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Chitchat Morally Upright Malaysian Khaw devises clever way to divorce wife and marry SYT student

Asterix

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HONG KONG (AFP): An anaesthetist gassed his wife and daughter to death using a yoga ball filled with carbon monoxide, a Hong Kong court has heard.
Prosecutors told the High Court that Khaw Kim-sun left the inflatable ball in the boot of a car where the gas leaked out and killed them, according to reports from court Wednesday (Aug 22).

His wife and 16-year-old daughter were found on a roadside in a locked yellow Mini Cooper in 2015, in a case which initially baffled police.

The pair were certified dead at the same hospital where Khaw worked and a post-mortem revealed they had died from inhaling carbon monoxide.

Police found a deflated yoga ball in the back of the car.

Khaw has pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder.

Prosecutors said Wednesday that Khaw, a 53-year-old Malaysian national, was having an affair with a student and his wife would not grant him a divorce.
They accused him of hatching a deliberate plot to murder his wife, the South China Morning Post reported.

Prosecutors said it was likely that Khaw had not intended to kill his daughter.

The court heard that in a police interview Khaw had said he had urged his younger daughter to stay at home and finish her homework on the day of the deaths, according to Apple Daily.

Khaw’s had been seen filling two balls with carbon monoxide at Chinese University, where he was an associate professor, reports said.

He told colleagues he planned to use the gas on rabbits but later told police that he had taken it to get rid of rats at home.

The trial continues Thursday. - AFP

Read more at https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nat...ith-gas-filled-yoga-ball/#FHJMhzkcSYMoG1ST.99
 

Asterix

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Verdict: Malaysian Khaw guilty of murder - clever but careless ........

Revealed: how Hong Kong police solved yoga ball murder
https://sc.mp/2xyeQo7

At first, nobody guessed the deflated yoga ball in the boot of the Mini Cooper had anything to do with the deaths of Wong Siew Fing, 47, and her 16-year-old daughter, Lily Khaw Li Ling.

Mother and child were found slumped in their parked car one day in May 2015, and both died from carbon monoxide poisoning.

For months police investigators were left without leads. All tests found nothing wrong with the car. To completely rule out a malfunction of the vehicle’s ventilation system, officers, with the help of Interpol, even asked staff at the car’s maker, BMW, in Germany, to do further tests.

As they waited for the results to come back, detectives spotted the vital clue everyone had overlooked: the deflated grey yoga ball in the boot, its stopper nowhere to be found.

“Why is it sitting there without a plug?” a detective wondered aloud.

That was what eventually led to police uncovering the bizarre murder plot of Malaysian university professor Khaw Kim Sun – Wong’s husband, and the girl’s father.

Khaw, 53, an associate professor of anaesthesiology at Chinese University, was found guilty of murder on Wednesday, after a unanimous jury believed the prosecution’s case that he planted the leaking, gas-filled ball in his wife’s car.

Now the Post can reveal how the detective and his colleagues came to solve one of Hong Kong’s most intelligent murder cases in recent times, and the challenges it entailed. The officer preferred to remain anonymous as he was not authorised to speak on the record.

“This was way out of my repertoire,” he said, recounting a highly technical investigation that involved interviews with more than 50 witnesses ranging from doctors to chemical suppliers to psychologists.

The officer admitted an initial concern: he and his colleagues were up against someone whose friends and co-workers later described him in court as a “clever” and “avant-garde” anaesthesiologist. The officer recalled a sense of cluelessness on the day the pair died. Police went to Khaw’s home that day to seize everything they could in the kitchen – even flour.

“Who knows? He’s an anaesthesiologist,” the officer said.

Prompted by what they had found in the boot, a few feet from the victims’ bodies, they had an idea: that the ball could have been filled with the noxious gas and left to deflate in the car. To test if the theory worked, an officer bought two similar yoga balls to do some experiments. They had assumed the yoga ball, like a beach ball, would have some mechanism to stop it deflating even if the plug was out. But they discovered it did leak without the stopper.

Experts later confirmed yoga balls were capable of carrying carbon monoxide, in theory at least, prompting police to seize the ball officially in November, six months after the alleged murder.

