This is a headline from the BBC.
"Indian women lead night protests after doctor's rape and murder." BBC - india
When I read this headline, although it seemed ambiguous to me, I relied on grammer and I thought a doctor has raped and murdered someone, because it says "doctor's ..." (a possessive usage) so the following action must belong to the doctor. However when I read the text, I found out it that it was actually a doctor who was raped and murdered.
Such situations drive me crazy, when you interpret things based on the grammar, and the meaning turns out to be the just opposite.
Now, what I wonder, do native speakers also understand it the same as I did because the headline was not well written and ambiguous, or is it me that is missing something with the English language grammar?