US woman ‘poisoned 5 of her family & herself with cyanide’ as traces found in teapot they shared in luxury Bangkok hotel

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AN AMERICAN woman allegedly poisoned five members of her family and then herself with cyanide-laced tea.

Three men and three women were found dead in luxury Bangkok hotel room on Tuesday – sparking a murder probe.

a man in a tan uniform with a name tag that says ' a ' on itGetty
Thai police at the entrance of the Grand Hyatt Erawan where six people were found dead[/caption]
epa11483009 A handout photo made available by the Royal Thai Police shows cups of tea on a table inside a hotel room where six people were found dead of poisoning at Grand Hyatt Erawan Hotel in Bangkok, Thailand, 16 July 2024 (issued 17 July 2024). According to the Deputy Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Police Major General Noppasilp Poonsawat six Vietnamese people, two of which had American citizenship and four Vietnamese nationals, that were found dead in a hotel room were poisoned with cyanide. The culprit, whom committed suicide, was found dead with the victims. EPA/ROYAL THAI POLICE / HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALESThe poisoned cups and teapot that held a residue of cyanide
a table with plates of food and a chair with the number 4 on itChilling scene pictures showed the family’s untouched room serviceAP
Police rushed to the luxury hotel to probe a mass poisoningThe guests at Grand Hyatt Erawan in Bangkok were found dead by a hotel worker

The room had been locked from the inside with scene pictures showing the teacups that held the victim’s poisoned drinks.

A post-mortem showed traces of the deadly cyanide chemical in all of the victim’s bodies – confirming they had died by poisoning.

Local media has since reported that one of the victim’s daughters – Sherine Chong, 56 – allegedly killed them over a row about debt.

She then took her own life by also drinking the poisoned tea, Khaoso reports.

The victims had traces of the fast-acting chemical in their systems and purple lips, indicating a lack of oxygen, the local hospital said.

A hotel worker at the Grand Hyatt Erawan in Bangkok found the group dead in their room.

Chilling pictures showed a table covered in untouched room service food delivered before they died.

Four of the bodies were found in the living room and two in the bedroom.

Two appeared to have reached for the door but collapsed before they could make it, cops revealed.

Hotel records showed no one else had visited the room the night they died.

A seventh person outside of the group of victims booked the hotel room where the tragedy unfolded.

After speaking to her cops determined she is the sister of the one of the victims.

But she flew back to her home country on July 10 – meaning investigators have ruled her out of their enquiries.

The victims included four Vietnamese nationals and two Vietnamese- Americans.

Suspected killer Chong had both a Vietnamese and US passport and had visited Thailand five times before.

She had reportedly persuaded a couple in the group to invest in a hospital build in Japan.

They apparently lost £215,000 in the project.

Dr Kornkiat Vongpaisarnsin, from the local Thai hospital, said they are waiting on further results to reveal the exact level of poison in each victim’s system.

Police Lieutenant General Trairong Phiwpan confirmed on Wednesday that one of the people in the group had killed the others.

Phiwpan said: “After staff brought teacups and two hot water bottles, milk and teapots… one of the six introduced cyanide.”

The three dead women were named as 46-year-old Nguyen Thi Phuong, Sherine Chong, 56, and Nguyen Thi Phuong Lan, also 46.

The male victims are Tran Dinh Phu, 37, Dang Hung Van, 55, and 49-year-old Hong Thanh Pham.

They were staying at the hotel in a popular tourist area of Bangkok known for its luxury amenities.

an ambulance is parked in front of a building at nightAP
Emergency vehicles gather outside the hotel[/caption]
a group of police officers are walking down a set of stairsPolice make their way through the hotel after the grim discoveryEPA
a man is pulling a suitcase in front of a houseRoyal Thai Police
The guests entering the hotel captured on CCTV[/caption]
a man speaking into a microphone next to another man in a military uniformEPA
Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin speaks to press after the murders[/caption]

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