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Jury begins deliberations in suitcase double-murder trial

Author
Emily Ansell,
Publish Date
Tue, 23 Sept 2025, 12:10pm
Hakyung Lee, in the High Court at Auckland this month (right), is accused of killing her children in Auckland before moving to South Korea. Photos / Pool, Lawrence Smith / Supplied
Hakyung Lee, in the High Court at Auckland this month (right), is accused of killing her children in Auckland before moving to South Korea. Photos / Pool, Lawrence Smith / Supplied

Jury begins deliberations in suitcase double-murder trial

Author
Emily Ansell,
Publish Date
Tue, 23 Sept 2025, 12:10pm

A jury has begun deliberating over whether an Auckland mother is guilty of murdering her two young children. 

Hakyung 鈥淛asmine鈥 Lee faces two counts of murder following the June 2018 deaths of her two kids in South Auckland. 

She admits giving daughter Yuna Jo, 8, and son Minu Jo, 6, a fatal dose of the anti-depressant nortriptyline before wrapping them in plastic and placing their bodies in suitcases which were left in storage for four years. 

But she says this was during an unsuccessful suicide attempt and claims her actions were the result of insanity following the death of her husband. 

The Crown and defence closed their cases in the High Court at Auckland yesterday, and Justice Geoffrey Venning summed up the case this morning following two weeks of evidence before the jury was sent out to begin deliberating. 

鈥淵ou are here as members of the public, representing the community we all live in,鈥 the judge said. 

鈥淵ou are the judges of fact, and have to decide if the Crown has proved its case of murder against Ms Lee, beyond reasonable doubt.鈥 

He instructed the jury to initially disregard any evidence implying Lee was insane so they could focus on elements of the murder charge first. 

鈥淭he Crown does not have show she was sane at the time the children were killed. The defence of insanity does not arise until the elements of the charge of murder have been established. 

鈥淚f the Crown fails to prove the elements of murder beyond reasonable doubt then you must find Ms Lee not guilty and the issue of insanity is irrelevant.鈥 

The question of insanity came into play if the jury found Lee deliberately administered the drug, and it was a substantial and operative cause of the children鈥檚 death, the judge said. 

鈥淚f the defence satisfy you Ms Lee did suffer from disease of the mind, then you must consider whether this meant she did not understand her actions in killing Minu and Yuna were morally wrong.鈥 

The jury were also asked by Justice Venning not to let sympathy influence their decision. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 natural to feel sympathy for the young children who are killed. It鈥檚 also natural to feel someone should be held responsible for their deaths. 

鈥淥n the other hand, some of you may feel sympathy for the defendant.鈥 

He told the jury they must be objective, but to come to their verdicts on the basis of the evidence they鈥檇 heard, and to do so fairly to both parties. 

鈥淵ou are acting as judges.鈥 

Lee鈥檚 attended the trial via video link, not speaking or raising her head. Justice Venning noted this demeanour, reminding the 12 jurors that her lack of engagement did not go against her and her case. 

He concluded his brief summary by reminding jurors that people make decisions in their everyday lives based on what they hear and read about issues. 

鈥淎nd that鈥檚 really what you have to do in deciding whether Ms Lee was guilty or not guilty in this case.鈥 

Defence鈥檚 closing address 

Lee has represented herself, but her insanity defence is being delivered on behalf of her standby counsel. 

Criminal defence lawyer Lorraine Smith began her closing remarks yesterday by asking the trial鈥檚 key question: 

鈥淗ow does Jasmine Lee go from mother, father, two children, to taking her children鈥檚 life and become the woman who has appeared on our screen in this courtroom over the last two weeks?鈥 

Smith said the answer can be summarised in two words. 

鈥淢ental illness.鈥 

She described Lee as a fragile person, whose inability to cope with adding her husband to the list of those she鈥檇 lost went unnoticed due to her dwindling support system. 

鈥淚n early 2018, her social circle shrinks to nothing. 

鈥淪o we have this vicious cycle of more isolation and the people who knew Jasmine were not around to see what was happening.鈥 

Smith told the jury the Crown鈥檚 theory was superficially attractive, but disintegrates under closer inspection. 

She said the Crown鈥檚 theory Lee wanted to leave within days, if not hours, of the deaths doesn鈥檛 stack up, given she didn鈥檛 leave until July 19 鈥 on a return ticket. 

鈥淚magine what the Crown would have said to you if Jasmine had booked a one-way ticket for herself in early June.鈥 

Hakyung "Jasmine" Lee is on trial in for the alleged murders of her children at their Papatoetoe home in June 2018. Jurors were shown screenshots of the children's PlayStation 4 profiles and other game data indicating they might have been playing Minecraft on the same day they were killed. Composite photo / Dean Purcell, NZ PoliceHakyung "Jasmine" Lee is on trial in for the alleged murders of her children at their Papatoetoe home in June 2018. Jurors were shown screenshots of the children's PlayStation 4 profiles and other game data indicating they might have been playing Minecraft on the same day they were killed. Composite photo / Dean Purcell, NZ Police 

Smith added that keeping her items in a storage unit doesn鈥檛 fit with someone intending to leave for good, and questioned why a supposedly cold, calculated person would keep all of the family鈥檚 belongings. 

Smith said Lee wasn鈥檛 living under a false identity in Korea, having kept her last name and date of birth. 

The name change, Smith said, 鈥渋s more relevant to Korean ideas about fate, luck and superstition鈥. 

