Murder: True Crime Stories - SOLVED: Anni Dewani 2
Episode Date: April 30, 2026After suspicion fell on Shrien Dewani in the murder of his wife, Anni, the case quickly expanded into an international legal battle over whether he would be extradited to South Africa to stand trial. ...As prosecutors worked to build their case, the question of what truly happened on the couple’s honeymoon became even more contested. In Part 2 of Murder: True Crime Stories, Carter Roy examines the fight over Dewani’s extradition, the courtroom proceedings that followed, and the testimony surrounding Anni’s killing. The prosecution argued that the attack had been carefully orchestrated, while the defense challenged the credibility of key witnesses and the deals made in exchange for their cooperation. As the case moved toward a verdict, it left behind deep uncertainty about the truth. More than a decade later, the murder of Anni Dewani remains one of the most debated and controversial international true crime cases. Head over to our Murder True Crime Stories YouTube channel to WATCH our video episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@MurderTrueCrimeStories If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Murder True Crime Stories to never miss a case! For Ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Murder True Crime Stories is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Serial Killers & Murderous Minds, Crime House 24/7, and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios YouTube: @murdertruecrimestories To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everyone, it's Carter.
Exciting news.
Video episodes of murder true crime stories are now on YouTube.
Every Friday, I'll be dropping a full video episode going deeper into the cases that still haunt us,
the mysteries that haven't been solved, and the stories that deserve more than just a headline.
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This is Crime House.
It's safe to say that most of us want to be honest,
especially with our family,
but the truth is there are parts of ourselves
we can't always share, even if we'd like to.
30-year-old Shrienne Duwani found himself in this very position
after his wife, 28-year-old Annie, was murdered.
On November 13, 2010, Annie was kidnapped,
and killed while they were on their honeymoon in South Africa. In the weeks, months and years
that followed, rumors swirled that Shrianne was involved, and once the floodgates opened,
they never closed. Tabloids around the world reported on every detail of Shrian's private life.
The secrets they uncovered were so explosive, they were almost more damaging than the original
accusations. And in the end, everyone suffered because of it. People's lives are like a story.
There's a beginning, a middle, and an end. But you don't always know which part you're on.
Sometimes the final chapter arrives far too soon, and we don't always get to know the real ending.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder, True Crime Stories, a crime house original powered by Pave Studios.
New episodes come out every Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday with Friday's episodes covering the cases that deserve a deeper look.
Thank you for being part of the crimehouse community.
Please rate, review, and follow the show.
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This is the second of two episodes on the 2010 murder of 28-year-old Annie DeWani in Cape Town, South Africa.
Last time I introduced you to Annie and Shrean, young, beautiful, and rich.
They seem like the ultimate power couple.
In 2010, they got married in Mumbai and jetted off to South Africa for their honeymoon,
but they never truly got a chance to celebrate because just a few days into their trip on November 13th,
a pair of gunmen hijacked their taxi and killed Annie.
Today, I'll discuss the explosive investigation that filed.
Although Annie's killers were found almost immediately, they claimed the entire hijacking was set up by someone else.
Those accusations led to years of legal battles, tabloid drama and conspiracy theories, and more than 15 years later, many people still aren't satisfied with the official verdict.
All that and more coming up.
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save the everyday with Amazon on November 7th 2010 28 year old Annie DeWani and her new
husband, 30-year-old Shrian, arrived in Cape Town, South Africa for their honeymoon.
Since meeting in London 18 months earlier, the couple had been through a lot.
Shrienne came from a wealthy family and had taken over his father's UK-based company,
PSP Healthcare. And though he ran the business with his older brother,
Shrienne definitely felt pressure to succeed. That might be why his in-laws thought he could
be controlling at times. He also wasn't the most affectionate, which often made Annie feel rejected.
At multiple points in their relationship, she considered calling off their engagement because of the
tension. But in the end, the two of them always worked things out, and by November 13th, it was
day six of their South African holiday, and the couples seemed to be enjoying themselves. That night,
After a long day of sunbathing and drinking at their five-star hotel,
Annie and Shrian decided to hit the town for some adventure.
At 8 p.m. that evening, they called up their favorite taxi driver,
30-year-old Zola Robert Tongo, to give them a ride.
Because Cape Town was notoriously dangerous,
finding reliable transportation was crucial,
and so far, Zola had proven he could be trusted.
