A South Korean court has given a life sentence to a true crime fan who told police she murdered a stranger “out of curiosity”.

Jung Yoo-jung, 23, had been obsessed with crime shows and novels and scored highly on psychopath tests, police said.

Fixated with the idea of “trying out a murder”, she used an app to meet an English-language teacher, stabbing her to death at her home in May.

The brutal killing shocked South Korea.

Prosecutors had asked for the death penalty - a request typically reserved for the gravest of offences.

  • Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de
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    11 months ago

    I suppose it’s possible that the police already investigated that avenue and ruled it out and are just not telling the reporters (and by extension the public), but if that’s the case why not just come out and say that so not only the suspected person’s name is cleared and also let the public know that they are indeed on top of the investigation?

    If they say they are investigating that way and it turns out the reporter was wrong, wouldn’t there be repercussions for the reporter?

    If they say they are investigating that way and it turns out the reporter was right, wouldn’t it make a fair trial in front of a jury nearly impossible because of public image?