A
wealthy British businessman who was run over in Ukraine was "murdered"
by his internet bride while they celebrated their first wedding
anniversary, his best friend has told an inquest.
Barry Pring,
47, suffered horrific injuries when he was hit by a vehicle - possibly a
lorry - while waiting for a taxi outside a restaurant in Kiev with his
wife, Ganna Ziuzina, on February 16, 2008.
Mr
Pring married Ms Ziuzina, a former stripper who was almost 20 years his
junior, in 2007 but his family and friends said they did not believe
she loved him and that she treated him coldly.
His best friend,
Peter Clifford, was best man at the couple's Kiev wedding and, giving
evidence at the inquest at Devon County Hall on Tuesday, said Mr Pring
was "totally under her influence".
He said: "There is no
reasonable doubt in my mind that Barry was murdered, nor is there any
reasonable doubt in my mind that Ganna Ziuzina either arranged for, or
was complicit in, his murder."
Coroner, Dr Elizabeth Earland said that "strenuous" - but
ultimately unsuccessful - attempts had been made to try to get Ms
Ziuzina to attend the hearing.
She read out a statement given by
Ms Ziuzina who said she had given three separate statements to police in
Ukraine and did not "believe I can add anything further".
Mr
Pring's brother, Shaughan, said he believed Ms Ziuzina was "only
interested in Barry for his money and saw their relationship as an
opportunity to better her position financially".
He added that
his brother was "besotted" by the woman, who he knew as Anna, but that
she "became very demanding", asking for money.
The inquest heard
Mr Pring, originally from East Devon, set up his own consultancy
business aged 30 after moving to the London area and that his career
required him to travel extensively.
His mother, Irene, said in a statement that her son started seeing Ms Ziuzina, who he said was a teacher, when he was 46.
She did not find out until later that they had met on a website - www.elenasmodels.com
- which describes itself as an "online Russian and Ukrainian dating
site for men who are looking single women and girls for friendship,
relationship and marriage" or that Ms Ziuzina was working as a lap
dancer or stripper.
Mrs Pring said her son frequently flew to
Kiev and started supporting Ms Ziuzina financially after she stopped
working as a stripper.
In early January 2007 Mr Pring told his
parents to expect an announcement and then phoned on January 23 to say
he would be marrying four days later.
"No one from our family
was invited," said Mrs Pring. "Barry returned to live in London. Anna
stayed in Kiev, moving to the apartment that Barry had bought ... we all
expected her to get her visa straight away."
But Ms Ziizina did not get a visa until August that year and then did not come to live in the UK.
Instead,
she visited for two weeks with her mother, before travelling to Devon
with Mr Pring to meet his parents for the first time.
Mrs Pring said of the visit: "I was quite surprised to see how cold she was towards Barry.
"She
was not loving or caring towards him at all. She never lifted a finger
[or did] anything. She was a lazy thing ... she was not providing a home
for my son."
The court heard Mr Pring, who owned a total of
five properties including three in the London area, bought another
apartment in Kiev and sent Ms Ziuzina £40,000 to finish it.
She spent that Christmas with Mr Pring in Devon before flying back to Ukraine again, his mother said.
Just before his last trip to Ukraine, Mr Pring told his
mother, in their final conversation, that the apartment was nearly
finished.
Mrs Pring heard about her son's death when his
brother, Shaughan, came to tell her that Ms Ziuzina had phoned to report
that he had been killed.
She said the family became suspicious
and hired a private investigator in Ukraine, spending £100,000 in an
attempt to find the truth.
"We are sure that Anna had some involvement in Barry's death in order to inherit money or property," she added.
"Our family has lost a treasured son, brother and uncle which will have an affect on us all for the rest of our lives."
The
inquest heard how after Mr Pring's death, Ms Ziuzina travelled to
London, sold her husband's Range Rover and the contents of his apartment
and removed money from his British bank account.
Dr Gyan Fernando, then a Home Office pathologist, examined Mr Pring's body after it was returned to the UK from Ukraine.
In
a statement read out at the hearing, he said there was no paperwork
returned with the body and that the cause of death was "multiple
injuries" including fractures.
He said the injuries, which
included "traumatic separation of the trunk", were "extremely unlikely"
to have been caused by a car and that it was more likely Mr Pring had
been run over by a heavy vehicle such as a truck.
The
inquest heard that blood tests revealed alcohol in Mr Pring's blood at
the time of his death, which indicated that he was likely to have been
intoxicated to some degree.
The case was investigated as an
unexplained road traffic accident but police in the Ukraine upgraded
their inquiry to a murder hunt in 2011.
SOURCE ... UK Mirror
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