Font Size
15px

126: Chapter 123: The Sa World_2 126: Chapter 123: The Sa World_2 Entering prison like this wouldn’t be too humiliating.

Moreover, learning new knowledge in prison also requires ti; a short sentence wouldn’t be interesting at all.

Of course, one couldn’t really get trapped there; doing several years’ ti for nothing would be utterly not worth it.

Wei Zhenguo didn’t do the interrogating himself.

He just walked around the case center, seeing which team needed an extra hand, and would help out for the duration it took to poop.

As he wandered around, Wei Zhenguo stopped at Guo Jingbao’s interrogation room.

“I really haven’t done anything wrong recently.

It’s too much the way you’re arresting people.”

“No, I understand you want to confess, that you have your tasks, but I really haven’t committed any cri recently.

What could I even confess to?”

“You ask the police station’s folks; haven’t I been showing up less lately?”

Guo, with his assured argunts, brought the interrogation room to a standstill.

Wei Zhenguo grew a little curious.

Guo Jingbao was a person whose na made a morable impression for its plainness; he said his mother wanted him to always be clean and well-fed, so she nad him Guo Jingbao.

He managed to stay clean daily, then made himself well-fed by stealing.

He had been caught a few tis already.

Probably during the era when Jin Yong’s martial arts novels were all the rage, he claid the na Guo Jing, leaving out the character for ‘full,’ but every ti he stole sothing, he was incredibly stupid, with the police solving the case usually within four hours.

Thus, he had the nickna Stupid Guo.

This clumsy thief who couldn’t even leave Ningtai County was now making the case officers speechless with his retorts.

Had he gone for training?

Wei Zhenguo was sowhat astonished.

Thinking this over, he made a call to an acquaintance at the train station police station, like Stupid Guo had ntioned.

After so customary pleasantries, Wei Zhenguo got the confirmation that Stupid Guo had indeed rarely been seen at the bus station recently.

Wei Zhenguo thought it over and made calls to two other acquaintances.

One advantage of having fewer pickpockets was that the few left on the market were well-known to everybody.

After so inquiries, Wei Zhenguo was surprised to discover that Stupid Guo had indeed not been active as a pickpocket recently.

A pickpocket with thirty years’ experience was starting to slack off?

Wei Zhenguo found it hard to believe.

As the saying goes, a dog can’t stop eating shit, and for a Labrador, there’s never enough shit.

A thief of Stupid Guo’s age would be at a critical ti for saving for retirent; how could he possibly take a break?

His ho setup didn’t look like one that was short on money.

Wei Zhenguo thus was certain that Stupid Guo had another case on his hands.

He knocked on the door, then entered.

Wei Zhenguo nodded to the two officers conducting the interrogation and imdiately asked Stupid Guo, “Have you really not committed any cris recently?”

“I really haven’t,” Stupid Guo insisted.

“Show him the video,” Wei Zhenguo signaled the interrogation officer.

“Now you’re showing it?” the interrogation officer was puzzled.

Normally, this kind of evidence is withheld, to pressure the suspect into confessing, unless they happen to confess to this particular case; otherwise, it’s considered an insincere confession.

An insincere confession, or a partial one, ans that previous confessions wouldn’t even count as voluntary, naturally having a significant impact on the possibility of a reduced sentence.

This model forces you to keep confessing, non-stop, until you have nothing left to spit out, and only then do they give you a break, forcing you to resu confessing.

Many petty thieves end up falling into this trap, trying to take a little advantage only to suffer a bigger loss.

Even worse is when so interrogation officers create a bizarre atmosphere in the interrogation room, with offers like “two cases for an eighty percent confession, three for seventy, and free shipping with ten or more,” enticing the suspect to confess to more cases.

However, Wei Zhenguo had his own ideas and nodded again.

The interrogation officer then played the captured video footage.

It showed Stupid Guo stealing luggage at the bus station.

“This…

I just took it without thinking,” Stupid Guo didn’t even seem to think he was stealing.

“What was inside?”

“Nothing valuable, just clothes, shoes, stuff like that.

These days, people’s luggage isn’t interesting.”

“There was a pair of headphones inside, wasn’t there?” Wei Zhenguo had done his howork in advance.

The victim had reported the theft, and one phone call made everything clear.

After hesitating for a few seconds, Stupid Guo said, “I just took a pair of headphones.”

