The High Court on Tuesday sentenced a former university professor to seven years and four months in prison for the manslaughter of his wife in 2018 in a retrial.
Cheung Kie-chung, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Hong Kong, strangled his wife, Tina Chan, with an electric cable and transported her corpse in a wooden box to his office.
In 2020, he was found guilty of murder by a jury and received a life sentence. He appealed against the conviction.  
Last year, his appeal was successful, resulting in the overturning of the conviction and a retrial.
During the retrial on Tuesday, Cheung pleaded guilty to manslaughter with the prosecution's agreement, citing "diminished responsibility" as the basis for his plea.
 
According to the Homicide Ordinance, a person who kills another person shall not be convicted of murder if they were suffering from a mental abnormality that substantially impaired their mental responsibility at the time of the act. If this is proven, the individual will instead be convicted of manslaughter.		
		
		
		
		
		
	
    	