Disturbing REGION-LOCKED Mysteries with Chilling Evidence

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  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @LazyMasquerade
    @LazyMasquerade  Год назад +204

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  • @bartender_billy6229
    @bartender_billy6229 Год назад +1179

    “We poisoned her because she was annoying, and we were too cowardly to confront her about it”
    I summed up the letter

    • @victory6924
      @victory6924 Год назад +12

      Well done

    • @rosiemeza1579
      @rosiemeza1579 Год назад

      It could have been a third party

    • @MegaAstroFan18
      @MegaAstroFan18 Год назад +12

      Even if we don't know who they are (and assuming the letter is true), they seem to think they were justified. So I'm of the view that they should at the very least be shamed whenever possible so maybe, on the off chance one of them sees something relating to the case again, they know that people are not and would not be on their side.

    • @LifestreamMaiden
      @LifestreamMaiden 11 месяцев назад +1

      I have to agree

    • @SmearyBridges
      @SmearyBridges 10 месяцев назад +17

      I wish they would have elaborated on how exactly 1 girl allegedly kept up a whole dorm for 2 years. Was she having dance parties every night? It just doesn't make any sense.

  • @eternityawaitz7726
    @eternityawaitz7726 Год назад +4728

    "And besides, no one was killed." But they permanently disabled her and ruined her life! Couldn't they have talked it out with Zhu about her disrupting their sleep?

    • @seandelap8587
      @seandelap8587 Год назад +538

      That was most likely an excuse they used i dount that was their real motive they targeted her because they wanted to and just made up some bs to excuse it

    • @jackiearnolds
      @jackiearnolds Год назад +445

      If that was even true, who poisons someone because they are being disruptive? I'm pretty sure there are many things you can do before a complete breakdown that would "justify" murder. Plus, this was not a case of sudden madness. This was cruelly calculated and executed through the course of several weeks.
      Aside from that, wouldn't the university have records of those who filled noise complaints and, therefore, have something against Zhu, if that was true? Was it a blatant lie, police neglect to seek those files, the university misplacing the files, neglecting to take them, or helping cover it up? It feels like this should be an easy case to solve if there was proper investigation.

    • @sandrafaith
      @sandrafaith Год назад +117

      So psychotic, if real.

    • @wingedsaiyan
      @wingedsaiyan Год назад +208

      Bruh I wanna get my hands on whoever wrote that letter fr.

    • @RubenKelevra
      @RubenKelevra Год назад +114

      Yeah, clearly written by someone who tries to compensate their guilt.

  • @Soup_phobic
    @Soup_phobic Год назад +3111

    The letter in the Zhu Ling case made me so pissed, I’ve never been so mad before
    The victim blaming and insensitivity is disgusting

    • @astrowolvez
      @astrowolvez Год назад +1

      Seriously just wanted to crawl through the screen and strangle them. The arrogance and thinking not only was this justified but warranted is sick.

    • @dataexpunged4784
      @dataexpunged4784 Год назад +354

      I can tell that that letter writer would be absolutely insufferable to be around IRL. Likely either a Karen or an incel, and a raging narcissist either way.

    • @RockinTheBassGuitar
      @RockinTheBassGuitar Год назад +270

      Considering the main suspect moved to the US makes me even more sure she did it and was trying to blame other people. He entitled attitude could mean she doesn't think she could be caught.

    • @HexIsme
      @HexIsme Год назад +43

      @@RockinTheBassGuitar This, exactly.

    • @didi012578
      @didi012578 Год назад +28

      Me too! I was yelling at my phone listening to that garbage!

  • @russellst.martin4255
    @russellst.martin4255 Год назад +228

    The type of person who would slowly poison someone purely out of jealousy is _exactly_ the type of person who would be so bothered and consumed by their victim's positive public perception that they would send a potentially incriminating letter without regard to the personal risk.

    • @AYVYN
      @AYVYN Год назад +12

      Clever insight. I agree.

    • @victory6924
      @victory6924 Год назад +5

      Makes sense

    • @Leonard0F41G
      @Leonard0F41G 3 месяца назад +7

      My thoughts exactly. Even before Lazy revelead the way she was poisoned this story reeked of someone being jealous to me.
      She was being described as so perfect and such a bright shining star.
      And then the way she got poisoned, "definitely a jealous fellow female classmate " I thought.
      Plus if someone were to steal her hygiene products and return them poisoned, in a dorm, they would need some observation to make sure they poison the right person.
      And then there's the rivalry.
      But the letter really seared it in, it reeks of jealousy, so desperatly trying to call the victim out and is full of projection (the part about sun being unconcerned for others).
      The psychotic rant about disturbed sleep is also a hint, it would need to be someone sleeping close to her at night to be disturbed.
      I bet she must've felt insecure that Zhu would stay up late to study, so "inconvenient" for her.
      Sun had also already given way to this need to be liked by people when she broke the silence to post online.
      It all fits perfectly, maybe too perfectly.
      But at the very least, if it's not directly Sun, I'm convinced she gave that Thalium knowing its purpose was to harm Zhu.

    • @AcornPower
      @AcornPower 25 дней назад +1

      not to mention the letter sounded like someone who had an inside view of what was going on not some random guy

    • @selena9932
      @selena9932 19 дней назад

      That’s what I said. Narcissistic personality type killers always seem to end up telling on themselves, in one way or another.

  • @PokemonkaDub
    @PokemonkaDub Год назад +725

    Japan seems to have a thing for protecting the criminals more than the victims/their families.

    • @imaghost2961
      @imaghost2961 Год назад +78

      A lot of countries seem to.. it’s absolutely disgusting.

    • @LadyAtivan
      @LadyAtivan Год назад +36

      Look at America now

    • @snokey1153
      @snokey1153 Год назад +40

      America… it’s a funny thing, some times they can hunt down a person from a five year olds drawing, but they can also spend years finding someone from a relatively clear picture

    • @Portymoth
      @Portymoth Год назад +53

      Those kids are 100% related to Yakuza. It’s the only explanation to why the police wouldn’t investigate properly.

    • @bee1411
      @bee1411 Год назад +35

      @@Portymoth Exactly. This was my suspicion as well. People definitely underestimate how much power the Yakuza has within the Japanese police system. It’s so gross. :(

  • @goldenpuzzle7864
    @goldenpuzzle7864 Год назад +2714

    the incompetence of the officials in these cases is always infuriating
    edit: i chose 'officials' vs police to include the doctors in the poisoning case, but yeah i agree that the cops were absolutely vile in both

    • @tylerp1019
      @tylerp1019 Год назад +34

      And doctors.

    • @Demonhead1
      @Demonhead1 Год назад +40

      You know when yakuza is involved no one really gets caught

    • @TheTrueDiablix
      @TheTrueDiablix Год назад +56

      Incompetence is highly improbable. Malice is a better fit to the available information.

    • @DanteTheEgregore
      @DanteTheEgregore Год назад +55

      Incompetent? That first story is criminally negligent. Those police belong in jail.

    • @tinawitte420
      @tinawitte420 Год назад +1

      True, but then, we wouldn't be hearing about it in this format if they weren't....

  • @broson2480
    @broson2480 Год назад +1191

    The Japanese legal system / law enforcement is so infuriating sometimes..

    • @DaneTheInsane675
      @DaneTheInsane675 Год назад +92

      fr man, seems like they like to hang back and do nothing

    • @bryn1063
      @bryn1063 Год назад

      ​@Sven the Almighty it's like they basically let murder go around. Until they keep doing it. It's so infuriating, are they even being paid? I just don't get the protection behind the first one. Sure they're minors but they're murderers?

    • @astrowolvez
      @astrowolvez Год назад

      Not as bad as america, the amount of times where they brush off something serious because they obviously don’t want to do work will make you want to claw your eyes out.

    • @MrYelly
      @MrYelly Год назад +62

      Only sometimes...?

    • @randombaron6219
      @randombaron6219 Год назад +15

      @@MrYelly Well yeah, when they mishandle cases, you can't blame every single law enforcement officer for the mishandlement of cases they aren't involved in

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapples Год назад +1991

    Taike is a hero for protecting his girlfriend. I hope his girlfriend is doing okay. Zhu’s classmates are hero’s as well for trying to look for cures for her.

    • @MrYelly
      @MrYelly Год назад +4

      Who is Zulu?

