The killing of Gurjit Singh was a targeted, premeditated attack fuelled by rejection and personal resentment, the Crown has alleged.
At the close of 12 days of evidence, Crown prosecutor Richard Smith told the jury at the High Court in Dunedin that the 35-year-old accused Rajinder had orchestrated an unmistakable chain of events leading to Singh鈥檚 brutal death.
Defence counsel Anne Stevens KC, meanwhile, told the jury the Crown鈥檚 case was 鈥渃ircumstantial鈥, noting they had 鈥渘o confession from a murderer, and no witness who saw Gurjit Singh murdered, and no reason why he would be murdered鈥.
Stevens suggested to the jury that alternative possibilities existed - namely, an alternative person murdered Singh.
On January 26 last year, Singh was found outside his Pine Hill home in Dunedin, surrounded by blood and broken glass, with 46 stab or slash wounds.
He had also been partially decapitated.
Smith told the jury the incident was not a 鈥渂urglary or a theft gone wrong鈥 but 鈥渁 targeted attack鈥.
He said that the night of the killing, Singh鈥檚 house would have appeared vacant and that there was 鈥渘o sign of forced entry into the house鈥 and 鈥渧aluable items [were] left untouched; drones, drone parts, the TV, laptop, even cash鈥.
He said the only reasonable conclusion was that 鈥渨hoever did this deliberately attacked Gurjit鈥.
The Crown alleges Singh returned home from a pizza party with friends shortly before the confrontation began.
Smith said the attack started in the dining room, where droplets, smears and cast-off blood indicated early knife injuries.
鈥淲hoever inflicted these injuries was determined and persistent,鈥 he said.
鈥淵ou can see from the scene itself that this wasn鈥檛 a momentary outburst.鈥
Blood patterns traced Singh鈥檚 movement from the dining room into the lounge, through the sunroom, and outside to a decking area.
鈥淕urjit Singh was putting up a fight,鈥 Smith said.
He then made it down the stairs of the decking area, where 鈥渇inally, the fatal injuries occur to him鈥.
Smith reminded the jury of 鈥渟awing marks on the cervical spine鈥 consistent with an attempted decapitation.
The violence, he said, reflected 鈥渘ot panic, not confusion, but persistence鈥.
Smith told the jury that while the Crown was not required to prove motive, Smith offered a theory of resentment and personal grievance.
Rajinder, he said, had previously been presented as a possible match for the woman Singh eventually married.
However, he was rejected by the woman, and later learned of her marriage to Singh.
Later, a proposal by Rajinder to marry Singh鈥檚 sister was also rejected by Singh.
A police cordon in place outside the home of Gurjit Singh in the days following the killing. Photo / Ben Tomsett
At the time of the killing, Singh was living alone and preparing for his wife鈥檚 return to New Zealand.
Smith described this as a 鈥渨indow of opportunity鈥.
Smith told the jury that the day before the killing, Rajinder visited several retailers, including Bunnings and Torpedo7.
CCTV footage showed him buying gloves and a knife, though in his two-and-a-half-hour police interview, he never mentioned these visits.
鈥淗e鈥檚 asked a number of times what he was doing Sunday and Monday,鈥 Smith said.
鈥淗e never once mentioned that he bought a knife. Or that he went to Torpedo7. Or that he bought a mountain bike. Why? Because it鈥檚 harder to replace small, incomplete truths.鈥
Smith dismissed the defence suggestion that Rajinder wasn鈥檛 hiding anything because he used his own bank card and even signed up for a store membership.
鈥淯ntil the police had him in mind as a suspect, there was no need to hide the purchases,鈥 he said.
According to Smith, Rajinder only became a person of interest when he turned up at the police station with an unexplained hand injury and 鈥渓ied about when and how it had occurred.鈥
Rajinder initially told police he cut himself with a chainsaw, Smith said.

A section of Hillary St in Pine Hill was cordoned off as investigators inspected the scene of Gurjit Singh鈥檚 death. Photo / Peter Macintosh
Once confronted with timestamps showing he had no injury the day before, his explanation changed to a mountain-bike crash.
鈥淩eally?鈥 Smith said.
He said that doctors described the wound as consistent with a sharp blade, not a fall.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no grazing. No marks you鈥檇 expect from hitting the ground.鈥
Rajinder also failed to mention significant bruising on his abdomen during his police interview, despite being asked twice about other injuries, Smith said.
The mountain bike itself, Smith said, did not support Rajinder鈥檚 explanation.
The Crown says Rajinder鈥檚 own movements after the attack further implicate him, as blood from both Rajinder and Singh was found in and on his vehicle, including on a seatbelt, a sun visor and a doorframe.
Smith said this aligned with the Crown鈥檚 theory that he returned to his van after the attack, placed items inside, and unintentionally smeared blood on the car.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a story that only makes sense when you see it all together,鈥 Smith told the jury.
Stevens KC challenged the Crown鈥檚 evidence, saying each piece of circumstantial evidence was 鈥渁 thread - combine them all, and according to the Crown, you have a rope. It鈥檚 a nice analogy, but what if each piece is flawed? The rope cannot bear the weight the Crown asks you to put on it.鈥
Stevens specifically questioned the knife alleged to have been purchased by Rajinder from Hunting and Fishing on the day of the killing.
鈥淭here is no evidence that this knife was used in the killing,鈥 she said, noting that Rajinder already had knives at home 鈥渢hat would do the job if he was set on murder鈥.
She argued the purchase of a knife and gloves that day had a simple, innocent explanation: 鈥淭hey are work tools鈥.
Stevens reminded the jury that alternate explanations exist, including the possibility the murderer was someone else with a grievance, or even a stranger.
The trial continues.
Ben Tomsett is a multimedia journalist based in Dunedin. He joined the Herald in 2023.
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