Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Lin Guoyun’s revelation

Lin Guoyun’s revelation

The information comes from "The Cruel Dismemberment Case" published by Hong Kong Publishing House Juxian Kuan in 1991

Lin Guoyun did not have a dark room at home to develop photos, so Lin was used to taking the film A drying shop in Tsim Sha Tsui was doing the drying because Lin was familiar with the shop assistant Zhang Zai (pseudonym) whom he met at the photography club. Lin told Zhang Zai that he worked part-time as a photographer in the mortuary and took photos of autopsies for them. Zhang Zai thought his explanation was reasonable. To avoid frightening other colleagues, Zhang Zai developed the photos for Lin Guoyun himself.

On August 10, 1982, Lin Guoyun wanted to enlarge the dismembered photo of the fourth victim, Liang Huixin. It happened that the enlarger of the photo development company where Zhang Tsai worked was faulty, so Zhang Tsai The negatives handed over by Lin Guoyun were handed over to the Mong Kok branch of the same organization for enlargement. Since the photo enlargement process was done manually, when the branch developer developed the films and conducted quality checks, they found that the photos seemed to Related to human dismemberment, photos were handed over to superiors for decision-making. The person in charge of the tanning company thought something was fishy and called the police.

On August 18, when Lin Guoyun went to a Tsim Sha Tsui store to take a photo and left, the police arrested him. Lin piled up randomly and said that the photo was from a "four-eyed guy" who worked at Oriental Daily. He picked it up and made an appointment to meet outside the Oriental Daily store on Guizhou Street in To Kwa Wan. However, the police found that there was no such person as the "four-eyed guy". Finally, the police led a team and escorted Lin Guoyun back to the second floor of Anqing Building on Guizhou Street. The residence in Room F was searched and the murder was revealed.