“It only happens in TV dramas,” the officer recalled thinking.

Their investigation led them to one of Khaw’s colleagues, who had a quotation form Khaw sent to a carbon monoxide supplier, asking about prices.

The colleague, Dick Chow Ho-kiu, later bought a tank of the gas at Khaw’s request and helped him conduct experiments on rabbits. Chow told police that after one experiment he saw Khaw take the carbon monoxide home in two yoga balls.

“This just proved we were right,” the officer said.

A possible motive had also revealed itself as police dug deeper: Khaw was having an affair with a student he used to mentor, Shara Lee, now an assistant professor at Polytechnic University. His relationship with his wife was more like a business partnership; they stuck together only to raise their children, the trial heard.

The investigation team arrested and charged Khaw on September 11, 2017.

Khaw, who taught at the department of anaesthesia and intensive care, was the kind of person “who knows a lot” and “knows how to take care of things”, according to friends who testified during the trial.

His family of six, including three daughters and one son, lived in the tranquil neighbourhood of Tai Tung Village in Ma On Shan when the 2015 tragedy struck.

On May 22, Wong left home with Lily at about 2pm in the yellow Mini Cooper to pick up her other children from school.

After travelling 1.6km down Sai Sha Road – about four minutes – Wong parked the car at the bus stop, and was first spotted by a bus driver 25 minutes later.

At 2.14pm, Lily – who the court heard was a girl “full of life” – had sent a text message to her friend Sarah Niu. It simply read: “Congratulations.” It was a message of joking jealousy, after Niu got out of doing an assessment at school.

Both Wong and her daughter were found unresponsive in their car two hours later by a jogger and others, who called an ambulance for them.

It was too late for doctors to save their lives when they arrived at Prince of Wales Hospital in Sha Tin, the very hospital Khaw Kim Sun worked at.

But when Khaw’s trial came to an end, some mysteries remained – the biggest being how the yoga ball ended up in the car.

There were security cameras installed in the family home, yet they were not working around the time of the killing.

While the professor denied committing murder, he did not dispute taking the gas home. He claimed he took it back to kill rats infesting his village house. He suggested Lily somehow might have used it to commit suicide.

His lawyer, Gerard McCoy SC, presented an alternative version in court, saying Lily, who had a phobia of bugs, used the gas to kill insects, unaware of the potential fatal consequences.

The defence also argued Khaw had an alibi. With a concentration so high it could cause someone to pass out in minutes, the defence argued. It would require the ball to have been planted right before the car was driven away, still leaking the gas. That would put Khaw out of the picture, as he left home at about noon for a university seminar.

A report presented to the court suggested the concentration of carbon monoxide inside the car reached at least 7,000 parts per million (ppm) at one point, lasting more than two hours. It takes 1,600ppm of carbon monoxide to make someone feel dizzy in just 20 minutes and die in an hour, according to medical literature.

Dr Lau Fei-lung, chairman of the clinical toxicology board at the Hong Kong College of Emergency Medicine, said it would be hard to pinpoint at what moment the ball was placed in the car, as it involved too many variables. Both suggestions from Bruce and McCoy could make sense, he said.

The closest the trial could get was that, when their helper Siti Maesaroh saw Wong and Lily head towards the car that day, they were not carrying a yoga ball.

She failed to recall it when giving evidence in court, but a statement the helper gave to the police said she saw Khaw leaving the house for the car park using a less commonly used door at about 11am.

But Lau was sure of one thing.

“The concentration in the car must have been very high,” he said, as it took only a few minutes for them to feel unwell.

The high levels would have made the mother and daughter feel woozy very quickly, which explained why Wong pulled over and spared a traffic accident. This also resulted in a fatal delay to their discovery, as they remained in the car, inhaling more gas, the court heard.

For our anonymous police officer, the lack of a crash at least provided him and his colleagues with an intact crime scene and first access to it.

Another unsolved mystery was why Khaw killed his daughter, who the court heard he had bonded well with, despite burdening her with high expectations.

