Husband's social media posts revealed after wife was found dead before Bali flight - as he's charged with her MURDER
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By CAITLIN POWELL - NEWS REPORTER Published: 00:26, 7 April 2026 | Updated: 00:47, 7 April 2026 A husband charged with the murder of his wife shared a series of social media posts before the mother-of-two was found dead by a roadside after moving from Bali to Melbourne for love. Eva Lasrini, 53, was reported missing on April 2 after failing to board her flight to Bali to visit her two children. Her body was later found in Little River, about 44km southwest of Melbourne, by Little River Road and Princes Freeway. Her estranged husband, Allen Keys, was arrested at Melbourne Airport on Friday before he boarded a flight to Bali and charged with her murder. He appeared at Melbourne Magistrates Court on Saturday where he was remanded in into custody to next appear on August 10. Ms Lasrini had been encouraged by close friends to seek family violence services in the lead-up to her death after a 'messy' and 'public' split from Mr Keys, Daily Mail understands. In the lead up to Ms Lasrini's death, Keys wrote comments belittling Western women and praising relationships with Asian women. 'It's funny western girls see an old perv, Asian girls see opportunity.' Allen Keys pictured left, with Eva Lasrini, has been charged with her murder Mother-of-two Eva Lasrini (pictured, centre) was found dead by a road in Little River, Victoria, after moving to Melbourne for love She was reported missing to police after failing to contact her family Another post said: 'Western females should realise that when they come to Bali their value is reduced substantially and nobody will put up with their s***.' He also wrote: 'I would rather be chasing Asian girls than stuck at home with a useless, sexless white wife but everyone to their own'. On April 1, the day Ms Lasrini failed to board her flight, Mr Keys posted images and videos online with another Balinese woman, captioning them: 'New girl new life.' He also shared videos making derogatory jokes about women and videos featuring right-wing 'manosphere' content creator Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan. Her friends paid tribute to Ms Lasrini on social media, saying she had moved to Australia for love. 'Eva met her husband in Bali and fell in love,' friend Gail Porter wrote on Gofundme. 'That love is what brought her to Melbourne, not for opportunity or financial gain, but to build a life with someone she trusted and cared for deeply. 'She came to Australia for love, and deserved a life filled with safety, happiness, and peace. 'After showing incredible strength, she was rebuilding her life from nothing and planning a trip home to Bali to spend time with her daughters, something she was so looking forward to.' Ms Porter said her friend was a 'devoted mother' to Evindra and Vanya, who remain in Indonesia. Sorry we are not currently accepting comments on this article.



