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FunTranscript
00:23They thought he discarded suitcases, thought nothing of it.
00:27Your body is your best source of evidence, but who's the victim?
00:32We just don't know.
00:33Why was she deposited in North Yorkshire?
00:35It was a mystery.
00:37Today, detectives said her death is being directly linked to the disappearance of another student.
00:45They were bound, they were asphyxiated with tape.
00:48There was so much tape on both of them, you could only see the forehead and the eyes.
00:54That might have been for purpose as well, to see the fear in their eyes.
00:58This was a sadistic killing, a torture, ultimately.
01:02The police would have realized they had a serial killer.
01:06We had a developing situation.
01:10Okay, where do we go from here?
01:14.
01:34Although it looks like a country lane,
01:37actually it's quite a busy thoroughfare for people on foot.
01:45It happens to be the road that you travel on towards the A64,
01:49which is the main Leeds-York-Scarborough main road on the outskirts of York.
02:03One morning, a villager walked past a hedge by the side of the road and saw a suitcase.
02:10Didn't think too much of it on that day and continued to work.
02:15The next morning, passed by again and the case was still there.
02:22He stopped, approached the suitcase.
02:28He picked up the suitcase and tried to move it and realised that it was rather heavy.
02:37And dumped it again.
02:39He thought it was strange, aroused his suspicion and that's when he called the police.
02:48An officer was sent out to have a look at his suitcase.
02:53Had a go at trying to open it.
02:57And to his horror, he was met with an eye looking at him.
03:05Obviously there was a body in the suitcase.
03:12He very sensibly left it there.
03:16From there we moved to the whole process of setting up a scene and moving into the investigations.
03:29The whole of that country lane was sealed.
03:35The gruesome find was made by a passerby on this quiet country lane on the outskirts of York.
03:40Since then, forensic teams have spent hours collecting evidence.
03:44And this morning, the surrounding area was covered with a special protective tent.
03:50The suitcase and obviously the body within was taken to a mortuary for a post-mortem examination.
04:13Sadly, she'd been dead for a while.
04:15She wasn't in a particularly good state to deal with.
04:20Elements of her eyes were bulging.
04:22It must have been a gruesome discovery.
04:26The post-mortem established that she was four foot, 11 inches tall.
04:30She weighed seven stone and that she was of Asian heritage.
04:35Aged between 20 and 40.
04:39The victim had no identification on her at all.
04:44It didn't look as though it had been a sexual assault.
04:49There was no evidence of that around her.
04:52Her face and head had tape wrapped around it and wrapped around.
04:59She was asphyxiated.
05:02Her hands, her face, her mouth and nose had been seriously bound.
05:06Clearly, with a view to cause death.
05:21We didn't know who the victim was.
05:24There's not a lot that you can do until you know who your victim is.
05:30We were left with, who is this lady?
05:35More importantly, how do we find out who is this lady?
05:45Locals in the nearby village of Ascom Richard said they were horrified.
05:49I was a journalist at the Times newspaper.
05:51This was passed to me to try and see what else I could find out about the case.
05:56It should have been a remarkable discovery for anybody living nearby to suddenly find
05:59that in the middle of a major news story apart from anything else.
06:02But to know that the body had been found down the road, it must have been shocking.
06:05It's just absolutely unbelievable.
06:08It's a lovely area and obviously no one expects it on their doorstep.
06:13The natural response to this would be to fear that someone in their midst had carried out a crime.
06:17But I think the police knew that whoever had done this had purposely
06:21gone as far away from where they committed the crime to remove all tracks connected to them.
06:26I think there was little doubt that a motorist had dropped the body off.
06:31The next thing that I will be wanting to do is establish when you think that the body
06:38arrived in your scene, because what you will know is that the body and the offender
06:44had to have been in the scene within that period of time.
06:48We were never quite sure when exactly it had arrived, because it turned out from inquiries
06:55that probably several people had picked up the suitcase at some stage or another in the last
07:01several weeks.
07:03The suitcase containing the woman's body may have been here for two or three weeks.
07:08A nationwide appeal for help has now been launched.
07:11We are looking for the public to help us and come forward with any information,
07:15particularly appealing to people who walk with dogs in that area or perhaps ride horses.
07:24A local worker had got up about four o'clock in the morning and driven along and seen a man
07:30standing outside the car where the suitcase was found, but nothing more than that.
