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In May 2009, a wealthy 20-year-old was drag racing through the city streets of Hangzhou, China, when his Mitsubishi struck and killed a pedestrian in a crosswalk. The car was traveling so fast that the victim—a 25-year-old telecom engineer of a modest, rural background—was flung at least 20 yards. Afterward, bystanders and reporters photographed the driver, Hu Bin, as well as his rich friends, who nonchalantly smoked cigarettes and laughed while waiting for the police to arrive at the scene. These images, soon posted online, provoked a public outcry. Anger over the callous behavior of these wealthy Chinese youths was followed by accusations of a police cover-up. First, the local authorities admitted that they had underestimated the speed Hu’s vehicle was traveling by half. (Incredibly, the police had first suggested that Hu was going no more than 43 mph.) Public furor rose again when Hu received a three-year prison sentence, an exceptionally light punishment in a country where drunk drivers guilty of similar accidents can receive the death penalty. But the most stunning allegation was that the man appearing in court and serving the three-year sentence wasn’t Hu at all, but a hired body double.
This is what I am thinking, he was drugged up. Have you seen the video of him in court? He looks "out of it"
Originally posted by calebdaniels
reply to post by matthewgraybeal
There are those who suggest he was forcibly under the influence of Scopolamine, a mind altering drug that makes one act like a zombie who follows orders and then, later, snaps out of it and no longer remembers what happens. Scopolamine is tied to the CIA's MKULTRA in more than one document, too. So, yeah, it's possible that he was forcibly drugged.
Scopolamine