He drove them to a late sushi dinner.
By the time they were done eating, it was around 10.30 p.m.
But the newlyweds weren't ready to hit the hay just yet.
According to Zola and Shrian, Annie was begging to see the real Africa.
So far, she and her husband had spent their time cloistered in luxury hotels and exclusive resorts.
She wanted to see where regular people lived, and Zola agreed to drive them through a township called Gugulethu.
Located around 12 miles west of the city center, it's an underdeveloped area with a high rate of poverty and crime.
Women are especially at risk of violence, especially at night.
Under normal circumstances, tourists wouldn't go anywhere near Gugu Lettu,
and no legitimate guide would agree to take them there.
Sadly, Annie soon learned why at around 10.45 p.m., their taxi was hijacked by two men,
brandishing pistols. Zola and Shrianne were robbed and thrown out of the car unharmed,
but the attackers drove off with Annie still inside. The next morning, police found her shot dead
in the backseat. Using fingerprint analysis, detectives located the gunman two days later on
November 17th. They were 26-year-old Zolili Munganee and 25-year-old Mismwa Mammu Doda Quabé.
Although both men confessed to the hijacking, neither one had a history of violent crime.
And they claimed that the whole thing was set up by the DeWani's taxi driver, Zola.
By then, Zola knew he was on the police's radar and hired a defense attorney who advised Zola to turn himself in.
A week after the murder on November 20th, Zola turned up at the police station.
He said he would talk, but only if he could work out a plea bargain for his confession.
Three days later, in exchange for testifying against the hijackers, Zola pleaded guilty to armed robbery, kidnapping, and murder.
Instead of the 25 years he would have normally faced, he was given 18.
That's when he dropped a bombshell.
He freely confessed to being involved in the hijacking, but he claimed there was another layer to the plot when the police hadn't expected.
Zola swore that the murder was all Shrienne Duany's idea.
According to the taxi driver, Shrienne paid him to set up a fake hijacking and kill his wife right in the middle of their honeymoon.
And apparently, Zola could prove it.
He confirmed that he first met Shrienne on November 7th, the day he picked up the newlyweds at the Cape Town Airport.
After driving them to their hotel, Annie got out of the taxi and headed to the front desk to check in.
But Shrian stayed behind to talk.
At that point, he'd only known Zola for about 30 minutes.
And yet, he allegedly trusted the taxi driver enough to ask him to arrange a hit on his wife.
He was willing to pay the equivalent of around $900 for the job.
And that was about two weeks of earnings for Zola in a good month.
And while it wasn't a life-changing amount of money,
he had five children and a teenage sister to support back home.
So even though he'd never committed murder before, he took the deal.
After that, Zola asked a friend named Monday to help him find a hitman.
According to Zola, Monday lived in Gugulethu and had the necessary connections.
From there, Monday acted as a middleman and put Zola in contact with the two hijackers, Zolili, and Kauabe.
But there was a problem.
Shrian only had U.S. dollars, but the hitmen wanted their money in South African RAN.
Shrian could have exchanged that money at his hotel, but according to Zola, he said the exchange rate they offered was bad.
So to save a couple of hundred dollars, Zola took Shrienne to a black.
market for the exchange. Zola said this took place at around noon on the day of the murder.
That night, Shrienne reportedly stashed the cash in an envelope in the back of the taxi.
Then the gunman hijacked the car at a pre-arranged spot, drove off with Annie in the back seat,
killed her on the side of the road, and took the cash.
After hearing Zola's confession, the police were split on whether to believe him.
Some parts of his story seemed unlikely, especially the idea that Shrian was willing to trust a man he'd just met to kill his wife.
But at least one veteran investigator, Lieutenant Colonel Mike Barkhaizen, took Zola seriously.
He knew from experience that in Cape Town, it was possible to hire assassins for relatively small amounts of.
of money. So while there wasn't any hard evidence to support the accusations yet, the police decided
to see if they could corroborate Zola's account. They ended up finding several pieces of evidence
that seemed to match up with his story. The first was security footage from the hotel the
Duwani stayed at in Cape Town. Cameras showed Annie checking in at the front desk when the couple first
arrived, while Shrian remained in the taxi for around four minutes.
