YOU (South Africa)

Jason Rohde in the dock

Suspicion, envy, deceit and violence – we unpack the key elements in the case against murderaccu­sed Jason Rohde

- BY CHARLEA SIEBERHAGE­N-GREY

HE LOOKS different these days. His face is puffier and more careworn and his skin is pallid. It’s hardly surprising really – having to sit in court day after day, listening while experts weigh in with testimony aimed at helping to prove a case of murder against you would takes its toll on anyone.

Ever since that horrifying morning in July 2016 when Jason Rohde’s wife, Susan (47), was found dead behind the bathroom door of their suite at a top Cape wine estate with an electrical cord tied around her neck, the property mogul has been fighting to keep himself out of jail.

His legal team maintains it was suicide but the state is convinced it can prove Jason (49) strangled his wife in suite 221 of the hotel at Spier Wine Farm near Stellenbos­ch.

After months of hearing expert witnesses testifying about what could have happened that awful morning, South Africans were riveted when the big moment finally arrived recently and Jason took the stand in the high court in Cape Town to give his version of events.

Was he telling the truth? It will ultimately fall to Judge Gayaat Salie-Hlophe to decide but Jason’s account did offer never-before-heard details about the events leading up to Susan’s death that weekend at the estate where the former CEO of Sotheby’s Internatio­nal SA was attending a business conference.

We take a look at some of the most fascinatin­g new informatio­n to come out of Jason’s testimony and ask experts to weigh in with their opinion.

HE DIDN’T WANT HIS WIFE TO ATTEND THE CONFERENCE

Despite there being a rule that no spouses were allowed to attend the Lew Geffen

‘She told me what a lying, deceitful f**king bastard I was’

Internatio­nal Realty Franchises conference Susan insisted on accompanyi­ng her husband.

The Johannesbu­rg father of three admitted he was terrified at the prospect of his wife being at the conference because he feared it could lead to a nasty showdown with his mistress, Cape Town estate agent Jolene Alterskye (37), who was also there.

“I was thinking the whole time something was going to happen, so I made an effort not to be seen close to Jolene.”

THE OTHER WOMAN

Jason testified that he’d broken things off wi t h Jolene (LEFT) after Susan had found out about her in February 2016 but in the weeks leading up to the conference he’d rekindled the affair. He admitted that when he travelled to Cape Town for work he hooked up with his mistress and they had sex. Jason revealed that even though Susan was keeping a close eye on him at the conference he managed to meet Jolene for about 10 minutes in a quiet corner. “We said hello to each other,” he said. But he says he hasn’t seen Jolene since Susan’s death. “She messaged me to ask how I was but other than that I’m not seeing her,” he said. There’s a chance that Jolene might still be called to the stand as a state witness.

HIS MARRIAGE WAS A WARZONE

Jason revealed he and his wife frequently argued about little things.

“Susan and I weren’t a happy couple,” he said.

He said she ate and slept little and was obsessed about his relationsh­ip with Jolene, often waking him up in the early hours to quiz him about the affair. He claimed Susan would call him up to 15 times a day and would take his phone away from him when he returned home from work at night.

Things reached boiling point at the conference. On the Saturday evening as they got ready for a black-tie prize-giving Jason told Susan he couldn’t be late because he was sitting at the main table. He claims she flew into a rage and opened a bottle of wine, which she started drinking straight out of the bottle.

He left and she later joined him outside the function venue so they could walk in together.

FIGHT NIGHT

Jason says when the function ended at about 2am colleagues invited him to an after-party but Susan put her foot down and refused to allow him to go.

He said he returned with her to their suite because he didn’t want to make a scene. While Susan was undressing he sneaked off to the bathroom to send a quick text to Jolene but Susan caught him.

“She just went loose [she lost it]. Apoplectic. Beyond furious. She told me what a lying deceitful f**king bastard I was.”

He said he retaliated verbally and it soon became nasty.

“We moved out of the bathroom. I told Susan I wanted to leave the room. I put my green jersey on and we argued. We had a major, major row.

“It was a loud conversati­on. We weren’t talking to each other, we were verbally shouting at each other and using ugly words. It was back and forth. We were screaming at each other, both using vulgar language.”

He admitted that as he moved to the door to leave and Susan blocked his way it turned into “a physical altercatio­n”.

“It culminated in me taking my right hand and moving her away. It continued for 30 seconds, a minute maybe. While this was happening we were still verbally shouting at each other. I was telling her to leave me alone and she was obviously responding.”

Jason then left the suite to join colleagues in another room for a drink but Susan followed him in her dressing gown and confronted him. In a statement read out to the court earlier he said that as they were making their way back to the suite she tripped and landed in a flower bed, allegedly cutting her toe.

He says during the evening he realised that divorce was the only option.

“I said yes, I’ve had enough, Sue. This is it. I’m done. I can’t do this any longer.”

He said all the arguing had worn him out and when they returned to the suite he got into bed and went to sleep.

“I can’t fight for three hours like Susan can fight. I just don’t have the strength.”

THE NEXT MORNING

Jason claims Susan got up at 7am and went to the en-suite bathroom. After she left the bed he says he fell asleep again. Later when he wanted to use the toilet he found the bathroom door was locked. When Susan failed to emerge he called reception and a maintenanc­e worker, Desmond Daniels, was sent to help him open the bathroom door using a screwdrive­r. When they got the door open they discovered Susan’s body hanging from a hook at the back of the door.

Under cross-examinatio­n Jason insisted he hadn’t strangled his wife and staged it to look like a suicide.

“The option was divorce, not murder. I made a lot of mistakes but I’m not a murderer,” he said.

HE ADMITS HE LIED

Jason admitted that in his initial statement to police he’d downplayed the physical altercatio­n he’d had with his wife in the hours before her death.

But he claims he did it because family members, including his father-in-law, Neville Holmes, were present and he felt embarrasse­d.

“Who wants to say or admit he had a wrestling match with his wife in front of the family?” he said.

He also admitted he kept Susan in the dark about how he’d rekindled his affair with Jolene. “Bottom line is you’ve got to be deceitful. Otherwise it’s not an affair,” he said.

 ??  ?? RIGHT: Property mogul Jason Rohde is standing trial for the murder of his wife, Susan. BELOW LEFT: How YOU has previously reported on the case.
RIGHT: Property mogul Jason Rohde is standing trial for the murder of his wife, Susan. BELOW LEFT: How YOU has previously reported on the case.
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 ??  ?? Susan Rohde shared this photograph of herself and her husband, Jason, on Facebook about a month before her death in July 2016.
Susan Rohde shared this photograph of herself and her husband, Jason, on Facebook about a month before her death in July 2016.
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