    • @janedoe4316
      @janedoe4316 Год назад +17

      *Zhu

    • @BlackSheepNara
      @BlackSheepNara Год назад +44

      He didn’t protect her from anything. From the sound of it, they were after him. If they really were after the girlfriend, they would’ve done something to her once he was out.

    • @multiyapples
      @multiyapples Год назад +12

      @@MrYelly Zhu. My iPhone autocorrected it.

    • @Peachu_n_Goma_Home
      @Peachu_n_Goma_Home Год назад +25

      They shldnt hv left with the gang to a remote spot. Never go to a second location with the aggressor it will dramatically lower your chance of survival. Honestly, scream and kick and scratch and bite (anything, use your body as much as you can on the spot might scare away the aggressor or draw attention from others -- you have a higher chance surviving than not doing anything. Going to 2nd location is big no no.

  • @SRCxo
    @SRCxo Год назад +438

    Zhu couldn’t have been that horrible of a person if she had so many classmates trying to find a cure for her.

    • @semoremo9548
      @semoremo9548 Год назад +5

      We'll never know. Some people are really nice to some, and really nasty to others for some reason.

    • @ElFreakinCid
      @ElFreakinCid Год назад

      @@semoremo9548 Yeah, look, something tells me the obvious narcissist with access to thallum who fled the country and changed her name before she was ever even charged or tried (and who VERY obviously sent that awful letter to Zhu's parents about how she deserved this for being such a nuissance to her amazing, beautiful, perfect roommate) isn't the most reliable source.

    • @Annabellethedoll666
      @Annabellethedoll666 Год назад +76

      @@semoremo9548Even if she was horrible she didn’t deserve that. Those fools could of reported her or talked it out with her. This excuse their making sounds like a lie to make themselves feel better about the crime they’ve done. Most likely even a lie that it was more people involved.

    • @evantambolang3052
      @evantambolang3052 Год назад +24

      It also said that the implied culprit, her roommate and rival who is now fled to US under new name is a terrible person at school

    • @valnerothgaming
      @valnerothgaming 9 месяцев назад

      @@evantambolang3052 Chances are this woman who fled was some sort of malignant narcissist. Upon hearing that the information about her was now being made publicly accessible back in China, she concocted the group and sent this letter to, in her mind, exonerate herself to make herself feel better and assuage whatever people in China may have been on her side or unsure of a culprit in the case. Having gone so far as to poison her to win a college rivalry, it doesn't seem like a stretch that she'd attempt to play the victim.

  • @freethinker1378
    @freethinker1378 Год назад +345

    No, I believe that letter to Zhu’s parents was sent by the lady that had access to thallium. Her school mate’s described her as entitled and rude. That’s exactly how that extremely hurtful letter came across. Narcissistic is the word that comes to mind. Most killers that have narcissistic traits cannot stand to let their cleverness go unnoticed. That letter is an example of the very same behaviour. Blaming the victim and shaming her parents. It’s despicable.

    • @Voidinfinitum0
      @Voidinfinitum0 Год назад +49

      Idk if anyone ever noticed this but the way the letter talks about america just proves that it was her roommate considering she move to America after getting married.

    • @victory6924
      @victory6924 Год назад

      Not to mention, the extreme hypocrisy. The irony. The backwardness in their sense of reasoning.

    • @freethinker1378
      @freethinker1378 Год назад +15

      @@Voidinfinitum0 I can’t understand how authorities ignored most pieces of obvious evidence..?

    • @raerohan4241
      @raerohan4241 Год назад +5

      ​@@freethinker1378 Probably because of her connections , but even without them, it's circumstantial evidence. They can't definitively say it was Zhu who sent it, they can't even prove it was sent by someone connected to the case at all

    • @GangstaCreeper
      @GangstaCreeper Год назад +5

      ​@@freethinker1378china is a very corrupt country full of basically nepotism, if you have enough fanily connections you can basically get away with anything and considering her family was part of the government or something like that then yeah shes most probably the culprit and just basically got away with it because of connections

  • @ahumanbeing4
    @ahumanbeing4 Год назад +855

    The first story made me so f-ing angry cause kids from my school did the same thing to a homeless man and did not get punished even tho they "got caught".

    • @lorettascott5477
      @lorettascott5477 Год назад +18

      Grrr 👿😖😳😖 that's horrible 😭😭😭😭😭😭

    • @ahumanbeing4
      @ahumanbeing4 Год назад +84

      @@lorettascott5477 so true. It was a group of kids 13-15 and the oldest one got a few months in juvenile detention. But that was "normal" in my school. Like 2 years before I went to that school , a girl set another girl on fire cause she was jealous of her hair. It was pure hell for me cause I was one of the good kids there. Oh and the IT teacher was a pedo, everyone knew, and I still had to spend a few classes a week with him, one on one. Horrible school.

    • @avelynn5976
      @avelynn5976 Год назад +41

      @@ahumanbeing4 jesus, i hope you came out okay cause that is a horrible environment for a minor to grow up in

    • @Shebeast3
      @Shebeast3 Год назад +7

      that is reprehensible 😮

    • @ahumanbeing4
      @ahumanbeing4 Год назад +42

      @@avelynn5976 Permanent knee injury and some trauma but mostly ok. Thank you for asking. Thankfully most people didn't bother me cause they knew that I was "different" (autistic).

  • @SaarRocks
    @SaarRocks Год назад +1888

    Zhu's story is so sad. To go from being perfectly healthy to losing every function in your body must have been awful. And the doctors not listening to her parents... Who knows how much that time without diagnosis would have matterend for her recovery (or lack thereof). And the other girl doesnt change her name and dob (never knew you can change that legally) if she's perfectly innocent. A sad case all around

    • @multiyapples
      @multiyapples Год назад

      The doctors should be fired and locked up for their shear stupidity. Same with Sun Wei.

    • @kadarak1
      @kadarak1 Год назад +1

      In most cases the faster patient get antidote to poison the higher the chances of both surviving poisoning and getting out without really big injuries. For sure if family didn't look for information on the internet and didn't get help, Zhu would die and maybe, just MAYBE if family wished to do autopsy they would discover that she got poisoned. And Sun probably did this because there are just too many coincidences, she could get thallium, could easily poison every day items in their room that Zhu was using and the moment Zhu fall in coma in hospital Sun could easily get rid off poisoned items in room to make sure that if police would start investigating they would find nothing.

    • @rossbaber-yd4fq
      @rossbaber-yd4fq Год назад +108

      It is a terribly sad case, and there is a good chance the letter came from the poisoner.
      Lazy is thinking rationally in saying they surely wouldn't want to incriminate themselves, and in such an obvious way, but the way she's described, I think there is a possibility Sun is a narcissist and if so, it would fit that she is the prime suspect. As such, 'normal' doesn't apply.
      She has a sense of entitlement, lack of boundary recognition if she's going though personal things, lack of accountability in continuing the attack and through her family connections, and a total lack of empathy after seeing what happened to Zhu.
      When it comes to the letter all those years later, the victim is painted black by some third party, but narcissists have no difficulty in pretending to be someone else and will see nothing wrong with their behaviour. The narcissist never forgets.
      Zhu was a rival, beat her in an election, was better liked, and that made her a target.

    • @pyrolink1990
      @pyrolink1990 Год назад +13

      @@rossbaber-yd4fq this exactly. I couldn’t have said it better myself.

    • @sipsdrewshin9169
      @sipsdrewshin9169 Год назад

      I agree it has all the hallmarks of being written by a narcissistic and entitled person, it’s an attempted mechanism of control and Sun fits that profile perfectly. Plenty of Chinese immigrated to the US and regardless, her desire to try and regain control of the situation would’ve made it too tempting for her to resist sending it. That’s my thought.

  • @alixiasolaris
    @alixiasolaris Год назад +506

    wow. that letter in the zhuling case was infuriating. "The fact that I hit you is your fault because you made me so mad that I hit you." Talk about gaslighting

    • @SPRX77
      @SPRX77 Год назад +53

      Seriously the fact that the person who wrote said letter to Zhu’s parents had to “justify” their reasoning for POISONING and permanently damaging their girl’s life is pure evil and disgusting. Seriously I had to pause at every bit cause it just kept getting me angrier the more and more BS I heard.

    • @bryn1063
      @bryn1063 Год назад +27

      ​@@SPRX77 I agree. They're all cowards, they know what they did was wrong and at this point, i don't believe them. I do not believe that this girl was being that loud. They're just making up excuses for ruining someone's life because they were probably jealous of her.