He returned to the parking lot shortly after dropping his bags off and talked to Zola
for an additional 10 minutes.
There was also footage of Zola visiting the middleman, Monday, at work.
Those cameras also recorded audio, which Monde was fully aware of.
On video, he and Zola exchanged a few quiet work.
then walked into a back office, apparently to have a longer conversation about the hit.
Then, on the day of the murder, around noon, cameras showed Shrian leaving the hotel alone
while Annie sunbathe by the pool. This seemed to match up with Zola's account. He said this was
the alleged time frame when Shrian exchanged his money and discussed the details of the murder
with the hijackers.
Next, there was some suspicious cell phone data.
Zola told police that right before the hijacking,
he texted Shrian to confirm that he'd stashed the money in the back seat.
And cell phone records confirmed the two were texting back and forth in the taxi
before the hijacking.
But Shrian's phone was stolen by the hitman and had already been sold off by the time Zola
came into the station.
Since it was never recovered, and Zola had deleted his messages,
police couldn't confirm what the two men were actually discussing.
But at the time, they were sitting two feet away from each other in the taxi.
It was odd that they texted at all.
Finally, there was CCTV footage from the hotel taken on November 16th,
three days after Annie's death.
Zola claimed that by then the hijackers,
had already been paid, but he was still waiting for his cut of the money.
So he allegedly met Shrian at the hotel and received his payout there.
Sure enough, the cameras showed Shrian entering a small office in the lobby with a white envelope.
Zola followed him inside the room, then left with the envelope.
So far, there was no smoking gun that proved Shrienne.
Rie-N was guilty, but the circumstantial evidence looked incredibly suspicious.
That made the police wonder if maybe Zola was telling the truth.
The lead detective on the case, Captain Paul Hendrixa, knew that announcing Shrian as a person
of interest in Annie's murder would cause an uproar in the media.
At the same time, he felt like they had enough evidence to move forward with the investigation.
So, three weeks after the murder, in December of 2010, the Cape Town Police asked Annie's family
to come to South Africa and speak to the prosecutors in person.
That's when they learned about Zola's accusations.
Annie's father, Vnod, could hardly speak by the time they were done meeting with the legal team,
but the truth was he'd already been harboring suspicions about his former son-in-law.
Since Annie's murder, multiple people reported that Shrian was behaving strangely.
For one, he seemed unusually eager to cremate Annie's body.
On top of that, Annie's cousin had shown Vnod some text messages in which Annie said she wasn't
happy with her new husband.
A couple of them were sent just days before her murder.
Vinaud was still processing all of this when Cape Town detectives told him he had a
choice to make. In order to move forward with the investigation, they wanted the family's permission
to formally grant Zola Tongo his plea bargain. Similar to the United States, South African
prosecutors are required to consult with the victim's family before making a deal. While family
members don't technically have veto power, for such a high-profile case, the Cape Town authorities
wanted everything done by the book.
as painful as it was, Vinaud agreed to sign the paperwork.
He wanted to get to the bottom of his daughter's murder, no matter the cost.
The fallout from this single decision would cause an international scandal
and ruin more than one life.
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On November 13th, 2010, 28-year-old Annie DeWani was murdered in Cape Town, South Africa.
Three weeks later, local detectives had arrested three suspects.
Two men in their mid-20s, Quabé and Zolili were the triggermen.
The third, Zolotongo, was a taxi driver charged with setting up the hit.
And in early December, the authorities told Annie's family they suspected her new husband,
30-year-old Shrian, of being the mastermind behind the entire plot.
After getting their permission to move forward with the investigation,
On December 7th, the police got an official arrest warrant for Shrian.
He was charged with conspiracy to commit murder.
At the time, he was back in the UK living with his family in London.
The Metropolitan Police executed the warrant and took him into custody on Cape Town's behalf.
A few hours later, Shrian was released on bail with an electronic ankle monitor.
his family had hired a PR firm, which put out a statement insisting that he was 100% innocent.
But by then his arrest was already front-page news, and a week after Shrian was let go on bond,
a British tabloid called The Sun reported the most sensational story of all.
A male sex worker who called himself the German master claimed that Shrian had paid him for,
sadomasochistic sex. He said they met on three occasions in 2009 and 2010. Their last
rendezvous took place only six months before the wedding. These revelations came at the same time
that detectives in Cape Town were trying to figure out a potential motive. On the surface,
it wasn't clear why Shrian would have wanted to murder Annie. Yes, there were signs that
he and Annie didn't have the happiest relationship.
