The late Koo Hara's safe theft case was re-illuminated in the SBS 'That's What I Want to Know' broadcast on the 22nd.
The safe theft occurred on the 14th January 2020, after the 49th day of the deceased's death. The perpetrators broke into the deceased's house late at night, stole the safe and fled.
The deceased's brother, Koo Hui-in, informed that the safe theft should not be seen as a simple theft case. He said "It is unacceptable to steal the deceased's things like that, even though it is the deceased's house. What I discovered was a situation that had passed for some time," he recalled.
Qu Huynh said that he only found out after some time that the safe in the upstairs closet vanity had disappeared, and added "I stayed up all night for about two days and searched the surveillance camera footage. There are surveillance cameras on all four sides around this house, but they were only found in two directions."
However, he informed that he had not been able to film any scenes of them entering the house or taking the safe. He said that it is assumed that he looked back at the line of flow of entry and fled to the iron gate on the side of the multi-purpose room. Mr Qu Huynh said, "I have never seen that door either. The people who came to play also go as far as the (guest) room", he informed. Hence, the police who investigated the incident added "So it could be an acquaintance".
Commenting on the items in the safe, Koo Ho-in said, "Some people thought there were materials related to Burning Sun in that safe, and they thought I was trying to steal them. There were letters I wrote to my sister in the army, letters she received from students she taught, contracts, documents reimbursed by her office, house registration deeds and about five or six mobile phones", he revealed.
Koo Ho-in, who said he opened the safe to look for his sister's will, said: 'I sorted out the contents in the safe and took out the important ones. I don't mind seeing that when the murderer took it, he took a shell," he added.
He added "There was a mobile phone and it is in the hands of a contractor. (I'm waiting for someone I can trust to solve (the PIN)."
The SBS 'That's what I want to know' production team re-illuminated the incident through reenactments and 3D simulations. They also used AI techniques to reconstruct the surveillance camera footage and materialised a montage of the perpetrator's face. The perpetrator is a person with a height of late 170 cm.
2024/06/24 06:31 KST
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