    • @TopherGrant
      @TopherGrant Год назад +2

      I think k it was written by her American husband

    • @tingispingis
      @tingispingis Год назад +6

      That's not what gaslighting means why does everyone keep using that word wrong
      Doesn't matter though the letter is still horrendously messed up

    • @tingispingis
      @tingispingis Год назад

      ​​​@@bryn1063 I think the same as you. They were just trying to find any reason to justify what they did. The explanation they gave was total bullshit. Zhu would have had to be throwing early morning raves in her room on the daily to even come close to the amount of disruption they were describing. It's all excuses

  • @vtet
    @vtet Год назад +95

    The first story is absolutely haunting. The realization that even if you have someone else with you, there's still always a chance someone could just see you and decide to end your life and traumatize the one accompanying you forever. No clear motive or anything, they just... felt like ending a life.

    • @burtonupchurch1690
      @burtonupchurch1690 Год назад +1

      I think it almost had to be mistaken identity. I just doubt there’s many that would beat someone completely random with such rage for so long. I know there’s some psychos like that but 4 together seems unlikely enough to assume there was an actual motive.

    • @ElFreakinCid
      @ElFreakinCid Год назад +5

      @@burtonupchurch1690 Given that their apparent leader asked poor Taiki "Are you the leader of Ushiku?" before the assault began, I wonder if that might be the case. But that sure as fuck doesn't excuse what they did...

    • @burtonupchurch1690
      @burtonupchurch1690 Год назад

      @@ElFreakinCidTheres not much in this life that would excuse what they did but just trying to make sense of it. No motive and just randomness with such ferocity and 4 perps would be very strange but not impossible.

    • @anakatana777
      @anakatana777 Год назад

      I'd say they totally mistaking taike for some gang leader. It happens. It happened to a relative of mine, cops mistaking my relative for some drug lord 😮‍💨 🙄

  • @birdbrain4445
    @birdbrain4445 10 месяцев назад +13

    21:40 Not only did her condition not improve - in December 2023 she was showing signs of a brain tumour, including a high fever. She slipped into a coma and died. That poor woman, that poor family too... absolutely horrific what happened to them. The people responsible for Zhu's life being ruined like that... I don't even know how they sleep at night.

  • @deletedwaffles
    @deletedwaffles Год назад +1015

    That letter sent to Zhu Ling's parents is infuriating, Sounds like whoever wrote it couldn't keep up with Zhu Ling and was inadequate with their own accomplishments that they had to resort to doing terrible things to others.

    • @dont-touch-mepg1392
      @dont-touch-mepg1392 Год назад

      If u think that was a real letter that someone sent to the parents ur gullible as shit. Lol literally saying she deserved it for being mean but yet being a piece of shit themselves.

    • @tymora11
      @tymora11 Год назад

      To say nothing of the obliviousness of suggesting the parents "teach her how to contribute to society" when she has the mental capacity of a 6 YEAR OLD.

    • @kaylieghskorner9650
      @kaylieghskorner9650 Год назад +24

      I know right! It’s so horrific, how could you do that to someone, just for keeping you up?

    • @invisible3972
      @invisible3972 Год назад +47

      That person tried so hard to paint Zhu Ling as a bad person just for losing some sleep thanks to her, but they only managed to leave themselves in even a worse place: who in their right mind would poison someone over some sleepless nights? God if they reacted *that* badly over something so silly I would be really afraid to be near them, imagine what they could do over the tiniest thing.

    • @Lili-ib2rh
      @Lili-ib2rh Год назад +12

      Yes, especially since given the implications, you'd think this person destroyed her life because the poor girl snores or something!

  • @hallievanoutryve3109
    @hallievanoutryve3109 Год назад +458

    The roommate checked out a book on thallium? Changed her name and birthdate. And Zhu had beat Sun in an election, and they were known rivals? Not enough for a courtroom but it is pretty damning considering Sun had access to Zhu’s personal belongings and thallium.
    And that letter was so disrespectful, imagine how the parents felt reading that? Esp since China’s culture is more collective than the West, so being rude to your dorm mates would be much more shameful than it would be in the US or UK. Disturbing sleep doesn’t justify poisoning. And why the heck would you use thallium if you only wanted to incapacitate her enough to make her repeat the year?

    • @esteemedmortal5917
      @esteemedmortal5917 Год назад +38

      Yup, definitely entitled. Hope karma catches up to them and bites them in the ass in the most brutal, humiliating, and devastating way imaginable.

    • @ForeverLaxx
      @ForeverLaxx Год назад +60

      That whole letter felt like the projections of a narcissist, which only makes me think Sun wrote it herself.

    • @teijaflink2226
      @teijaflink2226 Год назад +21

      Definitely sounds like the narcissistic, entitled murderer, if it was Sun or someone else, could have been a troll too I suppose.

    • @XxKilleredxX
      @XxKilleredxX Год назад

      She had access to thallium, so presumably was involved in a field of research wherein checking out a book on thallium would be non-suspicious (never mind that there was no mention of interviewing any other people who might have checked out the same book). If someone gets hit by a car, should we arrest their roommate because they're an automotive engineer? Changing name and date of birth would be entirely reasonable if they were innocent and being targeted and wanted that to stop. And if China is so collectivist, wouldn't winning an election help her, not harm her? When reviewing historical accounts, it's always a huge red flag when a story emerges long after it's claimed source (like how the story of Lady Godiva first appeared centuries after her death). All the details mentioned here are just creating a linear, dark narrative targeted at a person that's most likely innocent and even claim A4 paper is uncommon in the US when it's literally common printing paper. As was said in this very video, supposedly many people there could have had access to thallium at that university.

    • @TiredBirb490
      @TiredBirb490 Год назад +9

      @@XxKilleredxX only 8 people at the university had access to thallium. Add that with everything else and yeah, it doesn’t look good for Sun. She had access to both thallium and Zhu and she had a motive. Moving to a different country and changing your name makes it look even worse

  • @worsethanjoerogan8061
    @worsethanjoerogan8061 Год назад +571

    I feel like there are less elaborate ways to punish a roommate for bad behavior than poisoning by thallium. That's just vicious

    • @JK-gm6kk
      @JK-gm6kk Год назад +45

      Right? They say nothing about trying to talk to her about it like a rational human being or anything. If that doesn't work, then keep her ass up for a few days and ask her if she's enjoying herself. I don't buy that they didn't know what would happen

    • @worsethanjoerogan8061
      @worsethanjoerogan8061 Год назад +36

      @@JK-gm6kk Especially since it's not like they poisoned her once and she died unexpectedly and they panicked. They did this continuously for months and escalated to poisoning food when she didn't get sick enough from poison soap and such.

    • @LunaMoonah-dz6eo
      @LunaMoonah-dz6eo Год назад +15

      @@JK-gm6kk we had to deal with noisy neighboors at night the same way, we just kept them up in mornings and cut their electricity at night (ik it's illegal but we had to) but we never thought about poisning them that's just rediculous !

    • @Rujewitblood
      @Rujewitblood Год назад +7

      @@JK-gm6kk not that they were in the right for poisoning her obviously, but the letter did say she didn't listen to reason and didnt care about other people's feelings, and did it for a long time (over 2 years I think?), so for sure they tried talking to her, and it would have to take a lot for 3 people to get together and decide to poison their roomate. If that letter is legit, then I believe the girl was definitely a bitch. Obviously doesn't deserve what happened to her, but just because she had a terribly unjust thing done to her, doesn't mean she was great herself, of course her family etc are going to make her out to be a saint, but what would they know about her life in the dorm room and how she really was with her roomates, she must have really pissed them off, unless there were literally 3 psychopaths that happened to share a dorm together. For what its worth they did say they didn't mean for all that to happen to her, just make her sick, and obviously they have to keep quiet now that she got fucked up badly, so to me the story checks out, the girl was a menace, her roomates decided to 'teach her a lesson', it got way out of hand and I guess at least one of them is a fucking psychopath to send that letter

    • @BeautifulSilence
      @BeautifulSilence Год назад

      ​@@Rujewitblood Sending the letter was psychopathic? No, they all are psychopaths. Anyone who messes with another person's bodily autonomy and agency is.
      The damage done to her didn't happen overnight and would have been physically noticeable, and yet they didn't stop.

  • @fugoo8912
    @fugoo8912 Год назад +70

    Everything I’ve heard about japan and it’s “low crime rate” really just seems to stem from the police not actively investigating anything. They seem to look for any excuse to go for the juvenile laws or push prefecture bs.

