Husband murdered wife after she began new relationship, court told
Peter Nash denies murdering Jillu Nash and their daughter Louise Nash at their home in Suffolk last September.
A āself-pityingā husband murdered his wife and their daughter after his wife began a relationship with a colleague at the Homebase store where she worked, a court heard.
Police found the bodies of Jillu Nash, 43, and 12-year-old Louise at their home in Great Waldingfield, Sudbury, Suffolk, while 47-year-old Peter Nash was found covered in blood and holding a knife.
Nash had stabbed himself in the chest multiple times and tried to gas himself to death, prosecutor David Josse KC said.
He said that the defendant murdered the pair either late on September 7 or early on September 8 last year.
In a video played to jurors at Ipswich Crown Court, a Taser officer yelled at Nash: āThereās a red dot on you, drop the knife.ā
Mrs Nashās partner, Homebase colleague Mark Leamey, had become concerned when she did not respond to his messages late on September 7 and on the morning of September 8 last year.
He visited the Tesco store, where Mrs Nash also worked part-time, and then Louiseās school when he could not find her at her workplace, before visiting their home, with police called when there was no response.
The prosecutor said that Mr and Mrs Nash married in 2009, and at the time Mrs Nash was an Indian national.
She applied for leave to remain in the UK as the spouse of a British national in 2010 and their daughter Louise was born soon after, later to be diagnosed with non-verbal autism.
The family had lived in Leicester before moving to Suffolk in 2018.
Mr Josse said Mrs Nashās life ārather flourishedā in Suffolk.
He said that Nash was made redundant from Philips Electronics in the summer of 2020.
Mr Josse earlier told jurors that the couple āhad a difficult and unhappy marriageā.
The prosecutor said that after the deaths police found a series of videos on Mrs Nashās phone, of the pair talking, adding: āWe would suggest it appears that Jillu was trying to record this covertly.ā
In one clip, Mrs Nash tells her husband āyouāre a certified c***ā, and he replies āyouāre a validated cheaterā.
In a second, Nash asks his wife: āThe one youāre cheating with ā is he at Homebase, or Tesco, or is he a friend of the family?ā
In a third, recorded less than a fortnight before the deaths, Nash accuses his wife of being āa schemer, you cause chaos, you try to cause drama to get attentionā.
And in a fourth clip, he says: āThe past four months youāve been cheating,ā after which she tells him it is actually āeight monthsā.
Mr Josse said that āhaving killed his wife and his daughter, the defendant made a determined attempt to try to cover up not so much the killing, but some of the evidence behind itā.
āHe attempted to destroy his telephone, his wifeās telephone and made some attempt as well at their home computer,ā he said.
The prosecutor said police managed to access Mrs Nashās phone, where the videos were stored, but have not been able to access Nashās phone.
Police also examined a computer tower from the family home.
Mr Josse said that three TikTok videos were accessed at 6.25am, which he said showed the āembitteredā and self-pitying mindset from which the defendant had become entrenchedā.
One of the clips had the text: āA broken man who has rebuilt himself is very dangerousā.
A second said: āTell me why when anything gets rough in a relationship women are told to leave him and men are told to try and fix things.ā
The third, which showed Kermit the Frog by a fire, said: āDo girls actually feel for hurting a guy or do they just say their apologies and never think about how she affected his life againā.
The prosecutor said that Mrs Nash died of compression of the neck and Louise died of a single stab wound to the abdomen.
Nash denies two counts of murder.
The defendant, who has chosen to represent himself, was not in the dock on Thursday and the judge, Mr Justice Edward Murray, addressed jurors about this.
He said: āYou will see that the defendant isnāt here today, but you shouldnāt speculate about the reason for his absence.ā
The trial continues.