In connection to the mysterious (and tragic) “dead newborns in the French fridge” story, police now say a neighbor witnessed a white teenage girl leaving and entering the house where the bodies were discovered, reports YTN.
The witness said the girl appeared to be between the ages of 13 and 15 and 160-165cm in height.
The neighbor said she watched the girl carefully as she left the home, which the neighbor had believed was empty. When the two made eye-contact, the girl appeared very startled, said the witness.
Police are now focusing their investigation on learning the identity of the mystery girl.
Police also confirmed* that that the only security card used to enter the home while Mr. C and his family were vacationing in France was the one carried by Mr. C’s French friend Mr. P. Accordingly, they are looking into the relationship, if any, between P and the teenage girl that allegedly entered the home.
I fear this could get really sordid.
*Or so said YTN.


17 Comments
Any mention of the age of C’s children?
quotes from an idiot:
‘leave it to the koreans to blame whitey.’ dogbert in reference to the frozen babies case
‘why are korean women whores?’
dogbert
quotes from a sage:
‘what now how-mow-big-mouth?’ pawi to dogbert
‘is your hatred for koreans based on your ho deciding to leave you?’ pawi’s question to dogbert
‘i apologize to you for making fun of those creepy guys in the manga section of your local bookstore.’ pawi giving sincere apology to our resident idiot, dogbert.
quote from aunt condi:
‘we’re going to give the lebanese 30 million to help rebuild what was destroyed by the bombs we supplied to the people who destroyed lebanon in the first place.’
What has this got to do with teenage girl??
Dame, another job for Brendon Carr, The newest Legal Eagle of S. Korea!!
*There is no doubt in my mind Kenzi Snider is guilty as sin.
http://www.estripes.com/articl.....chive=true
What happened to those shoes Brendon!
Dame, I hate these sleek lawyers. Remind me to hire you when I accidently kill someone in Korea, OK?
It’s easy to throw stones without having seen all the evidence. I have seen all the evidence, and it was easy to see that Kenzi didn’t commit that crime. Luckily, we don’t have to prove she didn’t commit the crime — it’s the state’s burden to prove she did. It was easy to see from that evidence that the state could not meet its burden. Anyway, Kenzi is free as a bird now, having been acquitted three times in Korean courts through the Supreme Court. As for what happened to my Skechers, I threw them away.
Nulji, my only questions to you are:
(1) How old are you again?
and
(2) Why hasn’t your English improved?
Pawikirogi, resident idiot is NOT a title you can just pass on at your whim. It’s a LIFELONG position which YOU earned back in your Shin Jong-il days — and I must say you defend it robustly with each appearance.
When you stop being an asshole, then we’ll talk.
Was that the case where she confessed to the FBI? How did you reconcile the fact that the evidence didn’t point to her but she had gone on record as saying that she did it?
I’m not questioning the verdict, I’m just curious as to how that all came down.
Not to hijack the thread or anything, but I can’t reconcile that. Suffice it to say, though, that there is a large body of scholarship surrounding false confession.
I’m siding with Brendon on this one. Kenzi didn’t get off on a technicality. It is precisely because of the possibility of a coerced confession that Korean courts recognize only confessions given to a prosecutor. Her guilt was not proven, and justice was served for Kenzi, but not Jamie. Had the police not mishandled the evidence so badly, perhaps her killer would be behind bars.
Actually, the judgments in the appeal and the Supreme Court rulings both based the outcome on procedural issues (confession not made to prosecutor) and the substantive issues raised by evidence pointing another way.
As for mentioning names of people involved in criminal cases, I remember reading about the French dude arrested in the corruption/acquisition of secret documents [Thales, fighter acquisition thingy]. One of the articles I saw mentionned Mr. P. The funny thing is, it’s Mr. F. The dude’s full name is 20+ letters long. I would’ve liked to see it butchered in print
Damn! Young Brendan is not only an attorney (dime a dozen these days, what with the interstate and all), but a real trial attorney who defends felony cases before Korean courts. (Remove plumed hat, render deep bow in Carr, Esq’s. direction.)
No, I’m not a Korean attorney, and cannot represent people “in Korean court.” I work with people who do. That’s why I can only do part of the work. We are business attorneys by trade, but English language skill is limited here amongst the lawyers, and frankly speaking the ones who speak English are usually too busy making money hand over fist to take some random foreigner’s criminal case. But since I and my colleagues have made a lifestyle choice to work in a small enough firm to take what cases we want, we sometimes take interesting cases just for the interest factor.
Brendon Carr:t’s easy to throw stones without having seen all the evidence. I have seen all the evidence, and it was easy to see that Kenzi didn’t commit that crime.
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I ain’t buying that crap O.J. Simpson lover. You know she’s guilty.
http://www.courttv.com/room_10.....index.html
Yup, ‘was up all night reading this crap. Quite good, riveting actually. Why hasn’t this crap been made into a movie by the way?
Kind of seedy, but, has a little bit of everything.
Hmm.., I’m thinking Jessica Biel as Kenzi.
Dead girl looks a lot like that girl who got killed in Wash. D.C. Chandra something…was having an affair with that Congressman what’s his face…from California…
the main problem with a screenplay is you don’t know the killer…….duh.
natalee holloway would leave you with the same problem but you’re left with a much better series of back stories.
the case at hand.
the filipino maid will most likely never return.