness I don't want to live."

As he was cross-examined by the state prosecutor handling the case, Hunter cracked with emotion as he was shown pictures of the crime scene.





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