    • @semoremo9548
      @semoremo9548 Год назад +2

      Japan has a low crime rate, that has nothing to do with police being incompetent though. Even if they don't continue investigations or do a poor job at solving cases, they still have to report them.

    • @milannoelle1576
      @milannoelle1576 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@semoremo9548 ; you seem to have a very naive pov on japan's crime rates. they are artifically deflated for a myriad of reasons and police incompetence/inaction is definitely one of them. it happens anywhere in the world where ppl report to the police but then the *police* don't actually make the report themselves out of apathy. and police incompetence is really just one part of the whole messed up judicial system. japan needs to do better at protecting their vulnerable citizens like women and the disabled and prioritize getting justice for victims over perpetrators.

    • @semoremo9548
      @semoremo9548 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@milannoelle1576 Maybe I do, who knows. I don't claim to be an expert or anything like that. What I was trying to explain in my comment was that Japan does have a lower crime rate compared to other countries, whether or not the police are incompetent in solving the cases. Now, whether they end up not reporting the cases themselves, I do not know that, but I think my original point still makes sense.

  • @Flowerfairyy27
    @Flowerfairyy27 Год назад +83

    Zhu case infuriated me. They got what they wanted and felt absolutely no remorse. Even thought they were in the right this whole time. "We killed her because we don't like her because that's the appropriate response when we don't like someone. We took her life coz she was hurting our feelings uwu"
    I'll agree that karma is real. So I hope karma bites their asses as hard and as ruthless and in the most twisted ways.

  • @johnhein2539
    @johnhein2539 Год назад +565

    The voice of the letter in Zhu's case matches the description of her friend/rival "unconcerned with the problems of others." Note how she acts like her parents can still teach their daughter to do public service and better herself, despite all the mental damage done. Unconcerned to the problems of others to a manic degree it seems.

    • @Flowerfairyy27
      @Flowerfairyy27 Год назад +56

      She moved to the US too. The letter mentioned a similar case which was from the US. The sender also wrote "HERE, in the US". Hmmm

    • @vex_13
      @vex_13 Год назад +30

      Yes i agree. Its obvious that was her word in that letter. It piss me off that a monster like that protected by her families money

    • @killinglonliness88
      @killinglonliness88 Год назад

      The voice is Lazy though....

    • @MsKassandraKotaku
      @MsKassandraKotaku Год назад +23

      @@killinglonliness88 I don't think the mean the person narrating. They mean the tone and way the writer wrote the letter. Voice has multiple meanings.

    • @JamesRDavenport
      @JamesRDavenport Год назад +6

      Yeah, sounds like the original suspect trying to justify her actions in a covert way.
      In the first Japanese case, it stinks of total corruption.

  • @king81992
    @king81992 Год назад +465

    Case 1- I'm surprised law enforcement didn't make an exception to the rule, considering they did so in the past. The way they went about things make me think they were trying to protect the suspects for reasons not tied to their age. Entire thing feels like a cover up.
    Case 2- I wonder if the older sister's death was really an accident. Both siblings came to bad ends while at the university. The letter feels like a weak excuse to justify the criminal's actions and makes the dormmate look like the culprit.

    • @armorpro573
      @armorpro573 Год назад

      Yeah, case 1 definitely felt fishy to me. The fact that the police did virtually nothing to help solve the case makes me feel a third party was involved.
      Perhaps the perps were involved in some high level gang that had connections with political figures

    • @WhitneyDahlin
      @WhitneyDahlin Год назад +1

      CASE 1 I suspect the police KNEW who the boys were. I really believe the killers were known and the police intentionally allowed him to escape.

    • @marhawkman303
      @marhawkman303 Год назад +42

      yeah, feels weird to have BOTH of them have..... incidents.
      Also that letter.... I think it's real, but lies. Lies that hint at the truth though. The girl identified as a suspect... was perhaps ringleader with 2 accomplices. The letter, at least as Lazy related it's contents, made allusions to "respect" and proper manners.... maybe this was talking about the rivalry between her and the suspect? She refused to let the others "rest" and forced them to actually work for their honors.

    • @MrGoesBoom
      @MrGoesBoom Год назад +16

      case 1 especially since they only suspected they were under 18, they didn't know for sure....that's some pretty weak reasoning to let hose 4 get away with what they did.

    • @TrineDaely
      @TrineDaely Год назад +15

      Case 2 def has me wondering how she "accidentally" fell off a cliff. I have to also wonder how long it was before someone else noticed her missing and if any others who knew just told them "don't worry she's with another group" or some such to slow down the report. I doubt there was even an autopsy, which could have determined if she may have been dead before landing there, or even survived the fall but died later.

  • @LK-xk4nh
    @LK-xk4nh Год назад +325

    That second case makes me so angry. Go to the dorm authorities if she's bothering you this much??? If these girls had such powerful parents and families they probably could have gotten her to stop. Not to mention they would have known what happened to her older sister, so recklessly poisoning her was a complete act of malice. That is, if that letter is telling the truth, and i call bs. That story is too farfetched and outlandish. I've had shit roommates, who played music at the ass Crack of dawn and I still wouldn't ever get it into my head to poison them with one of the most toxic poisons known to human kind.

    • @michaeljacksheeheen
      @michaeljacksheeheen Год назад +25

      Yeah, I have a roommate that plays video games until 2 or 3 in the morning, this wouldn’t be a problem but every time she gets on she screams and yells. I despise her but killing her has never even crossed my mind

    • @clatterslam
      @clatterslam Год назад +22

      Yeah, not to mention that the letter mentioned "wanting her to repeat a year", which in no way guarantees sleep for the dorm mates, quite the opposite, they'd be stuck with her for longer. Definitely just revenge, if that letter is even to be believed.

    • @seaglass3034
      @seaglass3034 Год назад +6

      @@michaeljacksheeheen Your roommate sounds like my ex-fiance. Stay strong, lol.

    • @appleorange3663
      @appleorange3663 Год назад +4

      Exactly, being as powerful as she is, she could have easily gotten her expelled or something, or literally just changed dorms. Sounds like pure jealousy. Wanting her to repeat a year does show a motive, if it's not a true sentiment - that way they won't have to compete with her and lose.

  • @Nostalgic_1
    @Nostalgic_1 Год назад +49

    Both of these cases are horrific.
    However, Zhu Ling's case is particularly haunting.
    To methodically, meticulously, brutally and slowly murder someone by poisoning them and watching them slowly suffer horrifically until they die (or even live but have horribly disabling lives) is a whole new level of evil.
    And to see multiple people participating in, or knowing about, this crime without saying anything is particularly evil and unsettling.
    I feel so terrible for Zhu Ling's parents. You know that they have to worry about what will happen to her when they both pass away. 😢
    Bless Zhu Ling and her parents. ❤

  • @Glotzie1
    @Glotzie1 Год назад +21

    The case of Zhu Ling broke my heart. I don't know why her story touched me so much more than the first one, but it did. Poor woman.

    • @lukaurshibara5837
      @lukaurshibara5837 Год назад +1

      While both cases were sad, it was for me instead the first story that got to me because of the incomprehensible, brutal violence against a total stranger, and because Taiki died whereas Zhu survived.
      Plus his mother in vain trying for years to make the authorities care. :(

  • @hrknesslovesu
    @hrknesslovesu Год назад +673

    This is your best series Lazy. Big ups for introducing these to English speaking audiences

  • @TomorrowNobody
    @TomorrowNobody Год назад +344

    Over my headphones and during that intro, I heard my sister's children talking while they were walking through the hall. Hearing their barely audible, indistinguishable children's voices during that first 15 seconds was another level of creepy.

    • @luckyy3691
      @luckyy3691 Год назад

      Much respect for it being a Resident Evil 1 reference tho!!

  • @LucienYT
    @LucienYT Год назад +277

    It's crazy to me how I'm not a doctor and yet as soon as I heard that last girl's symptoms, I immediately knew it was heavy metal poisoning... Maybe I watch too many true crime shows. 😅

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute Год назад +46

      Right? The first symptoms were listed, and I was thinking 'It's arsenic.' More symptoms, and I thought, 'No wait, thallium!'
      Definitely too much true crime here too!

    • @hannahbul
      @hannahbul Год назад +27

      How did they think it was an infection... it's insane

    • @LucienYT
      @LucienYT Год назад +18

      @@hannahbul Agreed. I feel like presenting any kind of even semi-common ailments associated with poison should lead to a test for possible exposure, even if it's just a passive exposure.

