Gay pharmacist killed wife with Tesco Bag for Life then planned to flee with £2million insurance money

A gay pharmacist who plotted for years to kill his wife so he could start a new life in Australia with his boyfriend and a £2 million life insurance payout has been convicted of her murder.
Mitesh Patel has been convicted of killing his wifeMitesh Patel has been convicted of killing his wife
Mitesh Patel has been convicted of killing his wife

Mitesh Patel, 37, injected his wife Jessica, from Leeds, with insulin and strangled her with a Tesco bag-for-life at their Middlesbrough home, then staged a break-in to make it look like an intruder had attacked her and bound her with tape.

The couple ran a successful pharmacy together but their marriage was unhappy, with the husband repeatedly seeking sex with men he met on the Grindr dating app.

Mitesh Patel has been convicted of murderMitesh Patel has been convicted of murder
Mitesh Patel has been convicted of murder
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And he was secretly in a relationship with his "soulmate" Dr Amit Patel, who had emigrated to Sydney and with whom he hoped to bring up his and Jessica's IVF baby after her death.

The husband was convicted of her murder at Teesside Crown Court after the jury heard Patel had made internet searches dating back years, including "I need to kill my wife", "insulin overdose", "plot to kill my wife, do I need a co-conspirator?", "hiring hitman UK" and "how much methadone will kill you?".

Mr Justice Goss told the jury a life sentence was mandatory and he will determine the minimum term Patel must serve behind bars on Wednesday morning.

He will hear victim statements from Jessica's grandmother, father and a joint one by her siblings and cousins before he sentences.

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The jury unanimously found Patel guilty after deliberating for around three hours on the 12th day of the trial.

The judge told Patel: "You have been convicted by the jury and you will be sentenced to life imprisonment and that will happen tomorrow morning.

"I will also fix the minimum term you will have to serve before you can be considered for release in many years to come."

After the murder, police discovered syringes prepared with insulin in Patel's laptop bag and one was empty.

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Cleveland Police suspected he injected his wife to subdue her when she came home from work on May 14, then strangled her with the bag.

As she fought for her life, she scratched his neck.

He tried to blame the injury on an accident when he was working out at the gym that day.

Nicholas Campbell QC, prosecuting, said: "From various life insurance policies Mitesh Patel stood to profit from his wife's death to the tune of £2 million.

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"He was planning to use that money to start a new life in Australia shared with the person he really loved ... another man named Dr Amit Patel."

Despite his repeated infidelity with men he met on Grindr and also being in love with Dr Patel, the killer desperately tried to persuade his wife to have a baby using IVF.

When she voiced her doubts about going through with the process amid concerns about his infidelity, the husband texted her: "Ok then I'm telling you this then we are parting ways."

But she did eventually go through three cycles of the fertility treatment and the last was successful, resulting in three embryos which now lie frozen in a Darlington clinic.

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Weeks before he carried out his plot, Patel told a neighbour his wife was very trusting and that "one day she would end up getting murdered".

And during a family holiday to the Canaries only days before the murder, he messaged Dr Patel to say: "You know this plan, do you think we will succeed?"

Dr Patel replied: "Only you know the answer."

The defendant got no reply when he responded: "Do you think it is a bad plan?"

After staging the break-in, Patel dialled 999 and said: "Oh hiya, I think we've been burgled and my wife's been attacked."

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During the call, despite knowing she was long dead, Patel implored her: "No, Jess, come on baby, wake up."

During cross-examination, Patel said he had not tried CPR because he lost his "bearings" and panicked.

Mr Campbell replied: "And you weren't going to waste your time trying to revive the dead, were you?"