Tragically according to the article, she was abused by her father as a child and was eventually kicked out of her home. This resulted in her being on the streets, being abused by anyone who took her in, eventually working at certain ‘establishments’ (you know the type). After serving a year behind bars, she returned home where she was sold numerous times and ended up being sold to the village thug.
She not only suffered years of physical and sexual abuse by her drunk husband, but also his piece of shit cousins who assaulted her numerous times, resulting in a pregnancy. As a result she gave birth to a son, but the straw that broke the camel’s back was when her husband tied her to a tree and attacked her with weapons, demanding to know who the child’s dad was. After she woke up and saw that the child had been murdered by her husband, she lost it and killed the husband with a sickle.
She was sentenced to death and it was carried out in 1995.
Okay that was a very bad decision. So they knew all about her but still executed her? Was there any public outcry? I hope cases like hers now end up being very less or no prison time at all because that’s seriously so disheartening i literally wanna cry.
Usually with these older cases the outcry would only come way after it was carried out. The poor lady suffered a lifetime only for it to end in a terrible outcome.
In a few more recent cases from the 2000s to 2010s, there have been a few cases of wives killing abusive husbands in self defense and having their sentences lightened (from heavy sentences reduced to 3-8 years) after their circumstances are reviewed and with some public outcry (easier access to information during recent times). The Yu Huan case from above is another example.
According to my family of fake refugees in Canada who fled China before the Communists defeat the warlords, execution is necessary to reduce the number of competitors for limited food supply.
It might be this woman:
Supposedly executed for murder in the 90s. If anyone can confirm the sign around her neck?
Yep it’s the same person
The sign says “murderer Lu Jinfeng”
Tragically according to the article, she was abused by her father as a child and was eventually kicked out of her home. This resulted in her being on the streets, being abused by anyone who took her in, eventually working at certain ‘establishments’ (you know the type). After serving a year behind bars, she returned home where she was sold numerous times and ended up being sold to the village thug.
She not only suffered years of physical and sexual abuse by her drunk husband, but also his piece of shit cousins who assaulted her numerous times, resulting in a pregnancy. As a result she gave birth to a son, but the straw that broke the camel’s back was when her husband tied her to a tree and attacked her with weapons, demanding to know who the child’s dad was. After she woke up and saw that the child had been murdered by her husband, she lost it and killed the husband with a sickle.
She was sentenced to death and it was carried out in 1995.
Okay that was a very bad decision. So they knew all about her but still executed her? Was there any public outcry? I hope cases like hers now end up being very less or no prison time at all because that’s seriously so disheartening i literally wanna cry.
Usually with these older cases the outcry would only come way after it was carried out. The poor lady suffered a lifetime only for it to end in a terrible outcome.
In a few more recent cases from the 2000s to 2010s, there have been a few cases of wives killing abusive husbands in self defense and having their sentences lightened (from heavy sentences reduced to 3-8 years) after their circumstances are reviewed and with some public outcry (easier access to information during recent times). The Yu Huan case from above is another example.
According to my family of fake refugees in Canada who fled China before the Communists defeat the warlords, execution is necessary to reduce the number of competitors for limited food supply.
This is so fucked up to read, honestly. There are a lot of layers of trauma here.