    • @earth-6163
      @earth-6163 Год назад +9

      My first thought was mercury poisoning.

    • @shaaahm2211
      @shaaahm2211 Год назад +9

      it was just yesterday when i listened to a video about the teacup poisoner, so when they mentioned stomach cramps i was immediately hit by deja vu and realised that it is actually thallium poisoning!

  • @skp6613
    @skp6613 Год назад +15

    That letter to Zhu’s parents is the most sickening thing I have ever heard. EVER.

  • @jenniferjohnson-jb7ki
    @jenniferjohnson-jb7ki Год назад +21

    Oh, that letter to Zhu's parents is infuriating! I think the woman who was jealous of her, wrote the letter trying to justify her actions.

  • @ABGABGABG1
    @ABGABGABG1 Год назад +271

    Lazy, my friend, this is the way to go. Not many can provide insight on cases with no English translations so this is a type of content that is in demand. Many of us already know most of the english cases because they get covered on multiple channels quite frequently. But this is awsome sir, thanks for your hard work.

    • @nivision
      @nivision Год назад +13

      If you like true crime from Asian countries check out The Casual Criminalist, he has many different writers world over doing the research for him and one is Asian, I think Hong Kong? Who speaks the languages of the crimes he writes on along with English and goes and pulls up primary sources and even contacts the police data guys for info and files straight from the source. He's done a lot of cases that I've never heard of and the ones that I had heard of he went into so much more depth and better detail it was like hearing a new case practically.

    • @WhitneyDahlin
      @WhitneyDahlin Год назад +4

      ​@@nivision thank you! I will def check him out!

    • @atmywhitson
      @atmywhitson Год назад

      Yes!! So well said! 😊

  • @LadyZeke
    @LadyZeke Год назад +258

    How did Zhu keep everyone up and keep them from sleeping? So sad these cases didn't get proper investigations.

    • @d_lollol524
      @d_lollol524 Год назад +118

      if she did , during early police investigation someone would have mentioned it . If that anonymous letter is the only source of accusation, I suspect it is not credible .

    • @ae2948
      @ae2948 Год назад +103

      She didn't. The letter was written by someone who was sick in the head.

    • @myathewolfeh1156
      @myathewolfeh1156 Год назад

      Right? Have these people never heard of earplugs? Idk why they were expecting silence when they went off to college and lived in a dorm with a bunch of other college kids. Sounds like a bullshit excuse to me.

    • @NotExactlySans
      @NotExactlySans Год назад +35

      I'm guessing they were the only one kept awake by her and it was more because they were following her around. Such awful victim blaming in that fuckin' letter, eugh.

    • @onijester56
      @onijester56 Год назад +19

      @Penguin Economics The letter mentions a *specific* legal case where the defendant's entire defense-argument was that they murdered their roommate explicitly out of duress from literal sleep-depravation.
      The letter goes so far as to state that this specific legal case shows that Zhu's dormmates could have admitted everything on Day 1 and even if Zhu died they would have been found 'Not Guilty' for the same reason the person in the specifically mentioned legal case was found to be innocent.
      None of that, not a single word discussing the US court case, is applicable to their poisoning Zhu if we're interpreting their claims to be metaphorical/non-literal in any way.

  • @nobody2021
    @nobody2021 Год назад +264

    In the first one, I bet the suspect had connections to Yakuza and the police knew this, and were afraid of retaliation from them, or the Yakuza had the police in their pocket. There is no rational explanation for their inaction aside from that, it is inexcusable misconduct on their part as police

    • @d_lollol524
      @d_lollol524 Год назад +13

      But yakuza gangs have lost so much of their influence over the years . Was the local gangs that powerful around the time of the murder ?

    • @cjthebeesknees
      @cjthebeesknees Год назад +4

      Idk, I would of went to the underground and Yakuza if I was the mother once I found out the Police/Government we’re not going to pursue justice and cooperate, in my mind that’s her highest chance of success (wishful thinking perhaps) option left she had to get closure.

    • @HHpotatoes
      @HHpotatoes Год назад

      @@d_lollol524 i heard about that the yamasaki only have a fraction of memebers. of what they used to right

    • @coriolass
      @coriolass Год назад

      Or the suspect had connections to the police, or politicians, or the wealthy and powerful that hold their leashes.

    • @Hellooooo-kq1hb
      @Hellooooo-kq1hb Год назад +6

      @@d_lollol524 they have but remember this case took place in a fairly small part of Japan so Yakuza could hold more influence in places like that.

  • @helmethead3002
    @helmethead3002 Год назад +29

    Gotta love how in Japan the age of consent is technically 13 yet won't do anything if a crime is committed by someone suspected to be a teenager

    • @imaghost2961
      @imaghost2961 Год назад

      Please tell me you’re joking. 13 is way too fricking young. I think I’m going to be sick. Heck, I don’t even like that 16 is the age of consent in places. It should be 18.

    • @helmethead3002
      @helmethead3002 Год назад +5

      @@imaghost2961 pretty sure most prefectures have it at 18 making it functionally higher but still fucked up (wait until you find out about yemen lmao)

    • @ElFreakinCid
      @ElFreakinCid 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@imaghost2961 It was only ever technically 13. Prefectures and municipalities used to all have different ones and 13 was the lowest allowed, but most never went below 14 and some went up to 18. As of a couple years ago, Japan has one single age of consent, set at 16 like most of the world. And frankly, 16 is perfectly reasonable. 16 is the earliest age you can apply for a driver's license and get driving lessons at--you're telling me a 16-year-old shouldn't be allowed to have sex with their SO, but you're fine with that same 16-year-old thundering down the highway in a two-ton metal death machine full of highly combustible fuel?

  • @WatashiMachineFullCycle
    @WatashiMachineFullCycle Год назад +33

    That second story absolutely enraged me. I have had more issues with sleep than I care to count, I've been sleep deprived to the point of full blown psychosis, 82 hours in fact. Not once in my life did I ever think to poison another human being in exchange for sleep. Not once. She didn't deserve any of that. I hope her and her family are living peacefully, and I wish them nothing but good fortune for the rest of their lives.

    • @owinlaa
      @owinlaa Год назад +5

      They basically called her selfish for not thinking about anyone else when all they thought about was themself…

    • @WatashiMachineFullCycle
      @WatashiMachineFullCycle Год назад +3

      ​@@owinlaa absolutely, that's it 100%. So so beyond messed up to throw that in the family's face. This act was so cruel and senseless, then to come back years later and say that she deserves it is so evil.

  • @vagurl84
    @vagurl84 Год назад +56

    They didn't know the ages and with such a violent crime they should have shared the images. The police who protected them should be held accountable for aiding them.

  • @xxsilentreatmentxx
    @xxsilentreatmentxx Год назад +34

    The personal bitterness in that letter makes me think it was totally that roommate. Seething with petty jealousy all those years later

  • @Nahobino777
    @Nahobino777 Год назад +147

    Sun Wei did it. There are perps who like to torment their victims and she comes as someone narcissist. The fact her family is prominent gave her the entitlement to do whatever she wanted. Also, since she's narcissist, hearing about the case years later and how people said good things bout the victim, made her angry and that's why she sent the victim-blaming letter. She won't face any charges but maybe "karma" will happen.

    • @BeautifulSilence
      @BeautifulSilence Год назад +14

      I scoffed at that karma bit in the letter. Like if that's the case, honey, you've got a big storm coming...

    • @HeyLeFay
      @HeyLeFay Год назад +10

      That letter 100% reads like her being upset that people are mad at the person who poisoned Zhu, and she just had to let them know that the perpetrator suffered too.
      Like someone beating their spouse and then playing the victim because now their knuckles hurt.

    • @Annabellethedoll666
      @Annabellethedoll666 Год назад +1

      Bingo 👏🏽 I honestly believe she had envy towards her.

  • @sadbutrad4961
    @sadbutrad4961 Год назад +19

    man, as a non-chinese person studying in beijing and living in a dormitory, i get my sleep disturbed almost every night, never have i thought about poisoning my neighbors 😭😭😭 (but damn do i wish i could slap them sometimes lol)

  • @steveluna1627
    @steveluna1627 Год назад +5

    I can't even comprehend those Chinese students they said they did it because of "karma" yet they're crying and asking that they too don't get punished for their own actions, if being "loud" is something that deserves punishment then so does having them in jail, they don't deserve to sleep well.

