Chapter 6 Solving the Case in the Court (Part 2)(2/2)
What's more, using heart rate detection as an auxiliary means further improves the accuracy of judging micro-expressions and subtext.
Therefore, Zhou Jun determined that the dining room was where Jiang Yu hid his money.
When Zhou Jun announced the result, Jiang Yu pretended to be calm, but his slightly trembling lips had already betrayed his inner fear.
Seeing Jiang Yu's expression, Zhang Chuping nodded and said to Shao Chang: "Have someone search the dining room, search carefully!"
Before Shao Chang could answer, Zhou Jun suddenly said: "Please wait a moment, Ming Mansion."
Zhang Chuping looked at Zhou Jun, somewhat confused.
Zhou Jun actually took out another stack of paper from his arms, pulled out a floor plan of a house called "dining room" from the middle, and spread it on the table again.
Jiang Yu's face turned pale and his whole body was shaking.
Zhang Chuping laughed out loud when he saw this, and asked with great joy: "Where did you get all these drawings?"
Zhou Jun replied: "In the Ming Dynasty, I visited Jiang Yu's landlord and spent some money to get the design drawings of the small courtyard."
After answering, Zhou Jun moved his finger to the floor plan of the dining room and said to Jiang Yu: "Let's do it again."
Jiang Yu completely collapsed, his nose twitched, and he almost cried.
A quarter of an hour later, Zhang Chuping finally learned the ins and outs of the incident from Jiang Yu.
Jiang Yu was addicted to gambling and not only lost all his savings and rent money, but also owed a large debt to the gambling house.
The gambling house promised that if the money was not returned within the time limit, it would be reported to the Imperial Medical Office.
Jiang Yu, who was desperate, happened to see Zhou Dinghai in the dental market that day.
The latter was chatting with others, bragging that Zhou Ze, the eldest son of Zhou, was successful in his studies and had a bright future, and would surely become famous and prosperous in the future.
When Jiang Yu heard this, he began to plot and set up a scheme in his mind. He used himself as a slave as a cover to defraud and sell himself to pay for the emergency.
Things went smoothly. During the entire transaction, Jiang Yu did not interact with anyone else except Zhou Dinghai, and he faked the signature and fingerprints on the deed to clear up the relationship.
In this way, the witnesses and physical evidence all point to Zhou Dinghai. Even if outsiders can see the doubts, they cannot convict Jiang Yu of any crime due to the lack of evidence.
However, Jiang Yu did not expect that the money for selling her body would eventually become the only flaw.
After Jiang Yu confessed, Shao Chang also led the police to find the stolen money from the dining room of the former's home.
It turned out that Jiang Yu buried the 30 coins in a deep pit under the stove hole, covering it with soil, lime, stone slabs and firewood.
Such a hidden hiding place, if he hadn't confessed it himself, it would have been difficult to find it through ordinary searches.
At the end of the case, according to the relevant text in the "Tang Lv Su Yi": If the same person is sold to each other, or if the master's plan is to sell the other person as a slave, the seller and the sold person will have no leader and will be exiled for two thousand miles.
Jiang Yu was the chief culprit for betraying Yuan Miao and was sentenced to two thousand miles of exile.
The buyer Xu Fu, in accordance with the provisions of the Tang Dynasty law "Those who do not know the information will not sit down", "it is not the fault of the buyer" and does not bear any responsibility.
As for Zhou Dinghai, although he didn't know about it, as a servant of the tooth, he was not familiar with the rules of the tooth and did not respect the city order. He was sentenced to redeem ten pounds of copper.
Chapter completed!