But at the time of her death, they'd only been married a week, and no one forced Shrienne into it.
In fact, when Annie broke up with him months before the ceremony, he was the one who tried to win her back.
So when the German master came forward with his accusations, a potential motive fell into the detective's lapse.
because Shrian came from a wealthy and conservative family,
some people thought he was afraid to come out to his parents.
The Cape Town police reasoned that Annie may have learned about his sexuality right before the honeymoon
and threatened to either divorce or publicly embarrass him when they got back to the UK.
There was no direct evidence for this theory,
but it could explain why Shrian may have wanted to kill her.
Of course, not everyone agreed.
Many people argued that Shrian was simply a scapegoat for the Cape Town police.
A few months earlier, South Africa had hosted the World Cup.
The country was expecting a huge boost to its tourism industry.
When Annie was murdered at the beginning of the most popular travel season,
some residents and local politicians jumped at the chance to blame an outsider
for ruining Cape Town's reputation.
As time went on, the tension between both sides only ratcheted up,
and the people who suffered the most were Annie's loved ones.
In January of 2011, two months after the murder,
Cape Town attempted to extradite Shrian from the UK to stand trial in South Africa.
The process would drag on for years.
Shrian's lawyers argued that he was mentally unfit to travel
because he had been diagnosed with depression and was reportedly suicidal.
At the many UK-based court appearances that followed, Shrian did appear to be distressed.
He seemed like he was sedated, with a glazed distant look in his eyes.
And because of that, a judge repeatedly delayed the extradition efforts.
In the meantime, legal proceedings against the other men in the case continued.
Zola had already pleaded guilty and bargained for a sentence of 18 years in prison.
One of the hijackers, Quabé, also took a deal.
He pleaded guilty to kidnapping, robbery, murder, and the illegal possession of a firearm.
More importantly, he agreed to testify against Shrian in exchange for his sentence being reduced from life in prison to 25 years.
Then there was Monde, Zola's friend, who,
acted as a middleman. And the police also offered him a deal, one with exceptionally good terms.
Monday agreed to testify against Shrian for complete immunity from prosecution. He would never
serve a single day in prison. Police explained that they considered his cooperation
essential to their case against Shrian. In an attempt to catch the biggest fish, they were willing
to give him a sweetheart deal.
The only person who didn't take a plea bargain was the second hijacker, Zolili, who was also
charged with kidnapping, robbery, and murder.
He wasn't offered one because the cops didn't feel they needed him for their case against
Shrian.
They already had the cooperation of the three other men, so his testimony wasn't necessary.
In November of 2012, Zolili's case went to court where he pleaded not guilty.
some saw the proceedings as a rehearsal for the prosecution's future trial against Shrianne.
In front of a judge, attorneys laid out a theory that fit with Zola's testimony.
They argued that Zolili and his co-conspirator, Kowabe, planned to kill Annie from the beginning of the hijacking.
Investigators could already tie Zolili to the scene because he left a full palm print on the windshield of the stolen vehicle.
but their most compelling evidence was the testimony of his accomplice.
On the stand, Quabé said Zolili was the one who actually pulled the trigger.
According to Quabé, he was driving the taxi when Zolili turned around
and shot Annie in the chest from the passenger seat.
The defense had a hard time arguing with that.
When Zolili was first arrested, he admitted to police that he was involved in the hygiene,
jacking and he didn't have an alibi that said otherwise.
Still, Zolili's lawyers claim that his statements were coerced by the police who were under
intense pressure to solve such a high-profile case.
According to Zolili, an officer even attempted to suffocate him with a plastic bag to pressure
him into signing a confession.
The police denied the assault accusations, but their alleged conduct wasn't the only reason
that Zolili insisted on pleading not guilty. Throughout the trial, he was adamant that he wasn't
the shooter. He swore that Quabé was the one who actually pulled the trigger. In the end, a judge
disagreed. Zololi was found guilty of murder. On December 5, 2012, he was given life in prison.
In 2014, at 27 years old, he passed away from a brain tumor while serving his sentence.
Until his dying day, he maintained that he wasn't the one who shot Annie.
