MURDER accused Malcolm Webster wrote a grovelling love letter to his wife just months after she accused him of trying to kill her
MURDER accused Malcolm Webster wrote a grovelling love letter to his wife just months after she accused him of trying to kill her, a court heard yesterday.
The High Court in Glasgow was told Webster's second wife Felicity Drumm received the letter after he had left New Zealand, where they had married and lived.
The court heard Webster left New Zealand in February 1999 after he was confronted by Felicity, who believed he had been trying to kill her and cash in secret life insurance policies he had taken out on her.
The jury was read a note to Felicity from Webster which he sent on April 26, 1999.
In the letter, he tells her: "I still regard you as the most important person in my life. You are the person I want to spend the rest of my life with.
"We can get through this. I'm either an optimist or a fool, but I just went to tell you I love you."
Webster, 51, denies trying to kill her by drugging her and by staging a car crash.
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