Husband killing Wife who sent 100 million to South Korea "Call The Casketeers Company instead of 119" (ALL-BUM 2)
In 'ALL-BUM 2', the Crime of my wife who colluded with my husband and killed her husband was handled.
Professor Kim Sang-wook introduced the Namyangju nicotine killing case in 2016 as one of the poisoning cases on tvN 'ALL-BUM 2' broadcast on February 20th.
The couple went to sleep after going to dinner, but her husband died while sleeping. When I did an autopsy, a large amount of nicotine was detected and suspected of poisoning.
Police found something strange while grasping the behavior of his wife on the day of the incident, saying that his wife did not call 119 even though her husband was in an emergency, but called The Casketeers company and asked about The Casketeers process. So The Casketeers company employee said "call 119" directly. She even cremated her husband's body, which she had returned after the autopsy, and did not inform her family or friends of the death and did not have a funeral.
As it turned out, my wife had an internal lover, and my wife bought nicotine five days before the incident, and a record of searching for information related to it was also discovered. In addition, his wife began to quickly organize the billions of his legacy after his husband died, and he sent 100 million won to his wife.
The more pissed thing is that these couples originally lived without marriage, but they reported marriage two months before the incident. The shocking thing was that my husband signed the marriage witness, and the cast members could not speak to the story that his husband was terribly deceived by his wife and his wife.
No physical evidence was found, but circumstantial evidence was so clear that the court convicted his wife and his wife and his wife and sentenced him to life imprisonment.
"How did you take nicotine?" asked Yoon Jong Shin, and Kwon Il-yong said, "I usually put it in a syringe. But that's the most controversial point in the trial. The needle marks did not appear at the time of the autopsy, and the autopsy examiners examined the body closely, but they did not come out, so they assumed that they used too delicate needles. There was no solid evidence," he said.
But there was too much circumstantial evidence to convict him, because his late husband didn’t smoke, and the medical examinations showed no problems. The focus was on the fact that there was no reason for a large amount of nicotine to come out of her husband's body suddenly.