07:43The only good lead was the tape which she'd been bound in and which looked like had been used to
07:49kill her.
07:50The tape was a particularly unusual art tape by Gilbert and George.
07:56Our offender had to have access to that tape.
08:03It's from the Tate Museum Group. I think it had been sold in all four places. That's at Liverpool
08:11and at St. Ives, Tate Modern and Tate Britain museums in London.
08:18When you use a tape and you tear it off, you will leave a unique join, a unique connection.
08:27And what you're hoping is that you can find the other end of the bit of tape, if you like.
08:35The public usually holds some form of information or some sort of answer.
08:48Today, North Yorkshire Police revealed it as an instrument of murder.
08:52It's blue in colour, 50 millimetres or roughly two inches wide.
08:58The tape was based upon a 1980s work that Gilbert and George had done. It was called
09:03Death, Hope, Life and Fear, which had a certain poignancy to it.
09:10At this present time, we don't really know why it's been used. We've got to keep an open mind on
09:16this.
09:16I think something like 800 rolls of it have been sold. So we were working our way through 800 people
09:22who might have bought a roll of tape, some of whom were easy to find because they paid by card,
09:28and some of which were rather more difficult to find because they paid by cash.
09:33It isn't easy.
09:37Police also revealed that the suitcase the victim was found in is produced in Seoul,
09:42in South Korea and is not sold in the West.
09:44The suitcase was forensically examined and some fibres were found there on of a certain carpet.
09:53There was also some paint found on the suitcase as well, blue paint.
10:02The suitcase itself was disappointingly ordinary.
10:10No obvious stickers on it or anything which would point
10:14to a particular ownership or a particular set of travels.
10:19The suitcase isn't telling us anything useful at the moment.
10:33The investigation was struggling. Police needed a breakthrough.
10:37Always frustrating when you feel that the inquiry isn't really advancing anywhere.
10:43At the moment, all we have is a long list of people who've bought a tape,
10:48and we're still struggling to identify who our victim is.
10:55We turned to the forensic anthropologist to see if that would help us identify the remains.
11:02The police will normally call me in as a forensic anthropologist
11:05to help with identifying any unidentified bodies that may be found as part of the case.
11:12The main thing a forensic anthropologist would be looking for is age, ancestry,
11:17the sex, and the stature to try and provide a profile for identification.
11:25In this case, the way that was done was actually using an x-ray of the chest area.
11:30By looking at the sternum of the victim on the x-ray, it was evident that there was growth plates
11:35in that area, and those growth plates started to develop and be visible on the x-ray around the
11:40age of 20, and they would have been fused and disappeared by the age of 25.
11:45So, in this case, the victim was narrowed down from an age range of 20 to 40 down to confidently
11:53around the 20 to 25 mark.
11:59In terms of identification using ancestry, you're looking at mainly predominantly the facial features,
12:06and in this case, the cheekbones of the victim were actually quite forwardly pronounced.
12:12Looking at the hair of the individual as well, it was extremely black, almost to the point with a bluish
12:17tint,
12:18and the reason for that is there's a heavy melanin content in the hair.
12:21These features narrow down the ancestry to the East Asian area, which would be the eastern border of China, through
12:29to Korea.
12:40We had a name. If we had fingerprints available, we might be able to quickly confirm
12:46or deny the possibility of this identification. And once you've got the name, you can start doing
12:52the work to say, lead us to the offender.
13:02He's a very modest sleuth and shies away from praise. But there's no doubting Byung Ho Im's detective work
13:09on the internet has been of enormous help to North Yorkshire police.
13:12Byung Ho Im was a Korean police officer who was studying in Leeds. He contacted us suggesting that
13:20there might be an identity for our body.
13:44Byung Ho Im was following the local news, which included the media circulations about our particular victim.
13:52And he was also following Korean social media.
13:58Mr Im had followed the case on Look North and spotted a brother's plea on the web, desperate to trace
14:03his sister.
14:04The brother of a Korean student in France was asking about where she had gone
14:11and was trying to raise interest in the fact that she appeared to have gone missing.
14:22She was a young Korean woman called Hyo Young Jin.
14:29She was 21, I believe, within the age range for our victim.
14:36She had been studying in Lyon.
14:43I called her brother and father.
14:47And her brother and father sent me pictures and fingerprints and dental record.
14:54The next day, the 2nd of January, I called the local police and the detectives came to my house.
15:02South Korea is one of the countries in the world where they have a record of the fingerprints of everyone
15:07in their country.
