Irish Independent

Cyanide in blood of six found dead in Bangkok luxury hotel

One of the victims is believed to have poisoned the rest in investment row

- JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHA­I

Initial autopsy results showed traces of cyanide in the blood of six Vietnamese and American guests at a luxury hotel in central Bangkok and one of them is believed to have poisoned the others over a bad investment, Thai authoritie­s said yesterday.

The bodies were found on Tuesday in the Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok, a landmark at a central intersecti­on in the capital busy with malls, government buildings and public transit.

The six had last been seen alive when food was delivered to the hotel room on Monday afternoon. The staff saw one woman receive the food, and security video showed the rest arriving at the hotel room one by one shortly after.

There were no other visitors, no one was seen leaving and the door was locked from the inside. A maid found them on Tuesday afternoon when they failed to check out of the room.

Upon entering the room, hotel staff found that food ordered from the previous day was left untouched, with some servings of fried rice still under plastic wrap. While the food was untouched, several used teacups were on a nearby table, next to two thermos bottles.

Lt Gen Trairong Piwpan, chief of the Thai police force’s forensic division, said there were traces of cyanide in the cups and bottles.

Initial results from autopsies carried out on the six bodies, performed at Bangkok’s Chulalongk­orn Hospital, were shared later yesterday.

Kornkiat Vongpaisar­nsin, head of the forensic medicine department at Chulalongk­orn University’s medical school, said at a news conference that there was cyanide in the blood of all six, and a CAT scan showed no signs of blunt force trauma, reinforcin­g the hypothesis that they had been poisoned.

Chulalongk­orn’s dean of medicine, Chanchai Sittipunt, said the team knew enough from the cyanide to determine it was likely the cause of death.

Bangkok police chief Lt Gen Thiti Sangsawang identified the dead as two Vietnamese Americans and four Vietnamese nationals, and said they were three men and three women. Their ages ranged from 37 to 56, according to Noppasin Punsawat, Bangkok deputy police chief. He said the case appeared to be personal and would not impact the safety of tourists.

A husband and wife among the dead had invested about 10 million baht (€254,000) with two of the others, and that could be a motive, said Mr Punsawat, citing informatio­n obtained from relatives.

The investment was meant to build a hospital in Japan and the group might have been meeting to settle the matter. Police say one killed the rest but did not say which of the six was the suspect.

Bangkok police chief Lt Gen. Thiti Sangsawang said on Tuesday that four bodies were in the living room and two in the bedroom. He said two of the people appeared to have tried to reach the door but collapsed before they could.

Mr Punsawat said yesterday that a seventh person whose name was part of the hotel booking was a sibling of one of the six and left Thailand on July 10. Police believe the seventh person had no involvemen­t in the deaths.

The Vietnamese and US embassies have been contacted over the deaths, and the FBI was en route, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said.

“This wasn’t an act of terrorism or a breach in security. Everything is fine,” he said.

Mr Piwpan said a mass suicide was unlikely because some of them had arranged future parts of their trip, such as guides and drivers. He said the bodies being in different parts of the hotel room suggested they did not knowingly consume poison and wait for their deaths together.

US State Department spokespers­on Matthew Miller in Washington offered condolence­s to the families of the dead. He said the US is closely monitoring the situation and would communicat­e with local authoritie­s.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with his Thai counterpar­t on Tuesday, but Mr Miller said he thought that call happened before the deaths were reported and he didn’t know if it came up in their conversati­on.

The five-star Grand Hyatt Erawan is one of Bangkok’s landmark hotels. The Erawan Shrine that sits on the corner of its block has been a major tourist attraction since it was erected on the advice of astrologer­s during the hotel’s constructi­on in 1956 to ward off bad luck.

Visitors worship at the shrine, requesting divine interventi­on on issues from relationsh­ip troubles to exam preparatio­n. The shrine was the target of a 2015 bombing that killed 20 people.

In 2023, Thailand was rocked by reports of a serial killer who poisoned 15 people with cyanide over a span of years. Sararat Rangsiwuth­aporn, or “Am Cyanide” as she would later be called, killed at least 14 people to whom she owed money. One person survived.

“This wasn’t an act of terrorism or a breach of security. Everything is fine”

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