Plenty of Fish woman, 20, 'accidentally killed one night stand by strangling him with vibrator wire during sex game'

A WOMAN is alleged to have killed her Plenty of Fish date by strangling him with an electric vibrator cord during a sex game.

Jamie Lee Dolheguy, 20, is currently on trial for the murder of Maulin Rathod, 24, at her home in Melbourne, Australia in July 2018.


She is accused of killing Rathod after he drove to her home when the pair matched on dating app Plenty of Fish.

The Supreme Court of Victoria was played a recorded interview in which Dolheguy told police she had wrapped a wire round Rathod's neck during a choking sex game.

"I told him that I… wouldn't let him out of the house and he said he didn't care," she said.

She said her "bad side" came out when she was lying behind Rathod in a bondage outfit with her legs wrapped around him, and that she had asked: "What if I – what would you do if I were to never let go, are you strong enough to pull me off?"

She told police: "And he was like, 'I'm pretty strong,' and I'm like, 'Could we test the theory?' and he's like, 'Yeah, as long as you don't hurt me'."

According to her original testimony, she then strangled Rathod while holding him with her legs so that he couldn't move.

Dolheguy, who had advertised a bondage fetish on her dating profile, then phoned police and told them: "It feels so good."

Paramedics were unable to resuscitate Rathod, and he died the following day after life support was withdrawn.

'I MIGHT DO IT AGAIN'

At trial, Dolheguy pleaded not guilty to a charge or murder, claiming the death had been the result of a sex game gone wrong.

Prosecutor Patrick Bourke told the court that, in the hours before Rathod arrived, Dolheguy had Googled "I'm going to kill someone tonight for fun" and clicked on a linked with the title "10 Steps For Committing A Murder And Get Away With It".

Dolheguy is reported to have borderline personality disorder.

She had only been permitted to live alone four months prior to Rathod's death after carers at the Department of Human Services cleared her to do so.

She also told police she needed someone to "step in her way" because she otherwise might "do it again".

A jury were deliberating the case on Thursday.


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