Aug 01, 2023

Ex-boyfriend jailed for murdering aged care worker

After reporting her missing, police found Jasmeen Kaur’s car still parked at her workplace. [Source: Daily Mail]

WARNING: This story contains distressing content 

The ex-boyfriend of aged care worker and nursing student, Jasmeen Kaur, has been sentenced to a long stint in prison for her murder with a non-parole period of 22 years and 10 months.

At an Adelaide Supreme Court trial on Tuesday, Tarikjot Singh – who was also a carer at Ms Kaur’s workplace – was found to have abducted the 21-year-old after a shift at Bucklands aged care home at North Plympton in March 2021. He then bound her with tape and cable ties before burying her alive in a shallow grave in South Australia’s Flinders Ranges. 

The court heard that Mr Singh and Ms Kaur’s relationship ended in early 2021 and a few weeks later Ms Kaur went to the police with her concerns about her ex-boyfriend’s behaviour. Justice Adam Kimber was “unable to find words” to encapsulate the horror of the events, but said the evidence was clear Ms Kaur had undergone extreme suffering.

“You killed Ms Kaur in order to punish her for not wanting to be in a relationship with you and for going to the police… I am unable to find words to adequately describe how Ms Kaur must have felt when you placed her in the grave and buried her,” he said. 

Mr Singh will be eligible for parol in 2044. [Image: ABC News]

The court heard police cautioned Mr Singh for stalking in early February 2021 and that Mr Singh wrote several unsent messages to Ms Kaur in the days leading up to her murder.

It also heard how Mr Singh denied any involvement with Ms Kaur’s death, claiming he buried her body after she had taken her own life. 

Mr Singh initially pleaded not guilty to the murder but changed his plea a month before his trial was due to start in March 2023.

The mandatory head sentence for murder is life imprisonment and Mr Singh – a student from India – will likely be deported when he is eventually released from jail. 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. He should have received life sentence without release for such a vile and violent crime. To brutally take the life of someone so young and bury her alive is difficult to comprehend.

    What is also terrifying is that this monster was working in aged care looking after frail, often voiceless elderly people.

    What type of management was in place to monitor care given? Heaven help anyone in aged care who he didn’t like!

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Elderly man fined for ‘disrupting’ sacred aboriginal site on his own farmland

A WA farmer battling cancer has been fined $2,000 for building a bridge on his own property under the Aboriginal Heritage Act. The court ruled that while no major damage was done, the site was altered without approval. Read More

Visas granted to aged care nurse and family days before deportation

A South Australian aged care nurse and his family have been granted bridging visas, four days before they were set to be deported. Read More

Industrial Relations Bill boosts union push for aged care wage rise

Aged care unions plan to use the recently passed industrial relations laws to push for the desired 25% wage increase as multi-employer bargaining becomes more accessible. Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version