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A grab from a closed-circuit television
camera shows a man sending the three boxes containing the parts of a man
that he and his accomplice allegedly murdered in Guangzhou
recently.(Photo: China Daily) Photo Gallery
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BEIJING, Jan. 15 -- Police have detained a young man
and a woman suspected of dismembering a man and sending his body parts to three
different cities by post.
The man is an employee of a local logistics company,
while the woman is a prostitute, according to the Guangzhou-based Southern
Metropolis News.
"The case is thought to involve a murder for love,"
the newspaper quoted a police source as saying yesterday.
The victim was a 50-year-old man who had once visited
the prostitute, the newspaper said.
The young man is believed to have fallen in love with
the prostitute. The two then allegedly conspired to kill the older man because
he had met with the prostitute, according to the Southern Metropolis News.
After dismembering the man's body, the two allegedly
put the parts into three cardboard boxes, which they then sent to three
different cities.
The murder came to light on Jan. 7 after staff at
a logistics company in Qingdao, East China's Shandong Province, noticed blood
seeping out of one of the boxes. The box was meant to be carrying medicine.
Qingdao police opened the box, which was 60-70
centimeters long and 30-40 centimeters wide, and found a human torso but no
head, arms or legs. The box had been sent from Guangzhou.
Meanwhile, police in Beijing and Jiangyin, in East
China's Jiangsu Province, found a man's head and arms on Jan. 9. Police said
they believed the parts belonged to the same man.
Qingdao immediately sent five police officers, led by
a deputy bureau chief, to Guangzhou to help investigate the case. Guangzhou
police set up a special task force to handle the case after learning that body
parts had turned up in other cities.
Footage taken by closed-circuit television at a
Guangzhou shipping company showed that a man and a woman had sent the packages.
The footage showed that the two had arrived by taxi
at a cargo transport terminal on Guangzhou's Shatai Road at about 6:30 pm on
Jan. 4 to ship three boxes by truck. The boxes had been labelled as medicine
and machine fittings.
The man signed for the packages using the apparent
pseudonym Song Deyuan, which translates as "sent far away".
The logistics company did not inspect the boxes
before sending them on to their destinations, the paper reported.
Officials from the company refused to comment on the
case yesterday.
(Source: China Daily)