Man accused of driving wife to suicide claims she lied about abuse, jury told

Beth CruseWest of England
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Christopher Trybus is charged with the manslaughter of his wife

A husband who is accused of driving his wife to suicide says she lied about being abused by him, a court has heard.

Tarryn Baird was making "demonstrably false allegations to health professionals" about Christopher Trybus before her death in November 2017, his defence barrister said.

Winchester Crown Court was previously told Trybus, 43, controlled his wife by using and threatening violence towards her, monitoring her whereabouts, limiting access to finances, threatening to reveal private information and isolating her from her family.

Trybus, from Swindon in Wiltshire, faces charges of manslaughter, controlling and coercive behaviour and two charges of rape. He denies all charges.

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Prosecutor Tom Little KC told the jury the defendant carried out a "tsunami" of abuse against Baird.

But Katy Thorne KC, defending, later told the jury Trybus was "never abusive to his wife".

"This without question is a tragic case, a young woman has died and she took her own life and nothing you decide in this courtroom can alter the grief and loss of those who loved her," she said.

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Baird was 34 years old when she took her own life

"The defence position is he didn't beat her, he didn't break her, he didn't coerce her, control her and he didn't cause her death.

"On the contrary, he loved her and cherished her deeply and his case is that without anyone's knowledge, Tarryn Baird was making demonstrably false allegations to health professionals," she continued.

Thorne told the jury Trybus's actions did not cause Baird's death.

"The defence case is that on a number of occasions Tarryn Baird made allegations of violence which were demonstrably false, for example, by reporting injuries to health professionals when Christopher Trybus was not even in the country.

"Health professionals were being told a false story and her boredom and troubled mind was leading her to make allegations to seek care and attention," she said.

The trial continues.

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