Chinese woman sentenced over road death
- Toxic Turtle
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Re: Chinese woman sentenced over road death
What would seem so strange if for example the passenger has the window down looking at her phone not seeing a thief coming up from and angle snatching it through the window?Spigzy wrote: ↑Thu Nov 01, 2018 11:12 am Interesting case - suspended 2y jail sentence for killing a phone thief by knocking them off their bike whilst in her car.
Begs the question how did a thief grab her phone whilst she was in her car, or how on Earth did she catch up with a motorbike after being on foot, getting in her car & giving chase, etc. So something fishy here, but all the same - usually when a "jao" gets served mob punishment, not a lot usually happens beyond a "he had it coming".
Easy catch but they failed by not making sure it could not send signals.
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Re: Chinese woman sentenced over road death
what an award-winning bit**... She should be handed over to a mob from his province upon her release. Taking a life... only one punishment fits that act.
Re: Chinese woman sentenced over road death
deleted
Last edited by King Keil on Fri Nov 02, 2018 7:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Chinese woman sentenced over road death
This was not a normal accidentcptrelentless wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 4:12 pmIt's only about $2k to kill someone on the road. It's not much.
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Re: Chinese woman sentenced over road death
National November 2, 2018
Woman jailed for killing motorist
Buth Reaksmey Kongkea / Khmer Times
The woman rammed the motorbike because she thought its driver was going to rob her. DAP News
Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Wednesday sentenced a Chinese businesswoman to two years jail and fined her about $1,000 for ramming her car into a motorbike, killing the rider and seriously injuring his passenger in August.
Judge Ky Rithy said Yuan Tang, 26, a construction material vendor living in a rental house in Sen Sok district, was convicted of two counts of intentional acts of violence with aggravating circumstances and driving without a licence.
He noted that Ms Yuan will only serve three months in jail as the court suspended the remainder of the sentence.
Judge Rithy also said that Ms Yuan was ordered to pay a total of $39,000 in compensation to the dead man’s family and the injured passenger.
“The court decided to convict her to two years in prison but the term of her punishment shall be reduced to only three months,” he noted. “The rest of her sentence shall be suspended.”
“The court also fines her 4 million riels (about $1,000),” he added.
Judge Rithy ordered Ms Yuan to pay $17, 500 to the parents of the dead rider Be Sophea David, 24, and $21,500 to the injured passenger Sarun Piseth.
According to a police report, at about 11.30pm on August 12, Ms Yuan was parking a car with a friend inside along Street 244 in Tuol Tumpoung commune.
The report said that while she was parking, the accused noticed two men on a motorbike approaching her and suspected they were thieves out to steal phones from her and her friend.
It noted that to protect themselves from being robbed, Ms Yuan drove her car and hit the motorbike, seriously injuring both men.
The report said that police nearby intervened and took the men to the Khmer-Soviet Hospital for treatment and arrested both women.
It said that Mr Sophea David died in hospital on August 14 and Mr Piseth was discharged after he recovered from his injuries.
During her trial on Wednesday, Ms Yuan told the court that she suspected that the two Cambodian men were thieves who wanted to steal phones.
“To protect myself and my property from being robbed, I decided to drive the car to hit their motorbike and them,” she noted. “But I did not intend to kill them.”
Ms Yuan and her defence lawyer could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Woman jailed for killing motorist
Buth Reaksmey Kongkea / Khmer Times
The woman rammed the motorbike because she thought its driver was going to rob her. DAP News
Phnom Penh Municipal Court on Wednesday sentenced a Chinese businesswoman to two years jail and fined her about $1,000 for ramming her car into a motorbike, killing the rider and seriously injuring his passenger in August.
Judge Ky Rithy said Yuan Tang, 26, a construction material vendor living in a rental house in Sen Sok district, was convicted of two counts of intentional acts of violence with aggravating circumstances and driving without a licence.
He noted that Ms Yuan will only serve three months in jail as the court suspended the remainder of the sentence.
Judge Rithy also said that Ms Yuan was ordered to pay a total of $39,000 in compensation to the dead man’s family and the injured passenger.
“The court decided to convict her to two years in prison but the term of her punishment shall be reduced to only three months,” he noted. “The rest of her sentence shall be suspended.”
“The court also fines her 4 million riels (about $1,000),” he added.
Judge Rithy ordered Ms Yuan to pay $17, 500 to the parents of the dead rider Be Sophea David, 24, and $21,500 to the injured passenger Sarun Piseth.
According to a police report, at about 11.30pm on August 12, Ms Yuan was parking a car with a friend inside along Street 244 in Tuol Tumpoung commune.
The report said that while she was parking, the accused noticed two men on a motorbike approaching her and suspected they were thieves out to steal phones from her and her friend.
It noted that to protect themselves from being robbed, Ms Yuan drove her car and hit the motorbike, seriously injuring both men.
The report said that police nearby intervened and took the men to the Khmer-Soviet Hospital for treatment and arrested both women.
It said that Mr Sophea David died in hospital on August 14 and Mr Piseth was discharged after he recovered from his injuries.
During her trial on Wednesday, Ms Yuan told the court that she suspected that the two Cambodian men were thieves who wanted to steal phones.
“To protect myself and my property from being robbed, I decided to drive the car to hit their motorbike and them,” she noted. “But I did not intend to kill them.”
Ms Yuan and her defence lawyer could not be reached for comment yesterday.
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