Wei Zhenguo asked, “Besides that, what other cases have you committed recently?”

Stupid Guo lowered his head.

“None.”

Wei Zhenguo’s hackles rose with his detective’s instincts; if he couldn’t tell there was a case here, his decades on the force would have been in vain.

Wei Zhenguo gave a snort and directly asked, “If you haven’t been committing cris, where does your inco co from?”

“I haven’t… haven’t committed any cris.”

“If you haven’t committed any cris, where do you get the money for food and drink, for everything you use?” Wei Zhenguo asked again.

The two young officers in charge of the interrogation understood and couldn’t help but feel a jolt of energy.

“I…

I’ve been saving money,” Stupid Guo said.

“From before?”

“Yes.”

“Where is it saved?

In Alipay, WeChat, or in a bank account…?”

“No…

it’s, you know, cash.”

“You saved it in cash?”

“Yes.”

“When did you save it, and how did you earn this money?” Wei Zhenguo asked calmly, unafraid that he wouldn’t get to the bottom of it.

After all, the majority of Stupid Guo’s inco ca from pickpocketing, and he would be caught once every two or three years; in faster tis, he would end up inside once a year or two, a cycle of about four to five years.

When he was younger, his relatives would help out, but at his age, no one bothered anymore.

Therefore, saving money was a possibility for Stupid Guo.

However, the influx of a large sum of money, or the source of an unexpected windfall, was certainly worth investigating.

Stupid Guo tried to explain further, but when he couldn’t make it clear, he simply stopped talking, ready to deny everything obstinately.

Wei Zhenguo, sitting opposite, fiddled with his fingers and after about ten minutes said leisurely, “Guo, we’ve known each other for over 20 years, haven’t we?”

Stupid Guo still didn’t make a sound.

Usually, for small-ti thieves like him, cooperation with the detectives was the norm; strong confrontation was out of the question.

Especially since the officers were already playing good cop, if a small-ti thief like himself didn’t play along, even Stupid Guo felt it was inappropriate.

Wei Zhenguo chuckled and said, “When I started out, you were already a thief.

Now you’re getting older, and you’ve pulled such a big stunt.

Seeing you’re not talking, I’m guessing soone’s life is in your hands, right?”

“No, Brother Wei, there’s no need, is there?” Not completely foolish, Stupid Guo finally spoke up, “If you really need a brother to take the fall for a case, find soone plausible.

Can you really justify a murder case?”

Wei Zhenguo observed Stupid Guo’s deanor and felt it was unusual compared to the past.

Given Stupid Guo’s age and history, it was clear he couldn’t have suddenly developed a higher criminal acun.

What did this imply?

It implied soone had taught him.

Wei Zhenguo’s interest was piqued; he asked a few more questions, confird his thoughts, and then left the room.

The three people left in the interrogation room were perplexed, but Wei Zhenguo didn’t say to stop, so the two detectives continued their conversation ga with Stupid Guo.

Wei Zhenguo first found the image analysis office and then took them to find Jiang Yuan.

What he needed to do was facial reconstruction.

The two video segnts already cut were both of Stupid Guo and another person.

Young Gao Jiansheng took out the videos, still a bit embarrassed, and spoke quietly, “We’re still doing facial reconstructions, but we followed the thod you showed us before.

It seems a little clearer, but the face is still not visible, and we don’t know how to adjust it.”

“The image is a bit more complicated, the conditions of the cara itself are quite poor,” Jiang Yuan explained as he looked at it.

“There are many reasons why an image can’t be produced.

Many are caused by the surveillance system itself, such as the sampling resolution, fra rate, compression quality, and cara angle control…”

“Can’t you produce the image?” asked Wei Zhenguo, startled.

Jiang Yuan made a sound of acknowledgnt and said, “No, it’s not impossible, just a bit challenging.”

Jiang Yuan began working with a new algorithm, quickly typing commands.

In a short ti, a semi-clear photograph with a visible face appeared in front of everyone.

“Damn!” Zhuang Wei, the original image analysis expert, couldn’t help but curse.

It seed like everyone was doing the sa work, yet it felt like they weren’t in the sa world.

The eyes had managed it, but the hands, where should they go…

where should they be placed?

You are reading National Forensic Doctor Chapter 126 - 126 123 The Same World2 on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.