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Death sentence upheld for Vietnamese serial
killer
February 3, 2005
Hanoi - A court of appeal in Vietnam upheld the
death sentence on a 49-year-old woman from Ho Chi Minh City, who
poisoned 13 people to death with cyanide, local newspaper Saigon
Liberation reported Thursday.
The People's Supreme Court in Ho Chi Minh City on
Wednesday upheld the verdict passed by the People's Court of southern
Binh Duong province last September on Le Thanh Van who on the charges
of murder, robbery and illegal possession of toxic chemicals.
The defendant appropriated nearly 20,000 US dollars
in Vietnamese and US bank notes, a radio cassette player a mobile
phone from the 13 victims, who were from the city and the
southern provinces of Binh Duong, Binh Phuoc and Dong Nai, between
January 1998 and August 2001.
Taking full advantages of her lovely face, sweet
voice and good command of medicine, Van tried to make friends with rich
people, and then fooled them into drinking water or eating foods
containing cyanide, the paper said.
Death penalty for Vietnamese Black Widow
Poisoner
September 3, 2004
Hanoi - A woman from Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh City was
given death penalty for poisoning 13 people to death with cyanide,
following an eight-day trial, said a local court official on Friday.
Le Thanh Van, 48, was also on the charge of robbery
and illegal possession of toxic chemicals, said the official from the
Binh Duong People's Court which passed the verdict on Wednesday.
The defendant appropriated nearly 242 million
Vietnamese dong (VND) (15,400 US dollars), a radio cassette player a
mobile phone from the 13 victims, who were from Ho Chi Minh City and
the southern provinces of Binh Duong, Binh Phuoc and Dong Nai, from
January 1998 to August 2001.
Taking full advantages of her lovely face, sweet
voice and good command of medicine, Van tried to make friends with rich
people, and then fooled them into drinking water or eating foods
containing cyanide. She even poisoned her mother-in-law and a
brother-in-law partly due to family conflicts.
Van's accomplice, her 31-year-old husband without a
marriage certificate, named Dinh Danh Quang was given a jail term of
21 years for helping her kill a motorbike taxi driver.
Local investigators are still looking into the
case, since Van is suspected to have involving in eight other cases of
poisonings, which killed three people, including her two ex-husbands,
and injured 13 others, said the official.
“Serial
killer” woman stands trial
August 26, 2004
A 48-year-old woman accused of killing 13 people
stood trial for murder, robbery and keeping and using a poisonous
chemical at the People’s Court in Binh Duong southern province
yesterday August 25.
Le Thanh Van, living in Ho Chi Minh City’s District
10 was accused of murdering 13 people by putting cyanide into their
drinks and food in order to steal their possessions valued at 300
million VND in total. Her boyfriend Diu Dang Quang, 31, and born in
Dong Nai Province was also on trial for his suspected involvement in
the murders. The list of victims included Van’s brother-in-law and
Quang’s mother.
Van and Quang had previously admitted to the crime
when arrested but both retracted their confessions when questioned by
prosecutor Chau Thi Nga at the court on Wednesday. Van said that she
was forced by police to confess.
The murders took place in HCMC and the southern
provinces of Binh Duong, Binh Phuoc and Dong Nai from early 1998 to
August 2001, according to the indictment of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy.
In July 2000, Ms. Van was arrested as the prime
suspect in the murder cases when investigators of Binh Duong
Province’s Police Department found 2.8 grams of cyanide in her
handbag. According to the Criminal Science Sub-institute under the
Ministry of Public Security, cyanide is a highly poisonous chemical
compound and a small dose of 0.15-2.0 grams can kill a person.
But, she was later released for lack of further
evidence when investigators used the cyanide found in her handbag to
experiment on animals. They could not detect the poisonous chemical
when the animals died, thus there was no evidence to prove that the
cyanide had killed the victims.
The 13 victims all had similar symptoms of
dizziness, vomiting and headaches before dying. But, most hospitals
could not determine the cause of the death. Some hospitals speculated
that some victims may have suffered from pneumonia and others from
coronary thrombosis.
Investigators from the Ministry of Public Security
later became involved in the investigation.
During the trial, Van said the cyanide found in her
purse was given to her by a friend of her father’s, Dr. Lam Thien
Truong in Dong Nai Province.
“Dr. Truong asked me to bring it to HCMC for
forensic tests.” she said. “I did not even know what the substance was
until investigators told me that the yellow-color chemical found in my
handbag was cyanide,” added Ms. Van.
“Dr. Truong has a friend working at the Binh Thuan
Province’s Police Department who had an acquaintance poisoned with the
chemical. The friend asked for Dr. Truong’s help and the doctor asked
me to help,” she affirmed.
But, the accused could not give an explanation when
prosecutor Nga asked, “Why couldn’t the provincial-level police
department do forensic tests? Also, if the police couldn’t do it, Dr.
Truong has the right to ask relevant agencies to do such tests and
wouldn’t need to ask the accused to help out.”
The trial continues today.
Ms. Van is also suspected of being involved in
eight others cases in which 16 people were poisoned and three of them
died. But, there is no sufficient evidence showing that Ms. Van is
involved in the cases.
Wednesday, 25 August, 2004
A Vietnamese woman accused of killing 13 people
with poison has gone on trial in the southern province of Binh Duong.
Court officials said Le Thanh Van admitted she
killed them so she could steal their possessions and money.
She is accused of poisoning her victims, who
included several family members, by putting cyanide into their drinks
or food.
She could face the death sentence if convicted for
the killings, which took place between 1998 and 2001.
Fake wills
Le Thanh Van, 48, admitted killing her victims,
including her mother-in-law, brother-in-law and foster mother, to
steal money and goods worth more than $US15,000, said Nguyen Thanh
Tung, an official with Binh Duong People's Court.
The state-run Phap Luat newspaper said she faked
her victims' wills and other documents.
She was arrested twice between 1998 and 2000, but
was later released for lack of evidence.
Van will stand trial alongside her boyfriend. They
are both charged with murder and robbery.