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This article is reproduced from the public account: West Canada Weekly (public account ID: westcanadaweekly)
Ji, a 34-year-old Chinese woman, disappeared from the world after attending a party at a private villa in Pattaya, Thailand. A few days later, her body was found in a farmland ditch 238 kilometers away, floating face down in the water, with all her hair missing.
And the person who killed her was probably sitting next to her.

It all started in the early morning of February 21st. At 6:37 that morning, Ji sent the last message to a female friend on his mobile phone – only two words: “Save me”, and also included a location.
Then, the phone stopped making calls.

The friend panicked and quickly contacted Ji’s husband Zhang in China. Without saying anything, Zhang immediately bought a ticket and flew to Thailand. At 7:58 pm on February 23, he appeared at the Nongprulu Police Station in Thailand and called the police for help.
Ji is from Anhui and has lived and worked in Thailand for a long time. Entry and exit records show that she has traveled between China and Thailand five times, with the most recent entry being in December last year.

Before the accident, Ji accepted an “entertainment escort” job and went to a private villa with a swimming pool in Chonburi Province to attend a party. A group of Chinese men were present.
The last time she was seen was in this villa.
The police called up surveillance footage from the villa. The footage showed that Ji had contact with multiple Chinese men during the party, but spent most of the time with one of them.

The next scene makes people’s scalp numb——
When the party was about to end, the man hugged the unconscious Ji from behind, dragged her out of the villa along the aisle, stuffed her into a black BMW, and drove away with the accelerator.

The car drove out of Chonburi Province and headed towards Ratchaburi Province.
Police found the owner of the BMW. The car owner said that the car was lent to a Chinese friend and he used it for a day before returning it.
On the afternoon of February 25, bad news came.
The owner of a coconut plantation in Bangpha District, Ratchaburi Province called the police and reported that a female body was found in the drainage ditch of his house.
The body was floating face down on the water’s edge, visibly decomposed and swollen. The ditch is surrounded by coconut groves and orchards, and the water is filled with aquatic plants.

When the rescue team arrived, they thought it was a man at first. When they fished it out, they found that it was a woman. Her tongue was hanging out of her mouth, all her hair had fallen out, and her head was bald.
The forensic doctor determined that the body had been soaked in water for at least four or five days.
For the next two days, the police sent divers to search the ditch, but found nothing. It wasn’t until the third day that three hairpins and a strand of hair about 50 centimeters long were fished out.
After DNA comparison and identity confirmation, the deceased was the missing Ji. The place where her body was found was a full 238 kilometers away from the pool villa where she was last seen.

At this point in the case, the suspect’s clues began to slowly emerge.
The media exposed a recording of a phone call made by Ji’s friend to the suspect. The friend asked: “Did she go to your place after the incident?”
The man answered: “Yes.”
The friend asked again: “Are you the last person to be with her?”
The man changed his story: “I was very drunk at the time and can’t remember anything.”

But the surveillance video clearly showed that it was this person who dragged the unconscious Ji out of the villa.
On March 13, Thai police made a breakthrough. The Chonburi police, the tourist police and the immigration bureau formed a task force to formally issue an arrest warrant for the 29-year-old Chinese man Zhao Tianxing.
The charges are “illegal detention causing death” and “transferring and hiding corpses to cover up the truth of death.”

But now there is a problem – the police suspect that Zhao Tianxing has fled back to China.
The specific cause of Ji’s death has not yet been released. The forensic doctor is conducting a detailed autopsy to confirm whether she was drugged or violently injured before her death. Although there were no obvious external injuries on the body, the police did not rule out that she had been illegally detained or even sexually assaulted.
Husband Zhang was extremely grieved. He said: “I believe that my wife did not die of natural causes, and there must be relevant responsible persons behind this case.”
And the person who dragged her out is probably somewhere, pretending that nothing happened.
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