By that point, it had been over three years since the murder, and Shrian's lawyers were still fighting the extradition.
The long of the proceedings dragged on, the more frustrated everyone became.
Annie's family felt like they couldn't get closure until Shrian stood trial.
Her father, Vinod, made several statements to the media, imploring Shrienne to face the music or clear his name in court as soon as possible.
Public sentiment in South Africa was strongly in favor of extradition too.
Many still blame Shrian for dragging their country's name through the mud.
Over the years, the African Women's League held several.
several marches outside the courthouse in London, encouraging the judges to stop delaying the inevitable.
In March of 2014, they were finally successful.
That month, the judge ruled that 34-year-old Shrian could be extradited to South Africa.
The British government chartered a private jet to take the 34-year-old back to Cape Town.
According to police on the flight there, Shrian hardly said a word.
He found a window seat, threw a blanket over himself and slept the entire way.
On April 7th, the jet touched down and he was shuttled directly to the police station.
There he was saddled with five charges, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, robbery with aggravating
circumstances, kidnapping, obstructing justice, and murder.
Even though he wasn't the one who pulled the trigger in the eyes of the law, hiring a
hitman would make him just as guilty as the actual killers. The terms of Shrianne's extradition
meant he would need to be examined by doctors in Cape Town and they would determine whether he was
mentally fit to stand trial. So as soon as he arrived, he was shuttled to a psychiatric hospital
where he spent the next 30 days. After a month, doctors decided he could, in fact, stand trial.
His court date was officially scheduled for October 6th, 2014.
When the day finally came, all eyes would be on Shrianne.
But even with the whole world watching, no one expected.
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Hi, I'm Ashley Flowers,
and if you're like me and grew up watching America's Most Wanted
and reading Nancy Drew, then hi, you're a crime junkie.
And I bet that passion for solving mysteries never went away,
which is why we've assembled a team of reporters
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Each Monday, my best friend, Britt and I will bring you a case
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So join us by listening to Crime Junkie wherever you listen to podcasts.
On October 6, 2014, 34-year-old Shriandawani was put on trial in Cape Town, South Africa.
He faced five charges connected to the murder of his wife, 28-year-old Annie, in 2010.
Ahead of the proceedings, Annie's family had been careful to maintain a neutral stance
in public. For years, they'd been encouraging Shrian to tell his side of the story in court.
Many of them had lingering questions about how he had behaved since the murder.
Privately, some of her relatives believed he was guilty, but all they could really hope for
was some closure. That had been hard to come by, especially since the tabloids had been dominated by
headlines about Shrian, not Annie. In endless articles, they dissected his rich family, his
sexual preferences, and his potential involvement in the murder. Annie's family hoped that in court
the emphasis would be on her instead. But on the first day of the proceedings, the media
circus outside the courthouse was once again focused on Shrian. The lead investigator,
Police Captain Paul Hendrixa, described it as the most publicized trial he'd seen in 36 years with law enforcement.
Not only were there reporters from around the world, but there were crowds of protesters, too.
Even after four years, many South Africans were still heavily invested in Shrian's case.
For them, convicting him seemed to be a matter of national pride.
things got so extreme that the police escort who brought Shrian from the mental hospital to the courthouse
had to take extra precautions. Shrianne was so hated by the public that the liaison team genuinely believe someone might try to assassinate him on the road.
Authorities even blocked off the path to the courthouse using chain-link fences with dozens of guards posted along the route.
when Shrian eventually took his seat at the defense table,
everyone could see that the past few years had changed him.
His hair had gone from a slick black to a powder gray,
and his complexion was noticeably paler than it had once been.
Still, he seemed to be calm and alert.
He sat up straight in a tailored suit,
ignoring the reporters who were still shouting at him from the hall.
but the real test was still to come.
Unlike in the UK or in the U.S., there's no option for an accused person to have a trial by jury in South Africa.
Judges and magistrates are the only ones who oversee criminal proceedings and make the decisions.
So both Shrian and the prosecution would have to present their arguments to a legal expert
rather than a jury of peers.
Other than that key difference, the South African court system is similar to its counterparts abroad.
Going into the trial, the biggest challenge for the prosecution would be establishing Shrian's motive.
Legally speaking, and they weren't required to provide one, but to convince a judge he was guilty,
everyone knew the motive would be crucial.
