Top South Korean court upholds eight-year sentence for mother who killed newborns, stored bodies in freezer


- Illustrative photo: 123rf

SEOUL: South Korea’s Supreme Court has upheld an eight-year prison term for a woman who killed her two newborn babies and hid their bodies in her refrigerator.

The top court confirmed a lower court’s verdict that sentenced the mother, in her 30s, on charges of murder and concealing of a corpse on Oct 8, according to media reports Friday (Nov 8).

She was convicted of strangling a daughter and a son to death shortly after their birth in November 2018 and November 2019, respectively.

Prosecutors said that after each birth, she took the babies near her home or to a nearby alley where she murdered.

She placed their bodies inside black plastic bags and stored them inside her refrigerator in her apartment in Suwon, Gyeonggi Province.

The bodies of the babies were kept in the fridge for four years and seven months and three years and seven months, respectively.

The mother admitted to killing the babies, claiming financial hardship while raising her three other children.

Her crime came to light in May 2023, when the government’s Board of Audit and Inspection found the babies’ births were never officially registered, although there was a record of their births in the hospital, leading to a police investigation.

During the trial, she argued that she should be charged with infanticide rather than murder, which carries a heavier punishment in South Korea.

She also claimed that she had been in a state of mental distress at the time of the crime, but the court rejected these arguments.

In the initial trial, the judges handed down an eight-year sentence, saying her actions warranted a conviction on both murder and body concealment charges.

Both the prosecution and the defendant objected to the verdict with appeals, but the appellate court maintained the sentence. - The Korea Herald/ANN

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Aseanplus News

Taiwan son scams online scammers to get back US$21,000 father loses to crooks
China again urges Philippines to withdraw US missile system in the name of peace
Vietnam likely to experience intense heatwaves in 2025
HK actor Michael Chan, 81, spends over RM500k battling cancers
Rare 1,700-year-old oil lamp unearthed in Jerusalem
Emerging Greater Mekong Subregion vital to Asean centrality, say academics
It's war against scammers - Cambodia reinforces efforts to combat online job fraud that has even affected Malaysians
Mekong River Commission launches education hub and One Mekong app in Vientiane
'No overspending pls', Brunei civil servants urged to plan bonuses wisely
Blackpink’s Jennie to release debut studio album in 2025

Others Also Read