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#11
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04-06-2021, 04:45 PM
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Re: Cambodia - Man Electrocutes Wife then He Dies of a Heart Attack
Could be. Either way, he purposely took a life. I don't feel that bad about him being dead.
__________________ 💜🧿See Human | Be Human🧿💜 (War Section Hashtags) |
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#12
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04-06-2021, 05:56 PM
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Re: Cambodia - Man Electrocutes Wife then He Dies of a Heart Attack
Haha, same here, the bastard deserved it!
__________________ "I'd give the world for the chance just to see your face again. Still I pretend that you're still standing by." |
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#14
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04-07-2021, 02:11 AM
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Re: Cambodia - Man Electrocutes Wife then He Dies of a Heart Attack
From the article it says he started getting physical problems during questioning by police (AKA getting beaten and tortured), then sent to hospital where he died. Setting up exposed wires on floor to kill someone as they walk over it unsuspectingly? That's something straight out of a Hitman videogame. Poor kids though, both left without a parent. |
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#15
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04-10-2021, 09:10 AM
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Re: Cambodia - Man Electrocutes Wife then He Dies of a Heart Attack
Bet it was as this is former pol pot country Torture is an everyday occurrence in Cambodia. People are regularly and routinely beaten black and blue with punches and kicks. They are hit with batons, iron bars, gun butts, pieces of wood or other objects, subjected to electric shocks, whipped with wire, bamboo, rope or belts. Some are nearly suffocated with pieces of plastic, or have their feet crushed under wooden or iron bars. For many victims, torture includes rape or other sexual abuse. Aside from physical torture, methods of psychological torture include prolonged unlawful detention, verbal intimidation and death threats, mock executions and physical assaults or threats against relatives of victims. Torture has existed in Cambodia, as in many other countries, for centuries, including during the famed Angkorean civilization, but Cambodians need no reminding that torture is not consigned to ancient history. The most notorious practitioners of torture in modern Cambodia - the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime led by Pol Pot - haunt the memories of many Cambodians today. Virtually the entire population was tortured or subjected to other extreme traumas in one way or another by the Khmer Rouge. Decades later, some of Pol Pot's torture methods are still in use. Torture is inflicted on men, women and children in Cambodia, and many victims receive this treatment at the hands of those who are supposed to protect society: police officers, soldiers, government bodyguards and others in positions of authority. The single biggest reason why torture is permitted to flourish in Cambodia into the 21st Century is the lack of accountability before the law of criminals who hold power or influence. Prohibitions against torture - contained in Cambodia's Constitution (1993) and criminal law (1992), as well as by the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment - mean little or nothing to a torture victim or a torturer. |
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#17
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04-17-2021, 03:00 AM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2698 Join Date: Nov 2010 Posts: 153 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 10 Post(s)
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Re: Cambodia - Man Electrocutes Wife then He Dies of a Heart Attack
He's got a pretty bad single strike dent laid vertically into his forehead, located above his right eyebrow area. The tattoos on his right arm aren't tattoos. And it looks like he spent at least two hours or more flailing suspended in a "Maynard and Zed" Medieval restraining contraption. The type usually exclusively operated by "The Gimp." |