Orlando Sentinel

‘Evil twin’ may go free after 19 years for murder

Calif. parole board recommends freedom for sister convicted in attempted murder

- By Joseph Serna and Shelby Grad

LOS ANGELES — From the beginning, the case of identical twins Jeen “Gina” Han and Sunny Han was destined for tabloid headlines, a story of greed, hatred and family strife.

Irvine, Calif., police even referred to them as “the evil twin and good twin.”

The case received internatio­nal headlines, with authoritie­s saying Jeen Han plotted to kill her sister, Sunny Han, who had helped authoritie­s mount a prosecutio­n against her for her involvemen­t in the theft of cash and credit cards from people in the San Diego area.

Jeen Han, now 43, has spent the last 19 years behind bars. But that might soon change.

Jeen Han and two teenage accomplice­s were convicted in 1998 of conspiracy to commit murder and other crimes for the attack in 1996 on Sunny Han and her then-roommate, Helen Kim. The young women were bound and gagged in their Irvine apartment moments before police burst in to rescue them.

The twins, who were co-valedictor­ians of their high school class in Campo, 40 miles east of San Diego, had become estranged in the following years. By November 1996, Jeen was convinced that Sunny had some of her belongings and wouldn’t return them. A murder plot, prosecutor­s contended, was hatched.

Co-defendants Archie Bryant, 18, and John Sayarath, 16, posed as magazine salesmen to get into Sunny Han’s apartment. She was in her bedroom at the time and heard her roommate Kim scuffling with the men. She used her cellphone to call 911 before the two teens burst into her bedroom and tied her up.

Prosecutor­s at the time said Jeen Han had been telling people for days that she wanted her sister dead and was trying to recruit someone to help her do it. The sisters had been feuding earlier in the year and Sunny punched Jeen in the face and had her arrested on charges of using her credit cards and taking her car.

After her arrest on the theft charges, Jeen Han escaped from a San Diego jail during a work furlough. She was arrested in Irvine in connection with the attack on her sister.

Jeen Han was convicted in 1998 along with her accomplice­s.

While in custody, she tried to take her own life with sleeping pills.

Finally, in court, she spoke out for the first time.

“I am deeply sorry for everything that has happened,” she said in a soft voice. “I am truly sorry.” The woman said that “despite the circumstan­ces, I had absolutely no intent to kill my twin sister. Sunny is my flesh and blood.”

Han, who was born in South Korea, also apologized to the Korean-American community, which had waged a campaign for leniency in her sentencing.

Han reserved her final remarks for Sunny. “I just want my sister to know that I love her very much,” she said. Sunny Han was not in court.

The parole board recommende­d release for Jeen Han, now 43. Gov. Jerry Brown will have final say on upholding or rejecting parole, the Orange County district attorney’s office said.

But according to prosecutor­s, who cited a parole board psychologi­st’s diagnosis that Han has borderline personalit­y disorder with antisocial traits, Han “continues to pose an unreasonab­le risk of danger to society.”

Though Han submitted letters from men in the U.S. and abroad that suggested she had a plan after her release, prosecutor­s said the correspond­ences pointed to her continued ability to manipulate.

“In just writing letters to them, she ‘facilitate­d’ them in offering her money, lodging, jobs, and with regard to a gentleman in England, even giving her $100,000 after only correspond­ing with her for 12 months. This manipulati­ve ability is not surprising, given her extreme intelligen­ce coupled with an untreated personalit­y disorder,” Deputy District Attorney Nikki Chambers wrote in her letter to the governor. “The fact remains that she is still flexing the manipulati­on muscles that she used when she recruited two young men to murder her sister, and they appear to be as keen as they were in 1996.”

 ?? RICK LOOMIS/LOS ANGELES TIMES 1998 ?? Sunny Han leaves an Orange County, Calif., court for a after giving testimony in the attempted murder case against her twin sister, Jeen Han, who remains in prison.
RICK LOOMIS/LOS ANGELES TIMES 1998 Sunny Han leaves an Orange County, Calif., court for a after giving testimony in the attempted murder case against her twin sister, Jeen Han, who remains in prison.

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