Prosecutors suggested perhaps Khaw never intended for her to die. In fact, he did warn Lily not to go out that day.

Oliver Chan Heng-choon, an associate professor of criminology at City University, said that although the murder plan was intelligent, it was far from sophisticated, mainly due to the careless trails Khaw left behind.

For instance, being spotted smuggling the gas home by Chow, his colleague. A plastic plug which could fit the yoga ball in question was also recovered from a drawer in his bedroom.

But forensic scientists had no way to prove whether this small piece of plastic, which guided police in the right direction, did actually belong to the ball. Just as no one could tell when the yoga ball was placed in the car.

Only Khaw knows.
 

Asterix

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“Whatever you do, it is not wrong if you don’t get caught” – this was a favourite mantra of Malaysian professor Khaw Kim Sun who killed his wife and daughter with a gas-filled yoga ball, according to his sister-in-law.

The anaesthesiologist who was jailed for life on Wednesday for murdering his wife Wong Siew Fing and daughter Lily Khaw Li Ling, was not only a man of questionable moral standards but also a manipulative and bullying husband who destroyed his wife’s self-esteem, she said in an interview with the Post.

Sister-in-law Wong Siew Fong cited a string of his actions she knew he had committed over the years that to her showed his lack of morals.

He also repeatedly accused his late wife of being a bad mother, even though she cared deeply about her four children, she said.

Towards the end of their marriage, Siew Fing had been reduced to a “vulnerable and fragile” person from years of emotional abuse.

But the sister, who delivered an eulogy at the funerals of Siew Fing and Lily in 2015, said she and the rest of the Wongs bore no grudge against Khaw.

“He is a deeply unhappy individual. As a family, the best thing to do is to move on with our lives,” she said. “I also believe that Siew Fing and Lily are now in a much better place.”

On Wednesday, after a 21-day trial and deliberations lasting seven hours, a High Court jury unanimously found Khaw guilty of murdering both Wong, 47, and Lily, 16, on May 22, 2015.

Khaw, who taught at Chinese University and was having an affair with his student, Shara Lee, placed a yoga ball leaking with colourless and odourless carbon monoxide in their car that day, causing them to die from poisoning.

The presiding judge Mrs Justice Judianna Barnes Wai-ling said it was “shocking that a highly educated and successful man would conjure up such a calculated method to get rid of his wife” and suggested he did it to get the properties the couple co-owned.


But the couple did start out loving each other, Siew Fong, who lives in Britain said.

She recalled that her sister, the oldest among four siblings from the Brunei-based Malaysian family, met Khaw in the late 1980s when they were both training at a hospital in London. Court testimonies heard that while Khaw was studying to become a doctor, Siew Fing was a nurse.


Yoga ball murder victim Wong Siew Fing (left) and her younger sister Wong Siew Fong, aged eight and six respectively. Photo: HandoutLAW AND CRIME
Yoga ball murderer was a manipulative husband whose motto was ‘if you don’t get caught, it’s not wrong’: sister-in-law
Wong Siew Fong questions moral standards of jailed Malaysian professor Khaw Kim Sun, the man her murdered sister fell for
Chris LauChris Lau
UPDATED : Monday, 24 Sep 2018, 3:01PM

“Whatever you do, it is not wrong if you don’t get caught” – this was a favourite mantra of Malaysian professor Khaw Kim Sun who killed his wife and daughter with a gas-filled yoga ball, according to his sister-in-law.

The anaesthesiologist who was jailed for life on Wednesday for murdering his wife Wong Siew Fing and daughter Lily Khaw Li Ling, was not only a man of questionable moral standards but also a manipulative and bullying husband who destroyed his wife’s self-esteem, she said in an interview with the Post.

Sister-in-law Wong Siew Fong cited a string of his actions she knew he had committed over the years that to her showed his lack of morals.



Wong Siew Fing, 47, was found dead in her car. Photo: Handout
He also repeatedly accused his late wife of being a bad mother, even though she cared deeply about her four children, she said.

Towards the end of their marriage, Siew Fing had been reduced to a “vulnerable and fragile” person from years of emotional abuse.



