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Isan serial killer arrested after two murders and knife attack on woman


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Isan serial killer arrested after two murders and knife attack on woman

 

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Image: Independent News Network

 

Police have arrested a man they say is responsible for two horrific murders in Udon and Nong Bualamphu.

He was apprehended on Saturday after a third attack this time on a woman in the Naklang area of Nong Bualamphu where he stabbed the neck of a 53 year old  called Wow Donprap with a knife from behind in an attempt to steal her motorcycle. She is recovering.

Police said that 20 year old Sathaporn Seechiangsa from Bung Karn province admitted to the murder of two people and the attack on the woman after an intense three hour interrogation. They said he appears drugged and largely incoherent.

He has been taken back to Udon where he had attacked Panya Thongsri, 50, in a sugar cane plantation on Thursday. Panya was found by a neighbor - his head and torso were in a fertilizer sack and his arms and legs had been cut off and stuffed in a bucket near the kitchen at his shack in the fields.

The killer then stole the victim's motorcycle and moved on to Nong Bualamphu on Friday where he attacked Samran Srimungkhun, 61, on a village road with a  knife. The victim was a man with mental deficiencies who had worked in a nearby temple for ten years.

Police said that further details would be released Sunday with a reenactment likely to be held.

 

Source: Independent News Network

 

 

 
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-- © Copyright Thai Visa News 2016-09-18
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25 minutes ago, Haunebu said:

The saddest part is, that he will not be dissolved in acid to get rid of this subhuman waste and that he will be treated like a person, trialled, convicted, imprisoned and eventually pardoned and set free again... :(

Have you considered a move lately? ... I think you might be happier living in Pakistan

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47 minutes ago, Haunebu said:

The saddest part is, that he will not be dissolved in acid to get rid of this subhuman waste and that he will be treated like a person, trialled, convicted, imprisoned and eventually pardoned and set free again... :(

I think even in Western countries like the US & UK this guy would be locked away for life at the minimum (life without parole).

 

Sounds like he's mentally-deficient/crazy, and wouldn't be fit to stand trial anyway.

 

One thing with the UK, was that when they abolished the death penalty in the UK, they said that murderers would get "life", which seems like an average of 11 years, then released on license nowadays.

 

Just a bit of nit-picking also. According to many of the true-life crime shows from the US, a serial-killer is someone who has killed 3 people in separate incidents over a peroiod of more than a month. (FBI definition).

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"... an intense three hour interrogation."

 

Well, that's certainly some suggestive language....

 

Will be interesting to see whether this man is suffering from a definable psychological disorder (paranoid schizophrenia, etc.), as implied in the article, and how this will impact his outcome in the legal system. I'm sure, that regardless of his mental state, some people here will suggest still more creative punishments...

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2 hours ago, ratcatcher said:

Could they be detectives?

Not all police are uniformed or undercover, some are simply doing a job of tracking criminals.

In this case they seem to have done a good job. Praise where praise is due. Then there is the followup that is the part that bothers me. So much of the followup seems to fall between the cracks here.

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The word is that the crazy guy is related to the wife of the man in the sugar cane plantation. The family had arguments over a piece of land that she owned. The crazy guy had several arguments before he finally killed the poor man. Can't say that he could be released on mental state, looks more he all planned this.

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Of course I am just speculating here, but who wants to bet he was raised by his grandparents, while his single mother was away for years at a time, giving him no paternal guidance whatsoever? Grandparents are simply caretakers. They make sure the child gets fed, and clothed, and that they get the most modest amount of attention. It is no substitution for parenthood. Issan has this boil on it's face. Absentee parenting is a curse of the region, as it is considered acceptable by many. 

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4 hours ago, NongKhaiKid said:

There may be a supposed directive not to parade suspects but there's no way the BIB would pass up publicity on this one.

I can imagine any re-enactments could well turn into real Bollywood productions.

 

I really don't understand why they don't use a wide angle or fisheye lens for these photos. If so they'd fit so many more bib in the photo.

 

Just sayin.

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No doubt that because " he appears drugged and largely incoherent" that will be mitigating circumstance when he goes to court. Lucky to do 10 years.  Out, back on the drugs and do it all over again.

 

What ever happened to that serial killer that was running around raping and killing old ladies in Bangkok a year or two ago ?That has gone quiet.