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Год назад +219

    Whenever I feel bad about my life, I watch videos like this and remind myself I could be doing a lot worse

    • @archangelgabriel5316
      @archangelgabriel5316 Год назад +13

      Lol, we watch the same videos....I see your comments everywhere.

    • @sheep1ewe
      @sheep1ewe Год назад +7

      It can always be worse...

    • @Konmonachi
      @Konmonachi Год назад +4

      Hey thinking about being lucky sometimes

    • @thomascain8533
      @thomascain8533 Год назад +3

      I just saw you in the new That Chapter video replies

    • @SipherX05
      @SipherX05 Год назад +1

      Seen you also comment on That Chapters new video too. Good to see another fan of these types of videos

  • @d_lollol524
    @d_lollol524 Год назад +19

    In the second case, if she disturbed other residents from sleeping in her dormitory , most likely dorm residents had complained to dorm management and she would be banned from the dorm . The alleged murder in the letter does not make any sense .

  • @aliabideen
    @aliabideen Год назад +8

    One thing is common in every country, if you belong to a powerful/ influential family then you can get away with anything 🤬 some people are born evil 🤬🤬🤬

  • @supremepotatolord7353
    @supremepotatolord7353 Год назад +2

    I automatically said thallium poisoning! Crazy how something we find obvious here because of big cases isn't even considered in other countries. How heartless they were to do that to her for such arbitrary reasons. She is and won't ever be the same.

  • @rexzmom5692
    @rexzmom5692 Год назад +2

    I was just wondering what Lazy Masquerade looked like... then the babbel ad came on! Now I know... he's a yummy biscuit 😍❤🤤. Thank you!

  • @thetruekhanofkhans
    @thetruekhanofkhans Год назад +28

    Great video. Just FYI though the family name is Zhu while her own name is Ling. Hope both cases can get justice some day.

  • @nepmobile3583
    @nepmobile3583 Год назад +43

    Glad to see another region locked video! Any chance we’ll be seeing any more urban legend stories from around the world? I’d love to hear more!

  • @thingsthatfester2877
    @thingsthatfester2877 Год назад +8

    "You disturbed their sleep so you deserve being almost killed" That's such a load of bs.

  • @ES2X1
    @ES2X1 Год назад +38

    Logically, Sun wouldn’t be the one to send the letter because, as you said, it would just incriminate her more - however, I actually do think it’s Sun. Writing the letter seems to be more of an emotional response - possibly of the comments she was getting after breaking her silence and mentioning she was cleared and had no motive (with statements made afterwards that said otherwise). So she would proceed to write the letter to Zhu’s parents somehow thinking that guilt-tripping them with (very flimsy) justifications would result in them possibly requesting people to move on. The wording suggesting the writer wasn’t involved really doesn’t mean anything - psychologically, wording things the way as a “witness” could be a way to further deflect blame; that is, “just in case” law enforcement traced the letter back to its origin and, say it was Sun, she could tell them, “Yeah I wrote the letter, but I only knew of it and wasn’t involved,” in which case the letter references in precisely that way. It could also very well be her significant other. Either way, we’d likely never find out - that’s assuming it wasn’t a hoax in the first place. As a final note about how stupid it would be to write the letter in the first place - I think you’ve covered more than a handful of cases where the criminal wasn’t very intelligent.

  • @neopetsmaraquafan1
    @neopetsmaraquafan1 Год назад +8

    The money Zhu Ling’s family received will not even be enough for a year of her health expenses. It’s so saddening. With the amount of detail and American involvement it was definitely one of her well off classmates

  • @Clo_Dub
    @Clo_Dub Год назад +103

    Whenever I see Japanese cases I immediately think of Junko Furuta and the *anger* I feel towards those *pieces of shit* who didn’t get anywhere near the punishment they deserved

    • @bryn1063
      @bryn1063 Год назад +16

      Not only that, but they're still out there. Basically murdering someone and being free men. So many people knew. Nobody did a thing.

    • @Hauraunah
      @Hauraunah Год назад

      I think about their pos mother who basically blames HER for "ruining her son's life", and thinks it's okay to continually desecrate Junko's grave. That bitch deserves every unimaginable horror that could ever happen to a woman, to happen to her.

    • @Clo_Dub
      @Clo_Dub Год назад +6

      @@bryn1063 if I remember correctly, she was kept in one of the boy’s houses where their parents also lived? And there were people who visited who saw her there? (And I don’t mean the gang members who came and further abused her.)
      Every single one of them who were aware of what was going on deserves life sentences in solitary confinement. I don’t really agree with capital punishment on the grounds that it seems like an easy way out for some people who don’t deserve that kindness. They certainly don’t in this case. But the solitary confinement part comes from the fact that I know some of them were gang members so they were probably alright in gen pop in prison. Ugh I hate people.

    • @Clo_Dub
      @Clo_Dub Год назад +15

      @@bryn1063 oh and the parents of one of the boys who ruined a memorial for Junko because she’d “ruined their son’s life”? Trash. Life sentence for them too.

    • @bryn1063
      @bryn1063 Год назад +13

      @@Clo_Dub I completely agree. Stories like hers just make my blood boil. Especially "ruined her son's life" like what did she do? Get tortured and murdered?

  • @Crakinator
    @Crakinator Год назад +41

    In the Zhu Ling case, i think the letter at the end was sent by the main suspect, and that she is responsible for intentionally supplying the thallium to those who wished Zhu harm. That’s how the writer knew so much yet kept writing in 3rd person. Just my theory.

    • @TopherGrant
      @TopherGrant Год назад +8

      The American husband could certainly write that letter too. 3rd party that only knows HER side of things

    • @hoosthere
      @hoosthere Год назад +2

      ​@@TopherGrant i would never eat anything she gave me

  • @toshirodragon
    @toshirodragon Год назад +21

    I'm firmly in the camp that one or more of Taiki's murderers was the scion of a powerful family, on one side or other of the law. There was more than imcompetence in the police response.

  • @ZeldaQueen64
    @ZeldaQueen64 Год назад +36

    I'm inclined to suspect the dorm mate was the one who poisoned Zhu and had her family cover it up for her. That could even explain the incompetence of the doctors, being paid off or threatened to "overlook" the poisoning until it was made far too obvious that was what was happening.
    I also think the dorm mate wrote that letter. Why would she draw attention to herself? That's honestly something pretty easy to explain -- based on what was said about her (she was a sore loser, she resented Zhu beating her academically, she had family who may have been protecting her from legal consequences of her actions, etc.) she sounds like the sort of narcissist who unfortunately seems to pop up in a lot of true crime. The sort who think they're the smartest person in the room and are not happy at all when told otherwise. If she was jealous of Zhu, there's a good chance it infuriated her to see the case being revived and everyone's sympathies being towards the victim. Yes, one would think it's obvious any decent person would react that way, but... well, let's just say it's not hard to find criminals who clearly believe "Sure that terrible stuff happened, but why doesn't anyone consider they had it coming and I'm the wronged party?"
    I suspect the dorm mate sent the letter to Zhu's parents in some misguided belief they would be swayed to tell everyone their horribly poisoned and injured daughter was the one really at fault. The letter specifically expresses anger that all these people were describing Zhu as admirable, which is a pretty common way a lot of people are remembered after tragic circumstances (they were bright, they were well-loved, they had a good future ahead of them, etc.) But the writer seems to take it personally that people think highly of Zhu's accomplishments, something that would fit with the view of a petty academic rival.
    Finally, the letter keeps insisting Zhu "kept her roommates from sleeping" and clearly treats this as a crime worthy of being poisoned. My thought is that the dorm mate somehow self-rationalized that Zhu was somehow sabotaging the dorm mate's sleep to beat her in school and used that to justify what she did, forgetting how insane that sounds to anyone else.
    I would like to stress that THIS IS ALL SPECULATION ON MY PART. I'm not party to any of this, it's just my own conclusions based on the information in the video and patterns I observed in similar cases. I also know it doesn't matter terribly at the end of the day, since Zhu was still poisoned and hurt so badly. I just couldn't help but see those connections in the details, though.

    • @victory6924
      @victory6924 Год назад +4

      What you said makes a lot of sense.

  • @johnmobley9369
    @johnmobley9369 Год назад +5

    That literally disabled her permanently. Changed how she completely functions in life. Literally destroyed her life. And for what? Something communication would’ve handled in 2 shakes.

    • @HansMuneEnBy
      @HansMuneEnBy 5 месяцев назад

      You are thinking rationally... the villain here "felt" like hurting her and that is all there is to it.

