A man has been found guilty of murdering his wife following a new trial eight years after being cleared.
Robert Rhodes stabbed his wife Dawn in the neck and was cleared of murder in 2017 after saying she had tried to attack him.
New evidence from Rhodes’ child revealed how he coerced them into helping with a plan to kill his wife and injure himself to make it look like self-defence.
Rhodes, 52, who denied ever planning to kill his wife, will be sentenced in the new year.
A new trial at Inner London Crown Court heard how, days before the attack, Rhodes asked the child, who cannot be named for legal reasons, to go to Mrs Rhodes and say they had drawn a picture for her.
Mrs Rhodes was then told to “close your eyes and hold out your hands”, at which point the child left the room.
Rhodes then stabbed his wife in the neck and killed her in their kitchen at their home near Redhill in Surrey, on 2 June 2016.
During the original trial, Rhodes claimed he had killed his wife in self-defence.
He said she “flipped like the hulk” during an argument at the home in Wimborne Avenue in Earlswood.
Later, Rhodes asked the child to stab him in the back of the shoulder before cutting the child himself on the arm.
In police interviews, the pair claimed Mrs Rhodes had swung a knife at the child and attacked her husband.
Rhodes claimed he fatally injured his wife while defending himself in the fight that ensued.
Surrey Police Det Ch Insp Kimbal Edy, told South East: “Dawn’s character was essentially dragged through the mud.
“Dawn Rhodes was a victim of murder and the child is a victim who was groomed and manipulated to do the things they have told us that they did.
“He has shown a high level of malevolence, manipulation, and I would go so far as to say evil.”


