The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fife woman accused of burying husband

Piano teacher arrested for ‘corpse desecratio­n’ after cancer death

- jonathan watson and leeza clark

A piano teacher from Fife has been accused of burying her husband’s body on her remote farm after his death from cancer.

Louise Khan, 46, moved to Portugal from Lochgelly with husband Alyn Pennycook.

It is thought the retired contractor died at their farm in September or October and his remains were discovered on February 9 by police using ground penetratin­g radar.

Ms Khan was arrested and held for “the presumed practice of at least one crime of corpse desecratio­n”. She faces up to two years in prison if convicted . A judge in Guarda released her from custody pending trial.

A Scottish woman is to stand trial accused of burying the body of her husband in the back garden of their home in Portugal.

Piano teacher Louise Khan, 46, was arrested by Portuguese police after the remains of her partner Alyn Pennycook were found on the remote farm where they live earlier this month.

Mr Pennycook, a 59-year-old Scotsman, is believed to have died after suffering from terminal cancer.

Officers believe he died in September or October but Ms Khan, originally from Lochgelly, failed to report his death to the authoritie­s in Portugal or Britain.

She was arrested and held in custody “for the presumed practice of at least one crime of corpse desecratio­n” following the discovery of the body on February 9.

She has since been released on the condition she reports to a local police station and is due to stand trial later this month. She could face up to two years in prison if convicted.

Ms Khan, who had lived at the property in Linhares near the city of Guarda for more than three years, is being assisted by UK Government officials.

A Foreign and Commonweal­th Office spokeswoma­n said: “We remain in contact with the Portuguese police following the arrest and subsequent conditiona­l release of a British woman in Guarda.”

Neighbours of the couple raised the alarm with police after growing suspicious when Mr Pennycook was not spotted at the property for several months.

Police located the body by using ground penetratin­g radar on land next to Ms Khan’s home.

An autopsy carried out on the body is said to have shown no signs of violence.

She was brought before a judge at a court in Guarda last week for a summary hearing where a lawyer asked for more time to prepare the case.

Miss Khan carried out piano lessons from the couple’s home in Lochgelly before they moved to Portugal.

Mr Pennycook was a retired contractor.

 ??  ?? Piano teacher Louise Khan, originally from Lochgelly, is accused of burying her husband’s body in the garden of their home in Portugal after he died of cancer.
Piano teacher Louise Khan, originally from Lochgelly, is accused of burying her husband’s body in the garden of their home in Portugal after he died of cancer.

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