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The savage girlfriend is fierce, deadly

During the 18-month relationship, Yoo had physically, verbally and psychologically abused her boyfriend Urtura, and in the days leading up to his death, the abuse had become particularly frequent and intense.

The Korean movie "My Savage Girlfriend" was once all the rage, and the image of the heroine's savagery and domineering was deeply rooted in people's hearts. But having a savage girlfriend in real life is not as romantic as in the film. On the 28th local time, prosecutors in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, united States, filed a lawsuit against Yoo In-young, a 21-year-old Korean female student at Boston University, accusing him of committing "manslaughter" by encouraging her boyfriend Alexander Urtura to commit suicide.

According to CNN reported on the 29th, on May 20 this year, just a few hours before the graduation ceremony, Urtura, now 22 years old and studying at Boston University, jumped from the roof of a large local parking lot, and his girlfriend Liu Renying was the key figure in this suicide case. At a news conference, prosecutor Rawlings said investigators were on Urtura's cellphone and found abuse in the relationship. During the 18-month relationship, Yoo had physically, verbally, and psychologically abused Urtura, and in the days leading up to his death, the abuse had become particularly frequent and intense.

The savage girlfriend is fierce, deadly

Yoo In-young and her boyfriend

The Boston Herald said that in the two months before Urtura's suicide, the couple sent as many as 75,000 text messages to each other, of which Willow sent 47,000. In these text messages, Liu has urged her boyfriend to "die quickly" and "commit suicide" thousands of times, repeatedly saying to each other: "The world will be better without you." What's even more frightening is that Willow also tracked the location of her boyfriend through software, and CNN said that Willow was at the scene when Urtura committed suicide.

Yoo In-young, who is currently in South Korea, is unclear and has not commented on the allegations. As for whether she will voluntarily return to the United States to face the charges, U.S. prosecutors have expressed "cautious optimism" and are working with Liu's lawyers to coordinate the arraignment, "If she is not willing to return, we will take steps to get her back." According to South Korea's "JoongAng Daily" reported on the 29th, Liu originally graduated in May 2020, and she immediately applied to withdraw from school and return to South Korea after her boyfriend committed suicide. U.S. prosecutors said they would submit an extradition request to the South Korean government under the South Korean-U.S. judicial extradition treaty and that Willow must be brought to justice. So far, the South Korean judicial department has not expressed its position on the incident.

Source: Global Times- Global Network / Liu Chen, Cong Chao

The savage girlfriend is fierce, deadly

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