15:11Contact was made with the South Korean authorities.
15:14They were very happy to allow the release of their record in regards to this individual.
15:25The fingerprints from the Korean record and the ones we had recovered from the body allowed us to identify Miss
15:33Jin as being our victim.
15:40You can't imagine how awful it would have been for the family to discover, you know, hoping that she would
15:45be found alive,
15:46then to realize that she is in actual fact dead.
15:49My mission, bring the body to Korea and then make a funeral for her.
15:57We know who the person is within the suitcase.
16:04Getting a positive ID meant that I had a very happy senior investigating officer.
16:09And for the rest of us, we had a focus with the investigation into a life and background.
16:19Miss Jin was from a small village 40 miles south of Seoul.
16:24She came from a really staunch Catholic family.
16:28Her father was a former police officer in South Korea.
16:32And she had asked her parents' permission to travel to London for a few days to visit some sites.
16:39She was on a gap year and coming from where she came from.
16:43Probably the only time in her life she might be anticipating but she'd ever get to visit London.
16:48The world was full of opportunities.
16:50She was taking those opportunities.
16:52She was living her life to her full.
16:53And then she disappeared.
16:58Now we had to fill that gap between whatever had happened in London and getting to North Yorkshire.
17:04In tracing that route, somebody that Miss Jin had been in contact with
17:09was going to be the person who had killed her.
17:18I was a commander in the Metropolitan Police Service based at Scotland Yard.
17:22I was asked if we were willing to assist our colleagues from North Yorkshire.
17:28I immediately said yes.
17:30The team started working at Enfield linked in with one of my teams.
17:36My role was to deal with any financial investigative work that needs doing to identify potential suspects, patterns of movement.
17:46The first things we were tasked with dealing with was to identify the location of any premises within London
17:53that Miss Jin may have been associated with or had stayed at, whether it be hostels, hotels, flats and things
18:01like that.
18:03Inquiries identified that it would appear that the last known place that Miss Jin had been with her friends
18:10was at a property in Eagle Street, near Holborn.
18:21Where she had stayed for a short while.
18:29This was a flat which was used by a number of travelling Korean students.
18:35They would stay there together, obviously a cheap option if you happened to be a student.
18:41That became one of the focus points of our investigation.
18:49A decision was therefore made to search that address for any forensic evidence to ascertain.
18:58One, if Miss Jin had actually stayed at that flat.
19:02And two, if any harm had come to her in that particular flat as well.
19:07We got a Section 8 search warrant.
19:11There were people staying at the flat, other people.
19:14And they gave us access.
19:18The search took place and the crime scene manager found a bedroom.
19:27When they searched the apartment, the crime scene manager put himself in the position of
19:34anyone that would have had a heavy suitcase was trying to hide it.
19:39In one of the cupboards, there was a mark, like a straight line mark, across the floor at the bottom
19:46of the cupboard in the carpet.
19:53Body fluids were found in there which DNA examination showed that they were Miss Jin.
20:00Blood splatters were found on the wall that turned out to be Miss Jin's.
20:08It was decorated blue in the bedroom.
20:12And after forensics were carried out, they'd established that the blue paint on the walls
20:17matched the blue paint found on the suitcase in which she was entombed.
20:22So what we believed had happened at that stage is that she had been murdered in the flat.
20:29And kept in the suitcase.
20:33When the suitcase needed to be moved, it was picked up.
20:38As a consequence of that, some of the decomposition fluid from Miss Jin had come out of the joint
20:45at the bottom of the suitcase and had left this mark across the carpet.
20:54The forensic evidence showed that neither did she stay there, that she was murdered there.
21:05Then we had another turn in the investigation.
21:12Today, detectives said Ho Young Ying's death is being directly linked to the disappearance five
21:17weeks ago of another Korean student.
21:20It's been revealed that In Haesong had once stayed at the same London flat as Ho Young Ying.
21:27Her family also couldn't get in contact with her.
21:31That became a concern for us in London, because if there was a second person,
21:37then we needed to find her as a priority.
21:42Let's find this lady and let's talk to her, make sure we know that she's safe.
21:47With that discovery, the police will have realised that potentially they had a serial killer.
22:01They were both students that had come to Europe to immerse themselves in language and culture
22:06and travel. One had been murdered, the other one was missing.
22:10We couldn't see anything that really said to us at this time.
