Traces of Cyanide Found in Bangkok Hotel Room Where Six Died
The Thai police said on Wednesday that they had found traces of cyanide on flasks and tea cups in a Bangkok hotel room where six bodies were found the previous day, and that one of the people found dead was believed to have administered the poison.
Maj. Gen. Noppasin Poonsawat, the deputy police chief in Bangkok, told reporters that one of the six people “did this by using cyanide.” He did not identify the person. General Noppasin said the group had gathered in Bangkok to discuss an investment plan in which several of them were involved.
The bodies were found on Tuesday in a hotel room at the Grand Hyatt Erawan in the heart of downtown Bangkok, and little was immediately revealed about how they had died. The case has shocked Thailand, and officials have rushed to offer assurances that the country, one of the world’s most popular tourist destinations, remains safe.
The police identified the dead as Sherine Chong and Dang Hung Van, both Vietnamese Americans, and Nguyen Thi Phuong Lan, Pham Hong Thanh, Tran Dinh Phu, and Nguyen Thi Phuong, all Vietnamese citizens.
Ms. Chong and Ms. Lan were brokers in an investment plan, General Noppasin said. Ms. Phuong and her husband, Mr. Hong, had given Ms. Chong 10 million baht, or nearly $280,000, and were asking for updates on their investment, he added. They had agreed to discuss the issue in Japan, but they met in Bangkok instead because of visa problems, the general said.
On Monday, the group gathered in Ms. Chong’s room, according to the general’s account. The others had checked out of the hotel and brought their bags to Ms. Chong’s room. They ordered room service, including two thermoses of hot tea.
A hotel employee who entered the room at 1:51 p.m. only saw one woman, who