Yoga ball killer’s wife blamed herself for demise of marriage, diary reveals

But the sister, who delivered an eulogy at the funerals of Siew Fing and Lily in 2015, said she and the rest of the Wongs bore no grudge against Khaw.


HONG KONG NEWS
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The Mini Cooper in which the victims were found dead in 2015. Photo: Sam Tsang
“He is a deeply unhappy individual. As a family, the best thing to do is to move on with our lives,” she said. “I also believe that Siew Fing and Lily are now in a much better place.”

On Wednesday, after a 21-day trial and deliberations lasting seven hours, a High Court jury unanimously found Khaw guilty of murdering both Wong, 47, and Lily, 16, on May 22, 2015.


Revealed: how Hong Kong police solved yoga ball murder

Khaw, who taught at Chinese University and was having an affair with his student, Shara Lee, placed a yoga ball leaking with colourless and odourless carbon monoxide in their car that day, causing them to die from poisoning.


Malaysian professor Khaw Kim Sun has been jailed for life.
The presiding judge Mrs Justice Judianna Barnes Wai-ling said it was “shocking that a highly educated and successful man would conjure up such a calculated method to get rid of his wife” and suggested he did it to get the properties the couple co-owned.

At the heart of yoga ball murder case was a deeply unhappy marriage

But the couple did start out loving each other, Siew Fong, who lives in Britain said.

She recalled that her sister, the oldest among four siblings from the Brunei-based Malaysian family, met Khaw in the late 1980s when they were both training at a hospital in London. Court testimonies heard that while Khaw was studying to become a doctor, Siew Fing was a nurse.

He is a deeply unhappy individual. As a family, the best thing to do is to move on
WONG SIEW FONG, SISTER-IN-LAW
Although Siew Fong had yet to join her older sister then in Britain, she knew almost everything about the blossoming romance as her sister confided in her.

Khaw was Siew Fing’s first love, she said, and the pair bonded because they were both Malaysians. They also loved good food and skiing.

“She wrote to me and described him as being clean-cut and funny. She was clearly smitten,” Siew Fong said, adding that she found Khaw a polite man, who sometimes enjoyed playing practical jokes.

In 1992, Siew Fing walked down the aisle in a wedding dress from Laura Ashley, and Khaw put a ring on her finger.

But their marriage came undone many years before she died, as the murder trial heard.

The younger sister said the couple differed greatly on raising their children.

“There were a string of incidents in which Siew Fing was very uncomfortable with the morals and ethics being shown to their children,” she said.

In recalling these episodes, she suggested that he would brag each time he got away without being found out.


Their differences also caused Khaw to accuse Siew Fing of being a bad mother, her sister said. She said Khaw had put great pressure on Siew Fing to teach the children Chinese and speak to them in Mandarin, even though she never studied the subject in school. Khaw spoke mostly in English too, according to Siew Fong.

She said Khaw blamed his wife for the family’s lack of progress in the language.

Shara Lee, Khaw’s student who would become his mistress, was roped in to teach the children Chinese.

Siew Fong said her older sister once confronted her husband when she began to notice Lee’s familiarity with him. But Khaw would tell her: “It is all in your head.”


She said she still kept in touch with the three children since the deaths of the victims.

While recent reports showed the children being photographed with Shara Lee, Siew Fong only said: “This is a very difficult situation for all concerned.”

The court heard that in 2013, when it became apparent that Khaw was having an affair, Siew Fing, who was suffering from depression, had sought support from a self-help group. Khaw dismissed it as a “cult” when he was interviewed by police.

Siew Fong said at the time, her sister was so emotionally abused that she had lost her self-respect.

“Kim Sun is manipulative, controlling and a bully. Siew Fing was finding courage and building strength to stand up to him.”

https://www.google.com.hk/amp/s/m.s...er-was-manipulative-husband-whose-motto?amp=1
 

borom

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I have met some awful University academics -including a horrible neighbour who was Hongkie professor who played video games at the loudest volume that I felt my windows were vibrating.
They are used to talking down and bullying students that such behaviour carried forward to others also
 
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