A man accused of murdering his wife who disappeared in 1984 was deemed unfit to stand trial on Monday.
William Hodge, 79, is alleged to have killed Marion Hodge, then 34, in Lockerbie, Dumfries and Galloway.
Court papers state Hodge caused Marion an injury by ‘means unknown to the prosecutor’.
Hodge faces a separate charge of attempting to defeat the ends of justice by disposing Marion’s body and personal effects.
The mother-of-two was declared legally dead by the Court of Session in Edinburgh in 1992. Her body has never been found.
A hearing at the High Court in Glasgow on Monday was told that Hodge suffers from signs of dementia.
Professor Gary MacPherson, 56, carried out a cognitive test on Hodge at a care home in Bristol in July 2024.
The consultant forensic clinical psychologist told the court: “He demonstrates a number of deficits in attention and he is unable to follow what is happening around him.
“He as deficits in memory and he wasn’t able to remember things after a short time.
“He also has deficits in verbal fluency – expressing two or three words after a long pause.”
In terms of a trial, professor MacPherson stated that Hodge would “struggle” to instruct a lawyer and understand the trial process.
The professor, however, did say that Hodge was able to understand the penalties that would be imposed.
There was an investigation into the death in 1984 and a reinvestigation in 2006 when there was no further action taken.
The matter was then looked at again in 2021 which has resulted in the current prosecution.
Judge Lord Mulholland fixed an examination of facts which is expected to last four weeks at the High Court in Glasgow in September.
The judge said: “It is crystal clear that he is unfit – in all the circumstances, I uphold the unfitness to plead motion.