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Friday, May 9, 2025

Man who killed wife after her infidelity to serve 3 years in jail

by

Derek Achong
57 days ago
20250313

A 48-year-old man from Williamsville, who ad­mit­ted to stab­bing his es­tranged wife to death af­ter he caught her hav­ing sex with a for­mer part­ner, will be re­leased from prison in a lit­tle over three years. 

Roger Sewlal was await­ing tri­al for mur­der for al­most a decade be­fore he was al­lowed to plead guilty to the less­er of­fence of manslaugh­ter based on provo­ca­tion in Ju­ly, last year. 

Sewlal was in­formed of his re­main­ing prison term as he was sen­tenced by High Court Judge Hay­den St Clair-Dou­glas yes­ter­day morn­ing. 

Sewlal was ac­cused of killing his wife Shan­ti on Oc­to­ber 1, 2012. 

His wife and their two chil­dren, ages 12 and nine, lived in an apart­ment at Es­mer­al­da Branch Road in Williamsville which was ad­joined to an apart­ment shared by her par­ents. 

Sev­er­al months be­fore her even­tu­al death, Sewlal caught his wife hav­ing sex with a man, who she had a re­la­tion­ship with be­fore her par­ents arranged for them to be mar­ried. 

The man lat­er ad­mit­ted that they rekin­dled their re­la­tion­ship ten years in­to her mar­riage and they fre­quent­ly had sex in the cou­ple’s home when Sewlal was at work. He al­so con­fessed that he vis­it­ed her short­ly be­fore she was at­tacked and they kissed. 

Af­ter Sewlal found out about her ex­tra-mar­i­tal af­fair, she ob­tained a pro­tec­tion or­der against him and he moved out. 

The cou­ple’s chil­dren were at home with their moth­er and grand­par­ents when Sewlal en­tered the bed­room his wife was in and locked the door be­hind him. 

The cou­ple ar­gued be­fore he held her down and stabbed her sev­er­al times. 

She man­aged to run to the garage area when she col­lapsed and died with the knife stuck in­side her chest. Sewlal then ran away. 

He man­aged to evade the po­lice for al­most two years be­fore he was even­tu­al­ly ar­rest­ed by of­fi­cers of the South West­ern Di­vi­sion Task Force (SWDTF) at the Ves­signy Beach Fa­cil­i­ty in Jan­u­ary 2015. 

He did not re­sist when he was ap­pre­hend­ed as he told the of­fi­cers he was re­lieved to have been caught. 

“I fed up run and liv­ing like this, you wouldn’t be­lieve how I glad yuh hold me,” he re­port­ed­ly said. 

In their mit­i­ga­tion plea, Sewlal’s lawyers led by Se­nior Coun­sel Ramesh Lawrence Ma­haraj sug­gest­ed that Jus­tice St Clair-Dou­glas should be­gin with a start­ing sen­tence of 16 years based on the cir­cum­stances of the case. 

They claimed that mo­ments be­fore he at­tacked his wife, she told him that he was not the fa­ther of her chil­dren. 

They re­ferred to a psy­chi­atric eval­u­a­tion per­formed by psy­chi­a­trist Pro­fes­sor Ger­ard Hutchin­son, who stat­ed that Sewlal was act­ing out of a loss of self-con­trol as he ob­served his wife and her lover in the pres­ence of his chil­dren be­fore he en­tered the apart­ment. 

While they not­ed that gen­der-based and do­mes­tic vi­o­lence are se­ri­ous is­sues lo­cal­ly, they point­ed out that men­tal health is­sues lead­ing to such should not be over­looked. 

“In­fi­deli­ty and its psy­cho­log­i­cal im­pact have no­tably been con­sid­ered as an is­sue which leads to the de­te­ri­o­ra­tion of one’s men­tal health,” they said. 

“Con­se­quent­ly, this leads to ex­treme emo­tion­al and psy­cho­log­i­cal re­spons­es, as seen in the in­stant case,” they added. 

Jus­tice St Clair-Dou­glas de­cid­ed to be­gin with a start­ing sen­tence of 20 years be­fore he ap­plied a one-third dis­count for his guilty plea and de­duct­ed the time he spent on re­mand af­ter his ar­rest. 

Sewlal was al­so rep­re­sent­ed by Michael Rooplal, while Maria Lyons-Ed­wards pros­e­cut­ed the case. 


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