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53 minutes ago, Docno said:

"... an intense three hour interrogation."

 

Well, that's certainly some suggestive language....

 

Will be interesting to see whether this man is suffering from a definable psychological disorder (paranoid schizophrenia, etc.), as implied in the article, and how this will impact his outcome in the legal system. I'm sure, that regardless of his mental state, some people here will suggest still more creative punishments...

I am still astonished that it is legal to interrogate a "drugged and largely incoherent " person. Not trying to defend him or what he has done, just think that he should have been assigned a doctor and council. 

Other than that I think these likes of criminals should be banished to an island and left to rot, when found guilty. 

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3 minutes ago, StefanBBK said:

I am still astonished that it is legal to interrogate a "drugged and largely incoherent " person. Not trying to defend him or what he has done, just think that he should have been assigned a doctor and council. 

Other than that I think these likes of criminals should be banished to an island and left to rot, when found guilty. 

What a relief to hear that he is a 100% sane person just like the rest of us

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53 minutes ago, lhvdberg said:

The word is that the crazy guy is related to the wife of the man in the sugar cane plantation. The family had arguments over a piece of land that she owned. The crazy guy had several arguments before he finally killed the poor man. Can't say that he could be released on mental state, looks more he all planned this.

I think you'll find that theory has been discarded after the police brought in a relative of the deceased man in the sugar plantation and the motorcycle shop owner who repaired the motorbike the murder suspect brought in said he didn't look like the man who brought in the bike.Quite an age difference too, the suspect who is a relative is 33 but the man arrested is only 20. Plus why would the relative then go on to murder and attempt to murder others miles away and completely unrelated?

The suspect is a crazy, too much methamphetamine mixed with lao khao perhaps over the years, though he hasn't been long out of the slammer. 

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I am of the opinion that whether they are drugged up, mentally ill or blaming their murders on other reasons, the are a menace to society and should be executed. If they are released, they are very likely to murder other innocent people.

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14 minutes ago, Gary A said:

I am of the opinion that whether they are drugged up, mentally ill or blaming their murders on other reasons, the are a menace to society and should be executed. If they are released, they are very likely to murder other innocent people.

I couldn't agree more. In fact, let's do away with prisons altogether and just execute everyone who's convicted of any crime. Think of the money we'd save

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1 hour ago, Haunebu said:

The saddest part is, that he will not be dissolved in acid to get rid of this subhuman waste and that he will be treated like a person, trialled, convicted, imprisoned and eventually pardoned and set free again... :(

 

No. The saddest part is that you are  walking about spouting idiotic statements.

Look at what you wrote. You haven't the slightest clue as to whether or not the accused man is guilty do you? DO YOU? No, you do not. And yet here you are demanding that he be "dissolved in acid"  and that there not be a trial. You keep your confidence for your own police interactions. I know from my own experience that the Thai police often bungle major crime investigations and often  accuse the wrong person or toss up someone to  close a case. This case hasn't even been  fully investigated or a case made.

 

The man confessed to  a crime while incoherent and under the influence of unknown drugs. No one with any common sense would rely on evidence gathered under such conditions without benefit a thorough investigation. Are you also a big believer in torture?

 

Fortunately, ignorant folk like you have no influence in western society and we still have a system where the police  investigate  crimes, and the  judicial system determines guilt. This is not the dark ages where feudal lords run their  little fiefdoms executing   accused people based  upon their personal sentiments.

 

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3 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

Of course I am just speculating here, but who wants to bet he was raised by his grandparents, while his single mother was away for years at a time, giving him no paternal guidance whatsoever? Grandparents are simply caretakers. They make sure the child gets fed, and clothed, and that they get the most modest amount of attention. It is no substitution for parenthood. Issan has this boil on it's face. Absentee parenting is a curse of the region, as it is considered acceptable by many. 

Yes just a normal tv posters speculation 

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2 hours ago, geriatrickid said:

Fortunately, ignorant folk like you have no influence in western society and we still have a system where the police  investigate  crimes, and the  judicial system determines guilt. This is not the dark ages where feudal lords run their  little fiefdoms executing   accused people based  upon their personal sentiments.

I agree with you, but we don't need to go back to the dark ages, we have a feudal lord system in the Philippines right now.

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