22:15Miss Song was categorically alive.
22:17We were almost walking down an alleyway with no light at the end of it.
22:45The second individual, Miss Song, is about a similar age to Miss Gin, and she was supposed
22:50to be living in London at the time and studying within the UK.
22:55We were contacted by a woman who said that she had arranged to meet her friend Miss Song
23:01at Tower Bridge, but Miss Song had failed to turn up and wasn't answering her phone.
23:09She may well have fallen foul of the individual that may have been responsible for the death of Miss Gin.
23:16So our concerns were raised.
23:19We needed to identify the location of Miss Song.
23:23Can her disappearance be explained naturally, or is she another potential victim?
23:33At that stage, no one knew any more about her than the fact that she had been reported missing.
23:49She was living in Augusta Street in Poplar.
23:53Officers attended that address. There was no one at the address.
23:57No sign of Miss Song or any other people living there at the time.
24:07So we're looking at her movements at ATMs and things like that.
24:12One of the last movements was at a bank in central London near Holborn, where cash had been withdrawn.
24:20That started a new line of inquiry. Who took the money? Was Miss Song alive at that time?
24:27The investigative team went straight to that bank.
24:30Unfortunately, there was no CCTV covering the ATM machine.
24:34So that line of inquiry really fizzled out.
24:39But then the officers soon ascertained that a little while before,
24:45Miss Song had stayed in the same flat as Miss Gin in Eagle Street in Holborn.
25:03In our last communication, Miss Gin said to her family over the internet,
25:08that she met a kind man that was going to show her around London.
25:16We ascertained that Miss Song had said to her family she met a nice gentleman
25:23who was going to help her and possibly even travel with her,
25:27maybe to Disney or something like that in Paris.
25:29We made inquiries of who lived at the address in Augusta Street and that obtained that both apartments,
25:38Eagle Street and Augusta Street had been rented by the same man who became personal interest.
25:46He was a Korean called Kyu Soo Kim.
25:52The role of Mr. Kim within the UK was a bit of a mystery to us.
25:57We couldn't really work out whether he was a student.
26:00We didn't know whether he was a professional landlord.
26:03But again, he was a figure of great concern for us as to identify his role within the investigation.
26:15He was renting a flat and then allowing other people to stay there for a rent or a fee.
26:23Young Koreans, when they're travelling, like to be amongst other Koreans.
26:27He had advertised rooms for let to other South Koreans that were travelling through London.
26:32And that's exactly what Miss Jin and Miss Song did. They rented a room for a period of time.
26:40Mr. Kim Kyu Soo needs to be spoken to as a priority.
26:45Clearly, he was a significant comm within the greater jigsaw puzzle of this investigation.
26:51We needed to interview him to find out what he actually knew.
26:55We were making inquiries to try and find him. But he wasn't in the country.
27:01The police were able, eventually after their inquiries, to establish that Mr. Kim was in Canada.
27:10He had booked through a travel agent who had contacted police as a result of inquiries that we had made.
27:17Kim had withdrawn a lot of money from an ATM and used that money to buy the ticket to fly
27:23to Canada.
27:24Other inquiries had come to the fore through the financial inquiries.
27:28And we saw that these young ladies' accounts, which were £2,000 to £3,000 in both, had been wounded
27:36down and the money had been spent.
27:42We'd ascertain that Miss Jin's credit card had been used to hire a car.
27:47We contacted the car hire firm in Camden.
27:51That car was hired by Kim.
27:58My job was to go to that location and find that vehicle, which I did.
28:05It was a Peugeot.
28:07So that vehicle was then forensically sealed and was taken to a secure compound where it was examined in a
28:15sterile environment.
28:18We'd gone through the mileage and carefully through the computer of the car.
28:23And we also had a phone number for Kim.
28:26And we tracked his cell site analysis.
28:30And his cell site analysis showed us that he'd gone up to North Yorkshire.
28:38So he was very much a person of interest in the murder of Miss Jin into the realms of suspect.
28:46The boot of the car was forensically examined.
28:49And upon examination was found to be a line of material which included Miss Jin's DNA.
29:00Looks like a heavy suitcase was picked up and put into the boot.
29:05And as it had been pushed upright, more of the decomposition fluid had come out of the bottom of the
29:11suitcase.
29:17At the same time, we ascertained that Kim, even though he was now in Canada, had had a girlfriend who
29:25lived in North London.
