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The justices also said the trial judge erred in allowing one of Robert Kissel's friends and a private detective he hired to testify that he expressed worries that his wife may be plotting his murder. The "prejudicial" nature of that evidence outweighs its relevance in establishing Robert Kissel's views on his marriage, they said. "It is plainly in the interests of justice that there should be a retrial," the judges said. It wasn't immediately clear how soon a retrial would take place. Hong Kong's Department of Justice said it will issue a new murder indictment but didn't say when. Even before the death, the Kissels' marriage was already in disrepair, trial testimony revealed. Nancy Kissel admitted that she had an affair with an electrician who worked at the couple's vacation home in Vermont. Suspicious of his wife, Robert Kissel installed spying software on his wife's computer and hired a private detective to monitor her in Vermont. She accused him of alcohol and cocaine abuse and demands for anal and oral sex. Robert Kissel's brother, Andrew Kissel, was stabbed to death in 2006. The Connecticut developer was facing charges of real estate fraud and grand larceny at the time. Andrew and his wife had looked after Robert's three children temporarily after their father's death, but custody was later transferred to the brothers' sister. Although Hong Kong, a former British colony, is now ruled by China, it has kept a separate legal system and maintains its own courts.
[Associated
Press;
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