A Nigerian man, Olubunmi Abodunde, has beaten his wife to death with their son’s skateboard in the United Kingdom.
They couple arrived the UK in 2022 and reportedly clashed regularly over alleged affairs and bills.
Daily Mail reported that 48-year-old Abodunde had been investigated by the Suffolk Police over domestic violence and was due to be arraigned for murder but he changed his plea to guilty on Wednesday after a jury was constituted.
He was first arrested on April 27, 2023, when police arrived at the couple’s home in Newmarket, Suffolk, and found Mrs Abodunde with a split lip.
Later that day, he was freed on police bail with the condition that he stayed away from the marital home and didn’t approach his wife.
But after working a night shift at Tesco, he went home just after 9 am to allegedly pick up his mobile phone.
Two officers arrived at 9:20 am to take a statement from his wife, 41-year-old Taiwo Abodunde, about the previous night’s incident and heard repeated banging noises inside.
But it wasn’t until 9:55 am that they forced their way in after getting approval from senior officers and found Mrs Abodunde ‘obviously dead’ near the front door.
A post-mortem examination later showed she had been throttled until she fell unconscious, then stamped on until her ribs were broken before her husband used the skateboard to finish her off. The blows were so violent that the skateboard was damaged.
Prosecutor Simon Spence KC told the court the banging officers heard was likely to have been Abodunde continuing to attack his wife after she was unconscious or dead.
Judge Martyn Levett, sitting at Ipswich Crown Court, warned him the only possible sentence was life imprisonment.
Suffolk Constabulary has referred itself to the Independent Office of Police Conduct, which confirmed three officers were under investigation.
An IOPC spokesman said, “We advised two Suffolk officers that they are under investigation for potential breaches of the police standards of professional behaviour at the level of gross misconduct.
“We advised another officer that they are under investigation at the level of misconduct.”
Abodunde had a history of jealousy and suspicion and accused his wife of having affairs. He had been investigated by police a number of times over alleged domestic violence incidents before his wife’s death.
Mrs Abodunde had a job as a care home assistant in Cambridge, but her husband, who had trained as a civil engineer, was unable to find work in his profession and took shifts at Tesco and Wickes.
After his arrest for the murder, Abodunde was taken to hospital “because he appeared to have some sort of mental episode”.
He later claimed in a police statement he had acted in self-defence, saying, “My wife has subjected me to physical abuse for a number of years.
“On November 28, we got into an argument. She ran at me with a knife, I grabbed the knife and cut my hand. I was defending myself.”
But the court heard while he did have an injury to his hand, there wasn’t a knife near his wife’s body.
Nneka Akudolu KC, defending, said the level of violence was ‘completely out of character’ for her client and might have been affected by medication he was taking. But she said no medical evidence would be provided to support this claim.
Abodunde was remanded in custody and will be sentenced on May 9.