Like Tree19Likes

Yoga ball murder trial

Reply
Page 3 of 4 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 LastLast
  1. #21

    Join Date
    Jan 2018
    Location
    Taiwan and HK
    Posts
    6,158

    Once your colleagues know about your carbon monoxide plans, time to go to Plan B for the murder.


  2. #22

    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Hong Kong
    Posts
    3,988
    Original Post Deleted
    exactly ! and the suitcase murder case (Professor allegedly was seen on CCTV moving his dead wife from their home on the university campus to his university office) proves the high standard of education . I recently overheard some university students at the bus stop openly ridiculing these "educators" lol
    TheBrit likes this.

  3. #23

    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Hong Kong
    Posts
    3,988
    Quote Originally Posted by shri:
    From the above article.

    But 10/10 to the detectives for exploring this line of investigation.
    the carbon monoxide alarm in the car was a dead giveaway

  4. #24

    Join Date
    Jan 2016
    Posts
    732

    “I didn’t listen when my husband tried to tell me he needed me,” she wrote in a diary entry from 2013.


    yoga ball murder victim's diary reveals she blamed herself for marriage demise

    https://sc.mp/2xBprif


  5. #25
    Original Post Deleted
    It only seems intelligent if you do not understand the concept of an autopsy. The autopsy showed that they died from carbon monoxide poisoning. The reporter needs to watch more CSI.

    Piss poor reporting from the SCMP.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/19/w...hong-kong.html

  6. #26

    Join Date
    Jan 2018
    Posts
    1,492

    The description of intelligent murder can apply if you look at it from the perspective of the planning and execution. It's a bit above the grade of the average thug who might stab the lady with the knife or hit her over the head. Of course when you get caught, you leave a highway full of trace and evidence and you try to explain it away with the excuse of killing vermin then you look extremely dumb but then again I question the sanity of someone making the choice to kill his wife for convenience.


  7. #27

    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    θ–„ζ‰Άζž—
    Posts
    47,971

    Might be of interest to those of you who remember this case.

    TWO YEARS later...

    https://twitter.com/Jay_Watt/...16304742690816

    gigglinggal likes this.

  8. #28

    Join Date
    Jun 2019
    Posts
    7,463
    Quote Originally Posted by shri:
    Might be of interest to those of you who remember this case.

    TWO YEARS later...

    https://twitter.com/Jay_Watt/...16304742690816
    Talk about slow bureaucracy! Two years! If he was convicted of murder, there should not be any debate about his professional conduct or negative impact on the medical profession. Yet it took two years for the Council to reach this conclusion?

  9. #29
    Quote Originally Posted by Coolboy:
    Talk about slow bureaucracy! Two years! If he was convicted of murder, there should not be any debate about his professional conduct or negative impact on the medical profession. Yet it took two years for the Council to reach this conclusion?
    I doubt he would have been practising medicine from behind bars.
    TheBrit likes this.

  10. #30

    Join Date
    Jun 2019
    Posts
    7,463
    Quote Originally Posted by traineeinvestor:
    I doubt he would have been practising medicine from behind bars.
    That's not the point though. The point is why it took 2 years for the Medical Council to come to this obvious decision when, at most, only a few months is necessary.

Reply
Page 3 of 4 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 LastLast