And so far, that was the one thing that journalists in the public couldn't really agree on.
Before her death, Annie texted her cousin saying she had doubts about her relationship.
That suggested something was driving her and Shrienne apart, but no one knew the specifics.
Some believe the couple had a major fight behind closed doors that drove Shrian to murder.
Meanwhile, the media had spent the last few years focusing on the salacious details of his romances.
few people other than the sex worker who called himself the German master
were willing to publicly acknowledge their relationship with Shrian,
but there were rampant rumors that he had been involved with other men prior to his marriage.
Because of that, the prosecution planned to focus on Shrian's sexual preferences.
They believed he was secretly gay and may have been pressured into a heterosexual relationship by his family.
They planned to argue that in such a conservative environment, divorce wasn't an option.
Shrian was left feeling trapped in his new marriage and looking for a way out.
The defense knew they would have to confront the speculation around Shrian's sexuality head on.
So far, he had avoided commenting on the rumors directly, mostly speaking through the PR firm he hired.
He had categorically denied being gay, but had never clarified his preferences in direct terms before.
That all changed in the defense's opening statement.
Through his attorney, Shrian announced that he was bisexual.
He said he had been with both men and women in the past and confessed to paying for sex on more than one occasion.
The admission kicked out the proceedings with a bond.
but it also effectively torpedoed a key pillar of the prosecution's argument.
Even if Shriyan had been in relationships with men before, that didn't mean he wasn't in love
with Annie. By putting all his cards on the table from the get-go, Shri-an addressed the state's
most damaging accusations. Even so, at that point, the prosecution couldn't back down from
their original plan. For years, they had been building their cases.
on the assumption that Shrian was not bisexual but exclusively gay.
Now he had put them in the awkward position of arguing with him about his own sexuality.
To bolster their point, prosecutor Adrian Mopp submitted Shrian's profile on the website Gaydar
into evidence.
Under the handle Asian Subgui 24, he described himself as a gay man who was filthy-minded
and perverted. There was also usage history showing that he was active on the site during his honeymoon,
both before and after his wife's murder. In fact, just hours after Annie's body was found,
he was messaging men on Gaydar from his hotel room, while his father-in-law sat grieving in the lobby.
These revelations dominated the narrative during the first few days of the trial.
But the most shocking testimony was yet to come because next the prosecution called the German master to the stand.
He testified that he met with Shrian on three occasions in 2009 and 2010.
Their most recent link-up was only six months before the marriage.
The German master told the court that Shrian even asked to sleep over at his place,
night, which was an unusual request for a client.
After that, the German master planned to testify that Shrian had mentioned that he was
getting married.
Apparently, Shrienne said he wasn't sure he could go through with it.
But before the German master could complete his account, the defense objected.
Because Shrian didn't dispute that he had paid male escorts for sex, his attorneys argued
the witness was irrelevant to the case.
While the prosecution claimed the German master's story was essential to establishing a motive,
the judge disagreed.
She ruled his testimony inadmissible.
This was devastating for the prosecution.
Without the German master's allegations that Shrian had cold feet,
they couldn't prove that he wanted out of his marriage.
But that didn't mean the case was totally lost.
lost. Another central piece of evidence was camera footage of Shrian exchanging an envelope with
a taxi driver Zola three days after the murder. In addition, police verified that the hijackers
had also taken around $600 worth of South African currency when they robbed him, which they
claimed was the agreed-upon payout for their cut of the hit. Altogether, that amounted to about
$900 U.S. dollars, more money than people would usually carry around in South Africa at the time.
If Shrian didn't need it to pay off the hitmen, he had to explain why he had so much cash on hand.
But the defense was prepared, and they insisted that Shrienne wanted to arrange a surprise helicopter
ride for himself and Annie. Shrian claimed that he had asked Zola about the idea and negotiated the cost
down to $900.
The story took the prosecution by surprise.
It was the first time in four years he had ever talked about a helicopter trip,
and they definitely didn't believe him.
Shrian never asked the staff at his five-star hotel to book a trip for him in Annie,
and right after the hijacking,
he didn't tell the police about the gunmen stealing $600 from him either.
Instead, he only told detectives that they took his watch and his watch
and his wallet, which had a much smaller amount of money inside.