29:30We visited her address and sought her permission to look around the flat, which she agreed.
29:38On the mantelpiece, we found a roll of tape, Gilbert and George.
29:49Exactly the same tape as was used to bound Miss Jin's head and face where she was asphyxiated.
30:00When you tear something and you take them away, if you bring them back together, the tear will match up.
30:07We were able to examine that tape and he produced a physical match with the end of the tape, which
30:14had been wrapped around Miss Jin's head.
30:16So we have now an evidence of access to the murder weapon on behalf of Kim.
30:25Additionally, there was some blood on the card inside, the inside reel of the tape that later proved to match
30:35Kim's.
30:42So we had a murder victim with strong evidence that Kim was involved in that murder.
30:48And we had a missing person who we couldn't find but had a strong link with Kim as well.
30:56He was in doubt to his eyeballs to the tune of £17,000.
31:01And we're pretty sure that he's stolen around £3,000 each from both of these two young ladies.
31:09A decision then had to be made as to whether or not we sought an international arrest warrant.
31:19This international manhunt had become pretty intense.
31:23But sometimes the smallest of things can catch you out.
31:27The man who'd been on the run suddenly leaped up digitally.
31:33The team from East London, they got the contact saying that his email was being used in a cafe in
31:41Oxford Street.
31:48And he was sitting at that terminal still typing away when officers walked in.
31:54Kim was arrested for the murder of Miss Jim.
31:58He didn't put up a fight or anything, came quietly.
32:02It was a good moment.
32:04Fairly happy but he wasn't going to be going anywhere else.
32:10We needed to ask those questions.
32:12Where is Miss Song? Where has she gone? Tell us everything.
32:28Scotland Yard detectives who are working closely with police in North Yorkshire
32:33arrested the 30-year-old man at around 8 o'clock last night.
32:37He's being questioned over the death of Korean student Hyo Jung Jin, who was 21.
32:58The clock is then ticking.
33:01So to begin with you only get 24 hours that can be extended for serious crimes, which it was.
33:06But he made no comment throughout the interview.
33:09Detectives are also still looking for another South Korean woman in Hyo Song.
33:14He would just look at you, look down at the ground a lot.
33:18But that was to divert eye connection when being questioned.
33:27He was charged with the murder of Miss Jim and remanded in custody.
33:33Inquiries continued to ascertain if Miss Song was anywhere to be found, whether that be in London or internationally.
33:47At the beginning, we hoped that she was still alive.
33:52But as the days, the weeks and the months went forward, there is always that trepidation in the back of
34:01your mind that this is going to end in a very bad way.
34:07I did actually meet the parents.
34:09They traveled to the UK to try and find their daughter and work alongside us.
34:15They were very quiet, unassuming.
34:17They visited the investigation team accommodation.
34:20They could see the efforts that were being put in.
34:23You could see they were ripped apart.
34:25Their daughter was missing.
34:37The real landlord of the popular property summoned a plumber to carry out routine works and went into the bathroom
34:44and he noticed a lot of blue-bottle flies.
34:46And he had heard that the police visited earlier and he had the foresight to actually contact them and say
34:52that he didn't think all was right in that house.
34:58As a consequence of that, this is when we, as the Homicide Command, went to that location.
35:06When we entered, you just got a feeling that there was something there.
35:11We went straight to the bathroom.
35:13Nothing was obvious initially.
35:16What was immediately below the bathroom and it was the hallway downstairs.
35:21The closet.
35:22When it was opened, it was clear that there was the smell and the awful anticipation of waiting to find
35:30the worst thing that anybody could ever find.
35:35They established that there was a void behind a compartment wall.
35:42The fake wall.
35:45There was wood panelling which had been mastic around the edges.
35:50They've decided to remove that panelling.
35:55Behind that was a recess.
35:58There's a mess of clothing in there which was removed and that's when the body was found within that closet.
36:08It appeared to be a female of Southeast Asian origin in the fetal position.
36:15The fake wall.
36:16She was partially clothed.
36:17She was partially clothed, just underwear.
36:18The hands were bound.
