There was a lawsuit in Japan.
Major General Nopasilp Poonsawat, deputy chief of the Bangkok Police Department, confirmed that the suspect was Ms. Sherine Chong. The poisoning was believed to have stemmed from a financial dispute.
Police said that before the poisoning, Sherine Chong had invited five other people to invest in a hospital project in Japan. Specifically, the Vietnamese couple invested more than 10 million baht (about 7.5 billion VND).
However, as the project had not progressed for a long time, the investors filed a lawsuit against Ms. Chong in Japan.
The group of investors is scheduled to meet in a Japanese court in two weeks. In the meantime, Ms. Chong has arranged to meet with the couple to negotiate. They were originally scheduled to travel to Japan, but their plans were canceled due to visa issues. The meeting location was later changed to Bangkok, Thailand.
Victims of poisoning in Thailand.
Through Bangkok to collect debt
The group of six arrived in Bangkok at different times. Ms. Chong stayed in room 502 on the fifth floor of the Grand Hyatt Erawan Hotel, while the other five stayed in four rooms on the seventh floor. Initial negotiations were unsuccessful.
Those on the 7th floor checked out at noon on July 15 and Ms Chong invited them to take their luggage down to room 502 to continue negotiations. She ordered food and tea for everyone.
Hotel staff said that at noon on July 15, Ms. Chong was waiting alone in room 502. When the waiter offered to make tea, she refused and said she would make it herself.
The hotel security camera recorded a group of five people dragging their luggage into room 502. From 2:17 p.m. on July 15, no one left the room. On the evening of July 16, the staff discovered six bodies in the locked room and reported it to the police.
Major General Noppasin said that Ms. Chong mixed cyanide into tea and offered it to five people in the group. Ms. Chong also drank the tea and died at the scene. Police are investigating the source of the cyanide Ms. Chong used.
Lieutenant General Trairong Phiewphan, head of the Thai police forensic science department, revealed that cyanide was also found in tea bags collected from the room.
Initial tests from blood samples of six bodies conducted by Chulalongkorn University confirmed cyanide as the cause of death.
NHAT DUY (according to Bangkok Post)
Source: https://www.nguoiduatin.vn/nhom-nguoi-viet-tung-kien-nhau-o-nhat-ban-truoc-vu-dau-doc-tai-thai-lan-204240718103538081.htm
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