Mariticide

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Homicide
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In English law
Non-criminal homicide
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Infanticide
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Mariticide
Matricide
Uxoricide
Filicide
Suicide
Regicide
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Feticide
Tyrannicide
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Mariticide (not to be confused with matricide); from the Latin maritus (married) & cidium (killing), literally means the murder of one's married partner, but has become most associated with the murder of a husband by his wife.

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  • Heather Osland drugged and had her son kill her husband in 1991, creating a test case for the 'battered woman syndrome' defense in Australia.[1]
  • In 1995, Lilian Getkate shot her husband dead while he slept.[2]
  • Thao Thi Tran was spared a jail sentence for stabbing her husband to death for the sake of her three children.[3]
  • Liysa Northon shot her husband in the head during a camping trip and pleaded guilty to manslaughter in 2001. The motive was apparently to collect on her husband's life insurance policy. For years leading up to the murder, Liysa concocted a series of stories and self-inflicted injuries to support the idea that she was being abused by her husband.[4]
  • Katherine Knight murdered her de facto husband by stabbing him, then skinned him and fed pieces of him to his children.[5] She was sentenced to life in prison, but her rejected appeal said that the sentence was too severe for the crime.[6]

  • In the musical Chicago, the killing of husbands is humorously celebrated by the incarcerated women in the song "Cell Block Tango".

  1. ^ http://www.abc.net.au/stateline/vic/content/2005/s1420450.htm
  2. ^ http://www.fact.on.ca/newpaper/oc981111.htm
  3. ^ http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/husband-killer-freed-for-childrens-sake/2005/06/24/1119321902679.html
  4. ^ Heart Full of Lies, by Ann Rule, ISBN 0-7434-1013-0
  5. ^ http://www.australian-news.com.au/Media/Regina_v_Knight.htm
  6. ^ http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/Knight-life-sentence-appeal-fails/2006/09/11/1157826846642.html

  • Uxoricide, the practice of killing one's wife
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