A 42-year-old woman has been extradited from South Korea to New Zealand, where she is today to appear in court charged with murdering two children whose remains were found in suitcases sold at an auction.
New Zealand police yesterday said that “three police officers traveled to South Korea to transport the woman,” who arrived at Auckland Airport in the afternoon and was taken to Manukau Police Station.
The South Korean Ministry of Justice said that key evidence in the case had also been handed to New Zealand officials.
“We hope that the truth of this case, which has received worldwide attention, will be revealed through a fair and strict judicial process in New Zealand,” a South Korean official said in Seoul.
“She will be held in custody overnight when she will then be expected to appear in the Manukau District Court on two charges of murder,” police said.
South Korean police arrested the suspect in the port city of Ulsan in September, weeks after New Zealand police discovered the remains of two school-aged children in Auckland.
Images in South Korean media at the time of her arrest showed the woman, who South Korean police have identified only by her surname, Lee, being led out of an Ulsan police station by plainclothes investigators, covering her head with a large brown coat.
Asked by reporters whether she would confess to the killings, the woman repeatedly said: “I didn’t do it” as she was led into a police vehicle.
The bodies were discovered in south Auckland after an unsuspecting family bought a trailer-load of items — including the suitcases — at an auction for abandoned goods.
New Zealand police have said the bodies were likely in storage for several years, which has complicated the investigation.
Authorities have repeatedly said that the family who found the bodies were not connected to the homicides and were being given support to help deal with the trauma.
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