>>33857287
>refused to respond to questioning and has left the country
You don't know my situation before all this unfolded, so I can understand why it would appear suspicious to you.
I was looking at relocating because the apartment near the CBD I was renting was being auctioned off.
I was considering relocating to the suburbs, and towards the end of my lease my colleagues let me know that the detectives are coming to interview them about me. They weren't coming after me to question me directly then, and I wish they did, because I would have cooperated with them. I don't want them wasting time scrutinizing when they should be out solving real crimes with real victims.
I was just too fucking pissed off then to find a place to relocate to, so I just put all my shit into storage and left to go traveling.
My family are all in Korea, so I have some place to stay while traveling so that is what I am doing.
I renounced my Korean citizenship when I became a naturalized citizen of Australia, so I can't stay in Korea indefinitely without a permanent visa - hence why I'm applying for humanitarian stay.
I was staying in Tokyo when the detectives reached out to me for direct questioning and that was about 9 months AFTER they begain their investigation.
This is when I tried to hire a lawyer but all the law firms I called told me that there isn't much they can do unless I am charged or when I don't know what I will be charged with. They all told me to just wait and call them back whe I'm charged and to not speak to the police until then.
I would have cooperated with them had they come to me directly at first question me, because that would have clarified their suspicion. As a matter of fact, I knew the book will raise questions especially among the people who have hard time identifying with the story, and I was always open to clarifying any concern that people might have.
Well, I don't want to speak to the police when they come to me after they dragged my name through the mud.