protect his sister, the only living relative he had, was to kill this man. kathy suh is in prison serving a sentence for a crime they were able to prove she committed. this crime evidenced at the dry cleaners will be an unsolved case. i believe with all my heart and with all sincerity he was responsible for this. he was the man responsible for slashing my mom 33 times. he was the man responsible for shattering my life. he was the man responsible for putting me in this place. but in the same breath, i say, who am i to decide that. on certain days i wake up and say, oh, my god, what have you done. what you have done. you took another person s life. and i will always be a murderer. andrew was the last person to see my brother alive. it s hard to get over.
hermitage. everything was dark. it was pouring rain that day. she shoved a brown paper bag into my hand. she left me. inside the bag was a gun. it was like a couple hours there. i m constantly going through all these memories of catherine. the last memory i have is catherine telling me the story about my mom. we were at a restaurant, a japanese restaurant. i was leaving for college in matter of weeks. and at that point, she looked at me, she s quiet and you see almost a calm in her face, where she s she wasn t herself. she s like, i have to tell you somethin something. here s an interesting fact. all of andrew s parents money. it was a significant amount of money back then, goes to the son. catherine really didn t get anything. but what she got was control of andrew. before mom died, after robert got fired, we had a long
conversation about money, she said. robert and i i was talking to robert, halfheartedly about how everything will be fine once my mom passed away. shortly there after, my mother came up dead. she said, i didn t ask him to do it but he did it. they knew andrew would then become basically inherit everything, catherine would become the administrator of his trust and in fact, it proved true. she could then manipulate the money and spend it as if it was her own, which is what she did. i got up and i ran out. i m sitting on a concrete barrier in the middle of the restaurant parking lot. at that point, i was a little kid again. i was 13 years old, sitting there, finding out my mom just got murdered for the first time. it was just an overwhelming sensation, where i hated my sister. i hated robert, i hated everybody again, all this built-up anger and frustration came pouring over me again. she worked and worked on how
can you let this man walk the streets, knowing he murdered our mother. her mother was brutally murdered. someone sat on her chest and stabbed her repeatedly with a knife. this was not somebody walked in and shot her, this was, you want to talk about brutal and heinous murders. imagine your sister telling you that she had figured out who had done this most horrible thing to your mother. andrew said to her, let s call the police. catherine said, oh, no, if cool the police, they ll call me an accomplice and then we ll both go to jail. catherine was robert s alibi and robert was my sister s alibi. if he goes, i go. her words. she looks at me, you have to get rid of him. you have to do it for mom. cathy s mother was stabbed 37 times in the face and neck. that s not a crime for $100 in
what did he do? he said, i have to contain vengeance for that. however, in our actual civilized society, we are considered vigilantes. we then become the cold-blooded killer. we try to destroy the monster. in turn, we become that monster. andrew was certainly, he was a young adult, incapable making his own decisions. and his participation in this murder, although he was certainly urged to do so by his sister, again he was a willing participant, and went along with this. i m not saying i would have done what andrew did, or that anybody would. but somehow, a 19-year-old man, with an incredible sense of loyalty with his family was convinced that only way to avenge his mother s death and to