Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Murder charges upgraded for seller of suicide kits

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Former cook Kenney Law is now charged with planning and intentiona­lly killing buyers of the food additive.

Canadian authoritie­s have upgraded the murder charges against a Canadian who allegedly sold suicide kits online that caused the deaths of dozens of users worldwide, his lawyer said on Friday.

In mid-December former cook Kenney Law, 58, was charged by Toronto area police with 14 counts of second-degree or reckless murder in Canada’s Ontario province. Law denies the charges.

These have now been upgraded to first-degree murder, according to court filings, reflecting the prosecutio­n’s position that the homicides were planned and deliberate.

“He intends to defend (himself against) these new charges just as he’d plan to defend the previous ones,” defense attorney Matthew Gourlay told Agence France Presse.

Law was arrested in May for marketing a substance that is used as a food additive but can kill if misused. He is said to have targeted vulnerable people online.

He is believed to have sent as many as 1,200 packages to people in more than 40 countries since 2020.

Canadian police said last month they were coordinati­ng their investigat­ion with law enforcemen­t agencies around the world.

In Britain, at least 272 people purchased products from Law’s websites and 88 of them died, police there have said.

Alerted by Interpol, several other countries have launched investigat­ions, including New Zealand and Italy, where nine buyers have been identified and one victim has died.

The Canadian victims were both male and female between the ages of 16 an 36, according to police.

Law is scheduled to appear in court next week.

 ?? JOHN MACDOUGALL/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? TRACTORS drive in a line as farmers demonstrat­e in Berlin, Germany. German farmers are asking German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government to drop planned subsidy cuts hitting the agricultur­e sector.
JOHN MACDOUGALL/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE TRACTORS drive in a line as farmers demonstrat­e in Berlin, Germany. German farmers are asking German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government to drop planned subsidy cuts hitting the agricultur­e sector.

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