“Desperate Husband’s Bold Move: Could a Simple Meal Swap Expose a Shocking Betrayal?”

What would drive someone to believe their own spouse is trying to poison them? You might think such a scenario is pulled straight from the pages of a gripping novel or a procedural crime drama, but for Robert Knapinski, a 64-year-old man from Perth, Australia, it’s been an alarming reality. After years of battling a mysterious illness that seemed to vanish as soon as he left home, Robert became convinced that his long-time partner, Bozena, was spiking his food with something sinister. So, what did he do? In a twist worthy of a cinematic thriller, he set up hidden cameras and even swapped his meal with their son’s, hoping to catch her in the act. What he unearthed was beyond shocking—a toxic brew of selenium being poured directly into his drinking water! As the courtroom drama unfolds, with Bozena pleading not guilty to multiple counts of attempted harm, this bizarre tale begs the question: how far would you go to protect your own health when trust erodes? LEARN MORE.

An Australian court has heard how a man set up a trap to test his wife when he suspected she was poisoning the food she was preparing for him.

A Perth father had been suffering from a mysterious illness, which he claimed cleared up only when he went away on holiday.

Robert Knapinski, 64, was suspicious that his wife Bozena, 63, had been deliberately making him sick. In a bid to prove what she was up to, Robert swapped his meal for his son’s as his wife looked on.

He had also set up hidden cameras around the home, which revealed his wife of over 40 years was pouring dangerously toxic levels of selenium into his drinking water.

Selenium is sold as an antioxidant in Australia, and is intended to boost the immune system. When taken in excessive amounts, it can cause stomach pains, dizziness, vomiting, cardiac failure and even death.

Ms Knapinski is accused of poisoning her husband with selenium (Nine News)

Ms Knapinski is accused of poisoning her husband with selenium (Nine News)

After capturing the footage, he reported his wife to the police, and she was arrested in April 2023. Instead of drinking the water, Knapinski managed to hide 13 bottles away, which were then given to the police for testing.

She is now standing trial at the Supreme Court of West Australia, where she is accused of poisoning her husband and has pleaded not guilty to six counts of intent to harm endangering the life of another person.

Clinical toxicologist Dr Kerry Hoggett explained just how high the selenium levels were in the bottles, at 140 to 1100 times higher than Australian drinking water guidelines.

Ms Knapinski insists she did nothing wrong and just wanted to make him ‘more vibrant’ and was ‘doing it to make him feel better’, the Daily Mail reports.

Her lawyer has called her former husband a hypochondriac. She insists she was trying to help Robert with his health and to improve their marriage.

Bozena’s lawyer, Michael Tudori, says his client often worked two jobs and did most of the housework and cleaning. They claim that Robert complained daily ‘about some medical pain or suffering’.

However, Robert insists his now ex-wife was actually upset about an affair he had, which he says took place during a seven month ‘separation’ in 2021, and that she said she ‘would forgive but not forget’. During the time of separation, Ms Knapinski had moved into a bedroom upstairs in the home they shared together.

Robert accused his ex of spiking his water (Getty Stock Image)

Robert accused his ex of spiking his water (Getty Stock Image)

Robert had said he had been feeling unwell for years, but became suspicious in 2022, after he suddenly felt better when he went on holiday without his wife, during a four month trip to Poland.

When he returned from his travels, he decided to put his wife to the test, and chose to swap some of his food with their son’s plate, while she was looking.

He explained to the court why he did this: “[I was] just testing her reaction – I would think, if she poisoned something, she would react.”

Mr Knapinski confirmed he has been out of work for 40 years since suffering a back injury in 1988, but could not explain the nature of the injury or how it happened.

Mr Knapinski told the court he had received a meagre disability pension since the incident.

He denied the defence team’s claims that his ex-wife did the lion’s share of working and raising their son.

State prosecutor Brett Tooker said of their marriage: “As the years progressed, it became very unhealthy.”

Mr Tudori said Robert Knapinski ‘went to numerous specialists, dozens of specialists, dozens of other practitioners, he complained about lots of issues including a rash on his neck and abdominal issues going back a decade’.

They insisted that Ms Knapinski hadn’t meant to harm him, and insisted her ex-husband was a ‘hypochondriac’.

The trial continues.

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