Thailand's worst suspected serial killer 'Am Cyanide' is accused of luring her victims to a meal and
  • 7 months ago
#Thailand #Amcynaide #justice #serialkiller
Instead ; It claimed that he was poisoned with cyanide by the woman thought his friend. Sararat "Am" Rangsiwuthaporn, who has since been known as "Am Cyanide", had known Koy for more than 10 years. However, he then allegedly took his victim's money, phone and an expensive designer bag and fled the scene. In his statement to ABC, his mother Thongpin Kiatchanasiri described the moment she heard the news of Koy's death "I cried, I was shocked, I screamed." “He was healthy, very healthy and left home in good shape. Koy and his daughter, who has nightmares of losing her mother. Tracking down a potential serial Thongpin and his grandson are still trying come to terms with what happened Koy. "I want to ask him why he did this to my mother," she told ABC. "[My mother] is a good person, a kind person. I miss kissing her cheek." Am initially claimed that Koy was not with her at the time of her death. Desperate for answers, Thongpin asked Rapee Chamnanrue, a family friend, to help bring the case to higher-level police attention. He immediately got to work by posting the photo of the car Koy was driving on social media. Online detectives helped track him down to a curious address. "When I watched the CCTV, the person Koy went with looked suspicious," Rapee said. "Both the time, place and behavior convinced me that Koy's death was unusual. "These s really helped the research because science can't lie." Am was initially only accused of theft and Koy's death was considered natural. However, during the autopsy, traces of cyanide were found in his body. Thongpin says he is both saddened and proud of his daughter's legacy. "I lost my daughter and I didn't want it to happen like this, but Koy helped other victims," ​​he said. "If we hadn't disclosed it, those people wouldn't have known, and if my daughter hadn't , who knows how many more people she would have killed. "I hope this goodness reaches the Cove because he has taken off his mask of evil." Untangling a twisted web of crime Deputy Chief of Police General Surachate Hakparn said these deaths bore other similarities to Koy's. "[Families] wondered why the victims were healthy and then went into heart failure like this," he said. "He also had black nails on his hands and feet, which is why I started investigating the cases four years ago." He said that there was some negligence in the investigations carried out by local police in different provinces where poisonings occurred, including the Bay incident. “If local investigators report cause of death as heart failure, the doctor will report same,” he said. "We have to accept that there are not many forensic doctors in provinces... and they just wrote reports based on the opinions of police ." Over the next three months, police interviewed more than 900 witnesses and examined 26,500 documents. "We found cyanide in seven of the 14 bodies." In cases where cyanide was not found in the autopsy report, General Surac
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