Korean admits killing 14 women

Credit to Author: ASSOCIATED PRESS| Date: Fri, 04 Oct 2019 16:15:39 +0000

SEOUL: A South Korean man has confessed to the murder of 14 women, including nine who were victims in country’s most infamous serial killing case — but the suspect won’t face prosecution, police said.

Last month, police said they believed they had identified the man behind at least three of 10 killings, which took place in Hwaseong, a city south of Seoul, between 1986 and 1991.

On Friday, a police official said a man had confessed to nine of the killings. He also confessed to an additional five murders and about 30 sexual assaults. One of the 10 Hwaseong deaths is now believed to be a copycat murder, the official said.

The man — in his 50s — is already in prison serving a life sentence, according to police.

Nine criminal investigators worked to build rapport with the suspect — and last week his attitude changed, according to the official from Gyeonggi South Provincial Police Agency.

The suspect gave a detailed confession, even drawing an explanation of locations involved in the killings on a piece of paper, the official said. Police will now work to verify whether the confession is true, and cross-reference it against their original investigation records.

Despite the confession, the suspect won’t face charges over the killings as South Korea’s statute of limitations on the most recent of the cases ran out in 2006.

Although police knew that prosecution wasn’t a possibility, they kept records of their investigations and continued making checks into the cases.

“Naturally, the police must investigate the crimes,” the police official said. “It is an important case that had prompted questions all over Korea.”

“The victims and their families had strongly demanded (the truth). No matter how much time has passed, uncovering what really happened is the reason police exist.”

Seoul-based criminal attorney Kim Gwang-sam said that it would not be possible for the families of victims to take a civil suit either. In South Korea, civil cases must be taken within 10 years from the time of the crime, he said.

AP

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