The Malay Mail’s article on Aug 2, 2007
Could anyone tell that someone – he or she – is a serial killer? If we have that kind of gift, we can at least save children that falls under serial killers’ hand. The problem is we do not know how sick are they?
They are seemed normal to everyone and have normal life like each of us. Even their partners failed to detect the problems until they died.
Mary Ann Cotton, William Palmer and Gesina Gottfried are among the earliest serial killers written in the history and if anyone asked how crucial are they? Tell them they killed their own family including the four-month child.
Mary Ann Cotton might not feel anything when she pregnant Mary Isabella because she simply killed the child four months after giving birth. She also killed 10 out of a dozen of her children, at least four husbands and several others step children.
I could not imagine how cool they look and how cold their heart would be. In my experience, I had never met any serial killer but I might have seen the coldest heart.
She was the main suspect for “Butcher of Mont Kiara.” Based on law, she innocent because the authority failed to produce the evidence but at the beginning of the case, she already confesses that she done it.
Kuala Lumpur Criminal Investigation Department chief Senior Assistant Commissioner II Ku Chin Wah said the deputy public prosecutor’s office had studied the case and found there was insufficient evidence to charge anyone as yet.
Based on the investigation, the plan was almost perfect. The `Butcher of Mont Kiara’ had done it nicely, cutting up the body of 39-year-old Singaporean businessman Goh Yoke Seng into 11 parts before stuffing them into a refrigerator.
The authority believe the murderer had used a very sharp weapon to cut the hands, legs and neck before placing the body parts into garbage bags and stashed inside the fridge, which was sealed with tape.
Goh’s dismembered body was found on July 29 by the new owner of the condominium when he went to the unit to clean it.
When police arrived at the scene, police discovered that the internal organs were missing and found a copy of a driver’s licence belonging to the victim’s wife. She then surrendered to police on July 30.
She was subsequently remanded until she was released on police bail on Aug 10. She reportedly turned up at the police station on Aug 27, before she had the bail term extended until September 19 and became a free person.
Within the bail term, she has been treated by a psychiatrist and psychologist. Police believed the body had been in the condominium for more than a year before the discovery.
If I met her at shopping complex, I could not identify her and might not realise that she had once become main suspect of murder case. Could you?