Berlinah Wallace Threw Acid At Mark Van Dongen Shouting ‘If I Can’t Have You No One Can’ Murder Trial Hears

The victim passed away in a euthanasia clinic.

A scorned woman poured sulphuric acid over her ex-boyfriend leaving him so badly injured that he chose to end his life at a euthanasia clinic, a court has heard.

Berlinah Wallace, 49, tipped the substance over Mark van Dongen, 29, as he lay in bed at the flat they shared, telling him: “If I can’t have you no-one else will”, Bristol Crown Court was told.

The couple had been together for five years but had split up the month before and although Van Dongen was still supporting Wallace financially, he had started seeing another woman.

Civil engineer Mark van Dongen died 15 months after the attack, having been approved for euthanasia
Civil engineer Mark van Dongen died 15 months after the attack, having been approved for euthanasia
SWNS

In the hours before the attack, Van Dongen and Wallace had attempted to rekindle their romance but at 3am on September 23 2015, Wallace poured the acid over him, causing 25 per cent burns and devastating injuries, the court was told.

Wallace claims she believed the acid was a glass of water and denies murder and applying a corrosive fluid with intent.

She says it was Van Dongen who filled the glass with acid and tried to dupe her into drinking it along with medication she took in a bid to kill or injure her.

Van Dongen was left paralysed and only able to move his tongue, and had to have his left leg amputated. He also lost his left eye and most of the sight in his right eye, the jury heard.

Fifteen months after the attack, which occurred in the Westbury Park area of Bristol, Van Dongen applied for euthanasia in his native Belgium.

Berlinah Wallace denies murder and applying a corrosive substance
Berlinah Wallace denies murder and applying a corrosive substance
SWNS

He died on January 3, 2017 after the application was approved by three consultants who decided he met the criteria of “unbearable physical and psychological suffering″.

The couple had fallen out the month before the attack when Van Dongen began seeing another woman and moved out of their home and into a hotel.

He had told colleagues that Wallace was violent towards him, and on September 2 he called police, accusing Wallace of harassing him and new girlfriend Violet Farquharson by making silent phone calls.

Van Dongen met a police officer the following day but she deemed the messages were not threatening and issued Wallace with a warning.

On the same day, Wallace ordered a bottle of sulphuric acid from Amazon and a fortnight before the attack began searching on Google for images of acid attack victims, the court heard.

Prosecutor Adam Vaitlingam QC said: “The defendant denies that her purchase of the sulphuric acid had anything to do with the end of the relationship.

“She was to say to police interview she bought it because of a smell from the drains in the flat. She says that Mark knew she was buying it and why.

“He, on the other hand, was to tell police that he did not know that she had bought the acid and did not know that it was in the flat.”

After being doused in acid, Van Dongen ran into the street screaming for help, and neighbours described him as looking as though he had had grey paint thrown over him.

He was taken into a nearby flat and helped into a shower until paramedics arrived.

When police approached Wallace at her flat they found her sitting on the sofa with a glass beer mug on the floor beside a piece of cloth and a paintbrush.

Wallace was asked what had injured Van Dongen, and told them: “Acid. I was using it to distress some fabric,” and pointed to the floor before taking the officers into the kitchen and showing them the bottle under the sink.

Vaitlingam said: “Another police officer spoke to Mark Van Dongen while he was in the ambulance.

“He describes how Mark was screaming in pain for the entire journey, but remembers that Mark asked him to ensure ‘my girlfriend is OK’ and saying that he thought the defendant might be on the way to Violet’s address.”

A doctor at A&E in Southmead Hospital recalled how Van Dongen screamed “kill me now, if my face is going to be left looking like this, I don’t want to live,” after catching sight of himself in a mirror.

He was kept at the Bristol hospital until moving to care home in Gloucester for a month, before asking his father to take him back to Belgium.

Vaitlingam said: “His father hired an ambulance and made arrangements for Mark to be transferred to a place called Maria Hospital in Overpelt in Belgium.

“Over the next few days and weeks Mark was seen by doctors in Belgium. They confirmed that he was paralysed for life.

“He was taking the maximum dose of pain relief. He would have known he was extremely disfigured, that he needed constant care, that he would be in significant pain for the rest of his life.”

Defence barrister Richard Smith addressed the jury and said: “He [Mark] has bluntly told untruths to the police before his death.”

He told the court that Wallace had previously reported Van Dongen to police due to their volatile relationship.

Smith said: “It is understandable when you see someone covered in acid running from a building, you can understand that looks like a victim.

“It might not be all that it seems. From the very moment that Mark Van Dongen, if he poured the acid in that glass himself, he has become the author of his own misfortune.”

The trial continues.

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