36:21she had tape across her face and over her head in a similar fashion as miss gin had been
36:30asphyxiated as well you can't imagine the horror that woman went through before her demise it's
36:39thought the body of a young woman found in a sealed cupboard at a house in london is that
36:43of 22 year old in here song she'd suffocated I've seen a lot of scientific experiments around
36:52decomposing bodies and entomology and flies and how they attack a body we had an entomologist look
37:02at the five stages of life of a fly and we were able through that to say that she'd been
37:10in that
37:11recess for around about three months with the cycle of flies that have been around her body
37:22it's very creepy and it's very sad that she'd been in that recess where people were living in that block
37:31for mr kim the evidence was stacked against him
37:35pair of shoes were also found in that recess and they subsequently proved to be shoes that belong to
37:42miss jim we also found a spent kind of glue gun mastic gun and when that was examined dna was
37:55found
37:55that belonged to kim so it would appear that he had sealed that recess
38:09you know the trauma that you are going to inflict on that family but it's a job that has to
38:16be done
38:16and it's not taken lightly for the family of miss song it was the end of a long a rather
38:24desperate
38:24search for a loved one i decided that superintendent overseeing the case as well as other colleagues
38:34would travel to korea so both miss jim and miss song's family were updated as to what had happened
38:41we needed to sort of put those extra bricks within our brick wall of evidence was the fact that who
38:48was kim kyusun he'd been through a difficult divorce in korea and had come to the uk to study
38:57maybe find a new life his visa for the purposes of studying alone so he couldn't work so he had
39:05to
39:05have some form of income that would give him money to survive and he had decided to rent accommodation
39:12and then sublet rooms which is exactly what he did to miss jim and miss song and others the evidence
39:19showed that the families trusted him the police discovered that when miss song was missing miss song's
39:27family had reason to be in contact with mr kim and it's a cruel element of his behavior that he
39:34told them
39:34that she had gone away to study her course in hotel management and would be returning soon
39:40so they had some hope that she would be found safe and well but these two women were murdered at
39:46the
39:46hands of a man in such a violent way
39:58the trial of a korean man who stands accused of suffocating two young students to death has got
40:04underway at london's old bailey well it wasn't until late this afternoon that the jury here at
40:09the old bailey was sworn in a murder trial at the old bailey it's probably the most famous court
40:14in the land there's a sense of drama this is q sue kim the man the prosecution claim as the
40:21murderer
40:22arriving in the back of a prison van at the old bailey mr kim completely not guilty to all the
40:29charges
40:31quite an odd character in court he had an arrogance about him he looked like someone who
40:37found it more slightly bemusing he had an element of conceit as well he looked like he wasn't sure he
40:43wasn't going to be put away for this and he seemed to not quite realize the amount of evidence that
40:49was
40:49stacked up against him this wasn't circumstantial there was all direct evidence his blood on the tape
40:55used to bind and asphyxiate miss gin use of their credit cards use of his flats use of the hire
41:06car
41:06it was all there it was a model case why he chose to come to north yorkshire we don't know
41:13why
41:15the suitcase was deposited where it was deposited we don't know
41:21the prosecution said this was a sadistic killing uh and the motive always difficult to prove
41:30why exactly would someone suffocate people with this tape one theory was that he derived some perverse
41:38gratification from carrying out a torture ultimately there was so much tape on both of them you could
41:44only see the forehead and the eyes that might have been for purpose as well to see the fear in
41:51their eyes
41:56i feel that he got some pleasure or interest from seeing them die like that quite horrific
42:03the other theory was that he had a financial problem himself and rather horrifically tortured
42:10these two women to hand over their pin numbers so he was able to use it to obtain their money
42:18he never ever gave evidence he just let the evidence stand he made no attempt to counter it
42:23and that fell badly for him the jury went out we thought they'd probably come back quite soon
42:31and they didn't for overnight
42:42so we turned up the next morning
42:50the guilty verdict came in
42:54he just stared ahead and seemed completely disconnected
42:58it was quite a charged environment
43:05and it was uh it was a good result the judge said that it was a rolls-royce investigation
43:11and commended all the officers involved
43:21landlord kayu su kim who police believe may be a serial killer did we actually get to the bottom of
43:28if everything that mr kim had done was responsible for i don't know
43:33he was far traveled around the world my thoughts then and now
43:40yes he could have killed others before
43:52i wanted to show that we cared i wanted to show that um their loved ones hadn't been forgotten
43:58it was such a senseless waste of innocent life
44:03there were two young ladies that were traveling into europe into the uk hoping to study get some life experience
44:11and it was cruelly and barbarically snuffed out from them
44:16those two young ladies now will be in in their forties careers families children all been taken
44:28very silent
44:30very silent
44:30very silent
44:30very silent
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