🚨NO WHITE SUPREMACISTS INVOLVED🚨
So I'm sharing a comment below that I think is outrageously false. Ask the people who live in those countries he named. His comment is no different than the people who live in the inner city hating on White Supremacists when the people TERRORIZING THEM DAILY are not White Supremacists. My last post is a documentary about a cult in South Korea for heaven's sake that is a sex trafficking aka sex slave cult. The reason people hate on Americans so much is because the governments in these countries censor any bad news. Just like what Macron is trying to do with the horrific riots happening in France right now. He wants social media giants to delete any information shared regarding the looting, rioting, arson, shootings going on in France right now. The cult leader in South Korea has done the same thing. I just found out about that South Korean cult myself and they've been around since 1978. And furthermore, all of these Asian countries Qu Bit named in his comment have scary powerful gangs aka mafias aka organized crime syndicates that commit the most heinous crime in their countries. So shut up about "Americans commit most heinous crimes abroad especially in Asia." (emphasis mine)
Qu Bit made the following comment on the article I shared below: Time and again it seems Americans commit most heinous crimes abroad especially in SE/E Asia - gang rapes of young girls in Japan, beheading in Taiwan, murder in China, an much more.
Click On Detroit, Local 4 published June 20, 2023: Arrest in Germany draws reaction in Wayne County. The man accused of killing one college student and injuring another by pushing them into a ravine near a castle in Germany is from Metro Detroit. Police said Troy Bohling, 30, of Lincoln Park, met two tourists -- Eva Liu, 21, of Naperville, Illinois, and Kelsy Chang, 22, -- Wednesday, June 14, on a hiking path near Neuschwanstein castle in southern Germany and lured them onto a trail that leads to a viewpoint.
Click On Detroit
written by Derick Hutchinson, Lead Digital Editor
Tuesday June 20, 2023
2 women attacked in Germany
LINCOLN PARK, Mich. – The man accused of killing one college student and injuring another by pushing them into a ravine near a castle in Germany is from Metro Detroit.
Police said Troy Bohling, 30, of Lincoln Park, met two tourists -- Eva Liu, 21, of Naperville, Illinois, and Kelsy Chang, 22, -- Wednesday, June 14, on a hiking path near Neuschwanstein castle in southern Germany and lured them onto a trail that leads to a viewpoint.
“The younger of the two women was attacked by the suspect,” police spokesman Holger Stabik told the Associated Press. “The older one tried to rush to her aid, was then (was) choked by the suspect and subsequently pushed down a slope.”
Officials believe Bohling tried to sexually assault Liu before pushing her down the slope. She fell about 165 feet and landed next to Chang.
When a mountain rescue team arrived, Liu was flown to a nearby hospital, where she died from her injuries. Chang was responsive when they took her to a hospital, authorities said.
Bohling arrested
Police said Bohling left the scene, but he was arrested soon afterward on suspicion of murder, attempted murder, and a sexual misconduct offense.
A judge ordered him to be held in jail pending a possible indictment, which can take months, according to the AP.
Lincoln park neighbors shocked
Bohling’s neighbors on Cleveland Avenue in Lincoln Park said they were blown away when they heard what happened.
He lives at a home with his brother. Residents said they know him as a quiet guy who goes about his business.
Brittany Tyslicki, who went to Allen Park High School with Bohling, said she hasn’t seen him since graduation.
“He was laid back,” Tyslicki said. “He played in the band, dated one of my friends -- nothing remarkable.”
NextShark Media
written by Ryan General
Friday June 23, 2023
A WOMAN LIVING in Thailand has shared chilling online messages she purportedly received from the man who would later be accused of sexually assaulting and killing one woman and injuring another in Germany.
Online chatmate: Chanidtha Khumpuok was playing an online game several months ago when she first connected with 30-year-old American Troy Bohling and went on to develop a friendship through their daily conversations.
Their interaction would come to a sudden stop on June 14, the very day Bohling, of Lincoln Park, Michigan, allegedly committed the heinous crimes in Germany.
Shocking news: Khumpuok would later learn that the man she had been communicating with online stands accused of choking and pushing two women down a steep ravine.
She even received a series of selfies from Bohling less than an hour before the purported crimes occurred, including photos that showed him wearing the same attire he had on when police arrested him later that day.
What happened: Official reports noted that on that day, Bohling encountered 22-year-old Kelsey Chang and 21-year-old Eva Liu, on a hiking path at around 2:40 p.m.
Promising them a romantic view of the historic German castle Neuschwanstein, he was able to lure them to a barely visible trail and take them to a viewpoint on the bridge of Marienbrucke.
The suspect first attacked Liu and then choked Chang when she rushed to her friend’s aid. Bohling pushed both women down the ravine but only Chang survived due to a branch that broke her fall. Liu, who was sexually assaulted by Bohling, succumbed to her injuries the following day, while Chang sustained injuries but is expected to recover.
Disturbing chat logs: According to the chat messages Khumpuok shared with The News-Herald, she had been chatting with Bohling since morning on the day of the crime.
Bohling shared that he had a dream in which he felt detached from his own body while sleeping. He then mentioned that he was preparing to go out and would message Khumpuok later.
Later that day, Khumpuok received a photo from Bohling showing the mountainous area where he had parked. Several more selfies would arrive in the evening at 6:53 p.m. Thailand time (1:53 p.m. Germany time).
The final photo Bohling sent to Khumpuok featured two people kneeling while overlooking the castle, with the caption: “And now I get to sit here and look at these 2 try to get the perfect insta.”
Bohling’s arrest: After allegedly attacking the two women, the suspect fled the scene but was later captured by law enforcement officers following a large-scale search operation.
A judge has ordered that Bohling remains in custody pending a potential indictment while authorities pursue charges of murder, attempted murder, and sexual offenses against him.
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