  • @angelaengle12
    @angelaengle12 Год назад +91

    That last one infuriates me. All because this person wasn't getting their "beauty sleep", they decide to irreversibly poison this poor girl? Oh, I'm SO sorry that your sleep is more important than a human life. It was definitely Sum who sent that letter and committed the murder (yes, murder, because she is barley alive) I hope she never has a restful sleep for the rest of her miserable life. I hope this video blows up and she finds it. What a disgusting pile of filth. To even have the nerve to send a letter to Zhu's parents like as if her explanation is excusable.

    • @Gorborothh
      @Gorborothh Год назад

      This is not murder.

    • @angelaengle12
      @angelaengle12 Год назад

      @@Gorborothh Prove it. Where is your evidence?

    • @Gorborothh
      @Gorborothh Год назад

      @@angelaengle12 you said it yourself "barely alive".

    • @finndarling
      @finndarling Год назад +2

      @@Gorborothh attempted murder whether intentional or not . really not that much better

    • @angelaengle12
      @angelaengle12 Год назад +1

      @@Gorborothh To sit there and just start naming "technicalities" instead of grasping how horrible this case is, you're just as awful as the person who committed this act. You're disgusting.

  • @fixedG
    @fixedG Год назад +96

    My guess is that the Ushiku Incident involved at least one son of a prominent, wealthy or politically connected person. A random murder where the perpetrators could be easily identified, juvenile or not, just seems like too easy pickings for a justice system that results convictions 99.8% of the time. If someone is charged, it's practically a foregone conclusion that they'll be convicted. And if these four were identified by a first-party witness to a brutal murder, I can't even fathom what else might have given prosecutors pause in having the perpetrators arrested and charged. The story that law enforcement just *assumed* they were *all* juvenile without positively identifying *any* of them, thus keeping the investigation close to the vest is just absurd on the face of it. I can understand the law protects juveniles there, particularly to a much greater extent in terms of keeping their identity secret, but holy crap did that ever hamstring them.

    • @armorpro573
      @armorpro573 Год назад

      Yeah that's what I was thinking too. No way would the police cover up such a random case unless a third party was involved. Chances are, this so-called gang bribed or possibly blackmailed the police into covering up the truth

    • @nivision
      @nivision Год назад +11

      That 99% percent is only on those charged who go to trial. The only way to maintain that number is simply to not charge or take to trial anyone you aren't absolutely certain you have dead to rights, or a jury or judge pool who convicts automatically no matter what the evidence is to get darker. If it's the former, then there's sure to be a lot of cases where they're pretty sure of who it was but don't snatch them up because it's not an absolute conviction. In my opinion that's not the ideal setup for a justice system, but that's still the better option than absolute corruption in the second option.
      Tl;dr that stat sounds great, till you actually think about

  • @jamieweatherwalk2752
    @jamieweatherwalk2752 Год назад +70

    Ya know...first thing that came to MY mind as someone who has studied biochemistry, zhus symptoms immediately made me think of poisoning. She was young and healthy..she had widespread pain and her hair was falling out. WHY those Dr's never thought of poisoning, I have no clue. Not all Dr's graduated with a's...some barely passed medical school, and all those individuals are still walking around with "Dr " titles.

    • @GenXfrom75
      @GenXfrom75 Год назад +5

      Yep... I said out loud, "she's been poisoned!" I didn't think thallium immediately but I did shortly after the full list of symptoms.

    • @kadarak1
      @kadarak1 Год назад +9

      @@GenXfrom75 Those syptoms gave me only 2 options, metal poisoning or radiation sickness.

    • @emilybehnke9185
      @emilybehnke9185 Год назад +8

      Whenever I start having second thoughts about my degree (biological research) because of my grades my dad reminds me that the doctor who graduated with C's is still called "doctor" (which both helps and makes me nervous about doctors)

    • @GenXfrom75
      @GenXfrom75 Год назад +1

      @@kadarak1 I thought thallium because Ive heard many cases of it, sadly.

    • @MrYelly
      @MrYelly Год назад

      Japan is incompetent and grossly negligent. Always that dumb sense of pride blocking their acces to any basic sense of morality.

  • @lukesayers5850
    @lukesayers5850 Год назад

    You were my first love on you tube, dude! I think you were my first subscription, I've since found all the bedtimes story's, why file's, mystery history, top fives, unexplained mysteries, point being... There's nothing like your narratives, anywhere! Good ole lazy, you never let me down! Keep on keeping on, my guy! Your top notch.

  • @Seevawonderloaf
    @Seevawonderloaf Год назад +1

    I love kyotorobato’s work! He covers topics with so much detail and it’s clear he’s well versed in Japanese bc he gets so many incredible details. Most of the cases are ao sad though

  • @jbb2009
    @jbb2009 Год назад +14

    Thanks Lazy for this new video highlighting these mysteries.
    Also hope one day these two cases can get justice.

  • @gasolinecake
    @gasolinecake Год назад +6

    i’m so happy you featured kyotorobato! he deserves so much exposure and is so underrated! thank you!

  • @ASHl33164
    @ASHl33164 Год назад +5

    Omg I’ve had the worst Lazy withdrawals, I was checking RUclips for a new video several times a day

  • @gid-and-friends
    @gid-and-friends Год назад

    oh and imma firmly need you to bring back the "best things happen..." closing, going forward. Thanks Lazy. Keep up the great work!

  • @mommarissa420
    @mommarissa420 Год назад +1

    I really like the animations youve put into your videos here lately!! It's just looks super cool and flows well with the stories your telling. Thank you for all you hard work!!

  • @kokuhakuqiun4215
    @kokuhakuqiun4215 Год назад +9

    Finally! I’ve been waiting for Lazy Masquerade to upload another Region-Locked Mysteries video!!

  • @ScottieFindsFish
    @ScottieFindsFish Год назад +11

    Taiki (my deepest apologies if i misspelled his name) was a man of true courage. he will be remembered as a hero and his attackers as cowards

  • @jackiearnolds
    @jackiearnolds Год назад +34

    It is so sad what happened in both cases and so infuriating how they were dealt with.
    A group of teens who would beat someone to death, even more without any reason, should definitely be taken off the streets. They were already criminals and likely still are, and the fact police could cover for them is sickening.
    For the second one, regardless of the crime being committed by a person or group, even if Zhu was disturbing their sleep, which may not even be true, it is so scary to think someone could scheme such a cruel plan to ruin someone's life and get away with it. And what a ridiculous victim-blaming excuse of a letter. This was not someone committing a crime from a sudden rage caused by sleep deprivation. This was not someone trying to make her fail the year. They didn't sabotage her schoolwork or messed with her stuff to scare her. They went through great lengths to continuously poison her. They wanted to kill her and not get caught, blaming it on some sudden undiagnosed illness, and they got away with permanently disabling her and ruining her life.
    In the first case, it does appear like the police help to cover the case up, either because they knew the perpetrators, their boss, or whatever other reason. In the second, the university may have wanted to cover up how someone used their supplies to commit attempted murder or their property, or maybe the police just dropped the ball very bad. In either way, both intentional and unintentional lack of police effort is sickening and scary they don't care to take those vile people of the streets.

  • @OUTOFTHEBOXs
    @OUTOFTHEBOXs Год назад

    happy to find your channel again i use to listen to your stories 4 years ago i lost my old youtube channel and i always remember your videos and voice and wonder what was the name of your channel !? that is how good you are ... thank you for your hard work bro

  • @MarkToast99
    @MarkToast99 Год назад +4

    I don't think you get enough credit for how good you are at using stock footage to enhance your videos. It never feels randomly placed like it does on other channels, it always feels fitting and relevant.

  • @MissBunny01
    @MissBunny01 Год назад +15

    Good afternoon/ morning/ night to my fellow lazy members in this nice afternoon 😊

  • @shiffpup2529
    @shiffpup2529 Год назад +6

    Love the new intro! The low-poly graphics remind me of the nostalgic PS1 horror titles. Especially with that mask, it reminds me of Clock Tower 2: The Struggle Within.

  • @fauxsito
    @fauxsito Год назад +8

    AHHH So excited to see you & KyotoRobato collab! You guys are some of my faves

  • @tpanda
    @tpanda Год назад

    SO cool you brought KyotoRoboto on!! I've been following his channel for a while and his content is awesome. Great to see you feature small creators

  • @YourNightmare4u2c
    @YourNightmare4u2c Год назад +1

    We've been anxiously waiting!

