Boyle’s violence got worse as captivity wore on, Coleman tells court
OTTAWA — Joshua Boyle’s criminal trial heard allegations Tuesday from his estranged wife about his violent tendencies towards her before, during and after their captivity in Afghanistan, and the sordid details of their sexual lives that are now subject to charges he faces.
On the second day of her cross-examination, Caitlan Coleman talked about Boyle’s increasingly unsettled state as their time as hostages wore on, and her hope the beatings she suffered in captivity would end with their release.
The couple were kidnapped in October 2012 by a Taliban-linked group during a backpacking trip while Coleman was pregnant with the first of the couple’s three children — all of whom were born before the family’s high-profile rescue by Pakistani forces in 2017.
Boyle had violent tendencies before their kidnapping, but he became increasingly abusive towards her, Coleman testified. There was a reprieve of about two weeks after the couple returned to Canada in October 2017, raising her hopes that his behaviour had changed for good.