The problem was the prosecution hadn't prepared to dispute this helicopter theory,
but luckily they still had their most important witness, so they called him to the stand next.
Zola Tongo was the lynchpin of the entire case, the only one who said he met with Shrian in person
and talked to him about murdering Annie.
If he couldn't convince the court that Shrian had hired him to set up the hit, then the prosecution had nothing to go on.
But from the moment the defense cross-examined Zola, he started fumbling.
He couldn't explain why he hadn't asked Shrian for more money.
Zola's cut amounted to a fraction of his monthly salary as a driver.
Plus, his taxi was impounded cutting him off from his main source of income.
The defense argued that it didn't make any sense for him to take such a major risk for such a paltry reward.
On the stand, Zola also claimed that Shrian called him the day after the murder to discuss the details,
but phone records showed that wasn't true.
He was caught lying red-handed.
All in all, he simply wasn't a good witness.
There were so many contradictions in his story that the defense applied for a special exemption called
a Section 174 discharge. Under South African law, the defense can ask for an accused person to be
acquitted if the prosecution fails to produce any reasonable evidence against them. In other words,
if a judge rules that a conviction is impossible, they can stop a case early and dismiss it without
requiring the defense to call any witnesses or testify themselves. The judge paused the proceedings for two weeks to
consider the motion. During the delay, Annie's family publicly criticized Sharihan and the press.
For four years, they had been waiting to hear the truth from him on the stand under oath.
But if the Section 174 discharge went through, he wouldn't have to testify at all.
Even so, most people expected the court to deny the motion.
Granting a discharge was a strong statement, essentially acknowledged.
that the prosecution had no real case, it would also prevent the state from ever trying
Shrian for murdering Annie in the future.
So everyone was shocked when the judge returned two weeks later on December 8, 2014,
she stepped up to the bench to deliver a blistering critique of Zola Tongo.
According to her, Zola gave evidence to the court that was so improbable and can't
contain so many mistakes, lies, and inconsistencies,
that one simply cannot know where the lies end and the truth begins.
Without Zolotango, there was no one who could definitively say that Shrian planned Annie's murder.
So the judge granted the Section 174 discharge.
Shrian Dewani was officially a free man.
The ruling caused outrage among Annie's family and the South African public.
After all that time, they were denied a chance to see him cross-examined,
to listen to his personal account of the hijacking.
Annie's relatives decided they weren't through trying to get justice.
In 2015, they attempted to open an inquest into a murder in the UK,
but in the end, a coroner denied.
the request because the crime took place in a foreign country. Three years after that, the family
released their final public statement. This time they acknowledged that they believe Shrienne was innocent,
but they still felt he owed them an apology for hiding his sexuality from Annie. Since then, Shrian
has done his best to stay out of the public eye. It's hard to imagine what he went through,
losing his wife, having his private life exposed for the world to see.
and being accused of murder and though he's a free man many continue to doubt his innocence no one
should have to deal with that kind of scrutiny for years on end but the true tragedy is that all
the focus on shrianne drew attention away from annie she was only 28 years old when she was shot down
She had so much life ahead of her and so much she still wanted to achieve.
Because of the blame game and the plea deals that followed,
we'll probably never know what actually happened to her that night.
For her loved ones, living with that uncertainty is certainly difficult,
though nothing is as difficult as living without any.
Thanks so much for listening.
I'm Carter Roy, and this is Murder, True Crime Stories.
Come back next time for the story of a new murder and all the people it affected.
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Natalie Pertofsky, Lori Marinelli, Sarah Camp, Terrell Wells, Leah Roche, Cassidy Dillon, and Russell Nash.
Thank you for listening.
Dead on a doorstep, gone after a hike, vanished without a phone, wallet, or trace.
Twelve of America's top scientists with ties to classified programs and not a single explanation.
This is Vanessa, host of Crimehouse 24-7.
These weren't random people.
They held secrets most Americans will never know about, and someone, or something, is making them disappear.
One researcher texted a friend before she was found dead.
Quote, if you see a report that I killed myself, I most definitely did not, end quote.
Since then, the cases have only multiplied.
Now Congress is demanding answers from the FBI, the Pentagon, and the Department of Energy.
And the question nobody can answer is simple.
Who is targeting America's scientists?
And that's just the surface.
We're going deeper on Crime House 24-7, where we cover breaking true crime news daily,
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