  • @bentonrp
    @bentonrp Год назад +14

    My favorite narrator. Always calm, always mysterious. Always the right mood for LM!

  • @sarahr9894
    @sarahr9894 Год назад +11

    I must watch too many of these documentaries, I immediately thought it was thallium the moment her hair started falling out.

    • @joanhoffman3702
      @joanhoffman3702 Год назад +1

      Me, too. In Agatha Christie’s novel, “The Pale Horse”, thallium was the poison. It actually helped solve a medical mystery of a young girl sick in the hospital and losing her hair.

  • @RockinTheBassGuitar
    @RockinTheBassGuitar Год назад +4

    I love your region locked mysteries, not other mystery channel covers these types of things so they're always brand-new to me

  • @littledreamerrem7021
    @littledreamerrem7021 Год назад +1

    I'd love to see more videos like this! Kyoto Roboto is an amazing channel for Jp cases, but I love hearing cases recalled in your voice. :)

  • @mrnm6482
    @mrnm6482 День назад

    I really LOVE your region locked mysteries video. You should totally turn this into a series. If you want tips on an interesting case look up the disappearance of Jan and Riet Kelders. A Dutch couple who disappeared in from a small Dutch town in 1989 after an argument with their son. The police only managed to retrieve their vehicle which was found on the other side of the country , which is unfortunately where the trail ends. Strangely all interview and work done on the case have been destroyed since those days.

  • @shotwench2210
    @shotwench2210 Год назад +19

    The victim blaming in story two is astounding.

  • @noraabb
    @noraabb Год назад +15

    Thank you so much for your videos lazy even though true crime is so bad for my mental health and trust issues I still can’t stop watching your videos because they’re truly the best out there in the whole genre (source: trust me bro but this time fr)

  • @thirteenlets
    @thirteenlets Год назад +8

    Can't wait to listen to this on my commute from work. Thanks Lazy ❤❤❤

  • @spongefun
    @spongefun Год назад +13

    This is my favorite channel bc:
    1. His voice
    2. The creepy content
    3. The creepy music choice
    4. The mix of stories, not just one
    5. The rarity of the stories & not recycled and heard on every channel.
    6. The creepy images and graphics.
    Anyone have anything to add?

  • @bretthewitt3890
    @bretthewitt3890 Год назад

    Both are horrific crimes! You are really capturing my attention with cases I have never heard of! Thanks for your work! Hey how about another "Lazy reads your hate mail"? The last one had me in stitches!

  • @DevilNarwhal
    @DevilNarwhal Год назад +30

    As a Hispanic, it brought a big smile to my face listening to Lazy speak in Spanish. Muchas gracias, Lazy. ¡Que pases buen día!

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Год назад +6

    They could have taken his money without brutally stamping and kicking him to death such brutal savages it never creases to amaze me the brutal savagery that humans are capable of inflicting onto others

    • @armorpro573
      @armorpro573 Год назад

      Even more scary was that this was unprovoked and totally out of the blue. Just goes on to show how easily anyone can take your life

    • @danem2215
      @danem2215 Год назад

      I think you need a thesaurus

  • @sunneinsplendour8459
    @sunneinsplendour8459 Год назад +13

    I've lived in China for almost 7 years now and this is par for the course here. There is a Chinese expression 'guanxi' which basically means relations. If you have good guanxi, like San's family had, she could have even admitted to doing it, and nothing would have come of it. The CCP cadres her family was affiliated with, would have simply made it go away. The reason why this was most likely blocked, was also because of the CCP's desire te preserve 'he xie' which means social harmony. It really is sad that this happens. Scary thing is that this kind of thing happens more often than not. Like Peng Shuai's case. Or the doctor who first blew the whistle about Covid.

    • @thomasalmond3311
      @thomasalmond3311 Год назад

      What's it like to live there as a foreigner?, must be an experience
      🇨🇳🇨🇳🇨🇳!!!.

    • @sunneinsplendour8459
      @sunneinsplendour8459 Год назад

      @@thomasalmond3311 it sure is. Very different but for the most part, it's been a positive experience.

    • @Gildedmuse
      @Gildedmuse 7 месяцев назад +1

      Weirdly, I first learned about guanxi while reading up on this case. Reportedly, after a few months of investigation the police had pretty much dropped it and straight up told her parents they might have more luck using their guanxi to search for closure. I at first assumed that was some kind of private eye or something but, no, the police literally suggested they use family connections to find who almost murdered their child.

  • @samanthajacobs2827
    @samanthajacobs2827 Год назад

    I love your new intro, Lazy!!! I discovered your channel during the pandemic, and I absolutely love it! I think I binge watched everything in a ridiculously short amount of time. Every time I see a new video posted, I get so excited! Thank you so much for all your hard work ❤

  • @weebwhacker-p7n
    @weebwhacker-p7n Год назад +18

    japan likes to flaunt their low crime rate but ive been more skeptical after seeing cases like this

    • @elvingearmasterirma7241
      @elvingearmasterirma7241 Год назад +3

      The thing is
      When you have a low crime rate, the crimes that happen do tend to stand out more.
      Like the first story happens aaaall the time here in South Africa. But its so common its... Not shocking. It doesnt have the same impact as it would in Japan

    • @emilybehnke9185
      @emilybehnke9185 Год назад +2

      @@elvingearmasterirma7241 but at the same time Lazy had to go digging for these cases with VPNs because of international blocks ? You don't hide news like this unless someone paid you or you don't want people to know about it

    • @Gildedmuse
      @Gildedmuse 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​I don't think they hid it (well not NOW), it just wasn't publishized in English. He mentions that in passing at the very begining. The Region-Locked in the title is less literal and more a slang term in this case.

    • @up0820
      @up0820 23 дня назад

      When you don't pursue perps or bring charges when you do of course the crime rate seems low.

    • @up0820
      @up0820 23 дня назад

      ​@@Gildedmuse actually Japan has always been secretive with every aspect of things like crimes and such, especially dealing with what they consider juveniles.

  • @eternityawaitz7726
    @eternityawaitz7726 Год назад +9

    Thank you! I love region-locked mysteries!

    • @dankone3
      @dankone3 Год назад

      They're all lame ass Asian stories.
      I can see why they appeal to japanophiles aka weaboos though.
      These stories aren't really even region locked, they're just not shit compared to the stories out here, some of the cases out here barely even make the paper, why would/should we even know about these soft ass cases

  • @thinknofpie
    @thinknofpie Год назад +9

    All these videos are always so well researched, amazing work Lazy!

    • @DREDD.7356
      @DREDD.7356 Год назад

      You look familiar to a victim who was in one of his videos. Stay safe.

  • @injalife
    @injalife Год назад +1

    Cheers kyotoroboto! Happy to see this collab

  • @tessfabled4115
    @tessfabled4115 Год назад +2

    9:03 are you KIDDING me?! If one bloke had a full beard there is more than a MARGIN of doubt that he was underage....!

  • @alienartist6811
    @alienartist6811 Год назад +8

    >just got home from school
    >dont have school tomorrow
    >nice breeze, windows open
    >just made popcorn and green tea
    >lazy uploads new vid
    >its over 20 min long
    >comfy bed
    *its gonna be a good night"*

    • @welsh.truth.dragon3914
      @welsh.truth.dragon3914 Год назад

      Make sure no one is stood outside you're window watching you frommthe dark 😂😂😂. OJ. 😂😂😂

    • @maramarxx2431
      @maramarxx2431 Год назад

      Dont overdose on Green tea...

    • @oceanoflotion8630
      @oceanoflotion8630 Год назад +1

      Opened windows for first time too. Nice breeze

  • @La-Toya0488
    @La-Toya0488 Год назад +4

    I ❤this type of content, Lazy. Please continue to do more videos like these🙏🏾

  • @AaronSGames1
    @AaronSGames1 Год назад +7

    The happiness I get when new Lazy drops

  • @Foutainoflife1
    @Foutainoflife1 Год назад +8

    Both cases are horrible in their own rights and they also seem to share a level of authoritative corruption. How cases like this fail to be solved is beyond understanding and it's unfortunate that all too often we have to hope karma will bring justice for those who have been so senselessly wronged. I feel so sorry for the victims and their families. Just a real shame.

  • @tomhuynh4058
    @tomhuynh4058 8 месяцев назад +1

    These people are so incompetent. In emergency situations , they have to rely their lives on these so called “professionals”. I know stuff like this happens all around the world but it sad to know that these unqualified people are in these kind of work.