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Woodlands double murder: Accused told wife to ‘let go’ as he strangled her

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Psychiatrist says Teo Ghim Heng's behaviour was logical and showed planning

Three minutes into strangling his pregnant wife with a towel to "shut her up" for belittling him, Teo Ghim Heng decided to kill her.

As Madam Choong Pei Shan struggled for her life, he told her: "Shan, you got to let go already, I owe a lot of money. If you struggle, you will suffer."

After making sure she was dead, Teo asked his four-year-old daughter to sit on his lap.

"Don't be scared, Papa is here," he told her.

The girl cried as he tightened the towel around her neck.

"Go find your mummy first. Papa will come soon," he said.

Teo's chilling account of how he killed his wife and child, told to Dr Derrick Yeo of the Institute of Mental Health (IMH), emerged in court when the psychiatrist took the stand yesterday, the third day of his murder trial.

The 43-year-old faces two counts of murder for strangling Madam Choong, 39, and the couple's daughter Zi Ning, in their Woodlands flat on Jan 20, 2017.

Teo spent a week in the flat with the bodies, and he burned them before the deaths were discovered on Jan 28, the first day of the Chinese New Year, after Madam Choong's family called the police.

Dr Yeo, who saw Teo six times and interviewed his family members and co-workers, concluded the former property agent was not suffering from any mental disorder when he committed the killings.

The psychiatrist said Teo's behaviour was logical, goal-directed and showed planning.

On the morning of Jan 20, 2017, Teo and Madam Choong quarrelled after she questioned why Teo had changed Zi Ning out of her school uniform.

When he said she could be chased out of school because he had not paid her fees for the past two months, Madam Choong mocked him in front of their daughter, he said.

Teo said he was angered when his wife called him useless and said she should not have married him. He went to the bathroom to get a towel, looped it around her neck and pulled.

Three minutes in, he decided to kill her and their daughter and then commit suicide to "reunite the family".

Teo, who was mired in debt, told Dr Yeo that he decided to end all their lives because he did not want them to be hounded by creditors.

'OBJECTIVE CHOICES'

Dr Yeo said: "He was able to make objective choices and consider alternatives to his behaviour. His action to kill his wife was not something that was out of his control."

The psychiatrist said when Teo told his wife to "let go", he was trying to convince her and justify to himself that ending their lives was the correct decision.

Teo also told Dr Yeo he killed Zi Ning because he reasoned nobody else could give her the same level of care that he and his wife had.

After killing his wife and daughter, Teo tried to slash his wrist but the cut was superficial. He also downed Panadol tablets and drank diluted insecticide.

Dr Yeo said: "He wanted to die on his own terms. Many of the attempts were either too painful, too difficult or not successful."

Teo wrote four suicide notes, including instructions for his wife's mobile phone, which contained photos and videos of Zi Ning, to be handed over to the girl's grandparents, as well as instructions for how the couple's assets should be divided.

This showed planning and forward thinking, said Dr Yeo.

The court also heard that days after he was arrested for the double murder, Teo told a Changi General Hospital psychiatrist that he had "no regrets".

His only regret was that he had to take the life of his innocent young daughter, said Teo, who was treated at CGH for a Panadol overdose.

The trial continues today.

COURT & CRIME