Facebook murder

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

The Facebookmoord ("Facebook murder") is a term coined by Dutch media for the 2012 murder of Joyce (Winsie) Hau, by the then 14–year-old Jinhua K. from Capelle aan den IJssel, in the Netherlands.[1] Hau's father was also injured during the attack. The case was given its name because the motive lay in a disagreement on Facebook.

Events[edit]

Friends Polly W. (16 years of age) and Hau (15 years of age) had argued during a party, leading Hau to make remarks on Facebook over supposed promiscuous behaviour by Polly. Polly W. then asked her friend Wesley C. (17 years of age) to deal with the situation. C. hired Jinhua K. to 'punish' Hau.

On 14 January 2012, Jinhua K. went to Hau's house, carrying a knife. He rang the doorbell and stabbed Hau repeatedly as she opened the door. Hau's father came running and tried to help and was injured in the struggle. Hau died of her injuries in hospital several days later.[2]

Verdict[edit]

Jinhua K. was sentenced to a year in juvenile detention and three years in justicial involuntary commitment, of which one year was conditional.[2]

Those who ordered the killing, Wesley C. and Polly K. were both convicted to the maximum sentence possible under Dutch criminal law for juveniles, of two years in juvenile detention and justicial involuntary commitment, for conspiring to commit and purposely contributing to the murder. The public prosecutor asked to have the two tried as adults due to the severity of the case, and demanded five years in prison and justicial involuntary commitment, but the court ruled against this.[3]

The prosecution appealed the verdict.[4] The appeal was during a non-public case in July and August 2013.[5] On 27 August 2013 the court of appeals upheld the earlier ruling.[6]

Aftermath[edit]

Jinhua K. had shown some improvements during his time in a mental health facility, though psychologists had noted that he was at a low to moderate risk of reoffending, citing examples of impulsive behaviour, lowered empathy and occasional lack of cooperation with behavioural interventions.

In April of 2017, Jinhua K. and an unidentified older man committed an armed robbery. The two posed as prospective buyers of expensive computer equipment, having contacted the victim through his online listing. While stealing the equipment, they threatened to shoot the victim, his girlfriend and their infant if they attempted to intervene. A few weeks later, the two men were arrested.

Hau's father expressed his lack of surprise at Jinhua K's reoffending, stating 'He is severely disturbed; that was evident from (Winsie's) murder.'[7]

In popular culture[edit]

On July 8, 2023, the true crime podcast Casefile detailed the case of Winsie Hau in their 254th episode.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "OM eist 1 jaar cel en tbs voor Facebookmoord". RTL Nieuws, 20 augustus 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Jinhua K. krijgt maximale straf voor Facebookmoord". NRC Handelsblad, 3 September 2012.
  3. ^ "Opdrachtgevers Facebookmoord veroordeeld volgens jeugdstrafrecht". NRC Handelsblad, 12 November 2012.
  4. ^ "OM in hoger beroep tegen uitspraak Facebookmoord". NRC Handelsblad, 26 November 2012.
  5. ^ "Hoger beroep Facebookmoord niet openbaar". NU.nl, 18 maart 2013.
  6. ^ 'Weer jeugdstraffen in Facebookmoord', NU.nl 27 August 2013.
  7. ^ Szymanska, Paulina. "Case 254: Winsie Hau - Casefile True Crime". Casefile: True Crime Podcast. Retrieved 15 July 2023.