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Old 06-09-2008   #12
Fontenrose
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Location: Tri-cities
Gender: femme
Posts: 1,008

This issue of injustice speaks to the question of whether the accused was guilty. It can be very tempting for police to 'solve' a crime quickly and take the pressure off.

a comment made to the CBC article (based on a 45 min. interview) that is underneath was interesting. No idea if this comment is true.

Quote:
Actually this was a really informative article and probably does exactly what the propaganda machine wants... to distract the public from the fact that there are too many things that did not add up, including why the law enforcement agencies in Shanghai took so long to say anything. Could it be they had to take care of their own or at least find a way to save face because the crime was out of their hands?

Currently attributed to having come from the foreign affairs offices here in Shanghai, is a story that makes sense to many long-term expatriates here in China that have a better view of how some things work here:

It seems Miss O'Brien was assigned to some unseemly clubs and gigs, one of which was at a KTV Nightclub owned by certain well-connected military people. She may have inadvertently caused someone important to lose face and so someone went out to teach her a lesson. Instead, she ended up dead. The crime scene was then addressed and the civilian police took over from there. The actual culprit was handled through military means (aka. summarily executed as the military everywhere does not take too kindly to these kinds of mistakes) but then the civilian law enforcement agencies had to figure out a PR move to save face and minimize bad press before the Olympics.

They found a willing participant in a migrant worker already in trouble with the law, to confess to the crime in return for his family being taken care of. Case solved both in reality and in the media.

Believe it or not. Its up to you.

cbcnews.ca
Quote:
O'Brien, left, and Wood, second from left, enjoy a meal with some friends in Shanghai. (Courtesy of Charlotte Wood)
Quote:
B.C. model's roommate still haunted by Shanghai slaying

CBCNews.ca Monday, August 25, 2008

The roommate of a Salt Spring Island model who was murdered in Shanghai, China, says the experience still keeps her awake at night.
Charlotte Wood, 21, was the first to find the body of Diana O'Brien in their building's stairwell on July 6.
Earlier that Sunday evening, O'Brien had returned from a modelling job to the apartment the two shared.
The two had a bite to eat together, and then Wood went out with friends while O'Brien stayed home to rest.
Hours later, Wood came home to find a woman's stabbed body in their apartment stairwell. She immediately ran upstairs to get O'Brien.
"I didn't make it in. I just saw stuff happened in my apartment," Wood told CBC News on Monday in an exclusive interview at her mother's home in Metchosin, a suburb of Victoria on southern Vancouver Island.


The furniture in the apartment was overturned, and there was blood on the floor. It was O'Brien who had been killed.
Wood was questioned for hours by Chinese police. When they let her back into the apartment a week later, it was still a grisly crime scene.
"I tried not to look at Diana's room because it was the worst," Wood said. "I went in there. It was a blur. I just grabbed my things … It was too emotional being in there. It wasn't the same apartment."
Less than a week later, police arrested Chen Jun, 18, who had recently been working in a nearby coffee shop, and charged him with murder.
He allegedly confessed to entering O'Brien's apartment to rob her, saying he stabbed her when she tried to hit him and run away.
Critics have suggested the swift arrest and the man's inconsistent confession make his arrest look more like a public relations move before the Beijing Olympics rather than real police work, but Wood disagrees.
"They showed me tapes of the guy entering the building, riding his bike around, leaving with my stuff," she said. "They found all my stuff with him. So, I don't know. I don't know how they could have planted something on a random guy."


Modelling agency shut down


Victoria's Barbara Coultish modelling agency contracted Wood and O'Brien to JH Models in Shanghai, a new, small agency, which immediately shut down after the slaying.


The agency only had three models at the time of the killing: Wood, O'Brien, and a man. Wood said the agency asked her and O'Brien to do some strange jobs like dancing on stage to promote a new brand of liquor.
"We both didn't want to do it," Wood said. "We did it twice. We were both like, 'We don't want to do this anymore'."
O'Brien was disappointed with the work and missed her boyfriend and wanted to return home, Wood said.
After the killing and the investigation, Wood stayed and picked up work with another agency.
But now that Wood herself has returned home to British Columbia, she says she is still struggling with the reality it could have been her home alone in the apartment that night. The unthinkable tragedy is only starting to hit home now, she said.
"It's just hard," Wood said. "It's just weird being home and finally dealing with everything."