Smith pointed to their sole witness, forensic psychiatrist Dr Yvette Kelly, who found Lee to be struggling with a major depressive disorder at the time of the killings. 

She told the jury to take Kelly鈥檚 word that Lee was suffering from delusions at the time, evidenced by the fact Lee thought she鈥檇 caused her father and husband鈥檚 deaths by bringing bad luck on the family. 

She said Kelly鈥檚 later revision of her stance, that Lee didn鈥檛 know she was morally wrong, was based on a speculative timeline. 

The Crown suggested Lee made purchases such as bin bags, and changed her name, ahead of killing her children. 

鈥淭he Crown asks you to ignore the fact that these actions were equally consistent with other reasons. Namely, a plan to pack up the house because they鈥檙e all going to Korea, and hoping for a new start with a lucky name.鈥 

Smith told the jury the Crown鈥檚 argument 鈥渘eeds you to treat Jasmine as a mentally healthy woman, who was taking rational steps to kill her children 鈥 and they can鈥檛 do that". 

The jury was also warned against guesswork and speculation, as Smith reiterated claims prosecutors pieced together a case from an investigation that started four years after the event. 

Throughout the trial, Lee has attended via video link, sitting still with her hands clasped and her head bowed. 

Smith referenced this demeanour when challenging the Crown鈥檚 claims Lee told multiple lies during her evolving account of events. 

She said prosecutors were wrong about Lee鈥檚 forgetfulness and confusion, and it was a result of her mental state. 

鈥淪he鈥檚 not a liar, ladies and gentlemen. She鈥檚 mentally unwell. You鈥檝e seen her, she barely has the will to lift her head.鈥 

Crown addresses the jury 

Addressing the jury this morning for the final time, Crown lawyer Natalie Walker reminded jurors of how Lee came to be found in a South Korean psychiatric hospital, four years after she and her children disappeared. 

Lee had managed to get in contact with her mother鈥檚 pastor, who spoke to her over the phone in June 2022. 

Hakyung Lee has admitted she killed her 8-year-old daughter, Yuna Jo (left), and 6-year-old son, Minu Jo, in June 2018. She is on trial in the High Court at Auckland for two counts of murder but her standby lawyers say she is not guilty by reason of insanity. Photo / NZ PoliceHakyung Lee has admitted she killed her 8-year-old daughter, Yuna Jo (left), and 6-year-old son, Minu Jo, in June 2018. She is on trial in the High Court at Auckland for two counts of murder but her standby lawyers say she is not guilty by reason of insanity. Photo / NZ Police 

Walker said the pastor was aware Lee鈥檚 two children had been missing for some time, and asked what happened to them. 

鈥淭o which she replied, 鈥業 have no children鈥,鈥 Walker told the court. 

鈥淭his was the first in a series of lies told by the defendant, Ms Lee, in relation to the deaths of her daughter Yuna Jo, and son Minu Jo. 

鈥淗er mother asked the same question and was told the same lie.鈥 

Walker said she wanted to illustrate to the jury how much of an unreliable historian Lee was. 

鈥淭he only evidence of her defence 鈥 that she attempted suicide and took her children鈥檚 lives as she didn鈥檛 want them to live without both parents 鈥 comes only from her.鈥 

Walker said Lee had provided five different accounts about the deaths of her children since 2022. The prosecutor suggested none was true. 

鈥淔irst is that she had no children. Second, that she had the children but she left them behind in an institution. 

鈥淭hird, that someone murdered her children, she knew who it was but it wasn鈥檛 her. Fourth she was the person who killed her children by drug overdose but was suffering from a major depressive disorder at the time and thought it was the right thing to do. 

鈥淎nd fifth and finally, that voices told her to kill her children and she still thought it was the right thing to do.鈥 

A security photo from Safe Store Papatoetoe shows Hakyung "Jasmine" Lee on the day she hired a storage unit. Her children's remains were hidden at the facility for four years. Photo / SuppliedA security photo from Safe Store Papatoetoe shows Hakyung "Jasmine" Lee on the day she hired a storage unit. Her children's remains were hidden at the facility for four years. Photo / Supplied 

The potential that Lee planned her actions has formed a part of the Crown鈥檚 argument. 

Walker reminded the jury of PlayStation data suggesting the children were alive at the same time Lee was purchasing a courier envelope on June 27, used to apply for a name change the same day. 

Receipts showed Lee also went to Mitre 10 and purchased wheelie bin liners and duct tape, which the Crown said could have been used to conceal her children鈥檚 bodies. 

All this, Walker said, meant it would be fair for the jury to infer the killings were intentional, and not the spontaneous actions of someone severely mentally unwell. 

Walker said it was this timeline that shifted the position of the only defence witness, forensic psychiatrist Dr Yvette Kelly. 

During cross-examination last week, Kelly appeared to reassess her findings that Lee was unaware what she was doing was morally wrong. 

However, Kelly maintained Lee had a disease of the mind. 

But Walker said the evidence of Crown witness forensic psychiatrist Erik Monasterio disputed this claim. 

Monasterio accepted Lee was likely depressed, and suffering from a complex and prolonged grief reaction. 

But he believed she was not impaired, adding that major depression was common in the community. 

Walker also spoke of the effort Lee went to, on her own, to wrap her two dead children in three layers of plastic bags. 

鈥淓ach of which she knotted, then lifted into the next layer, then knotted, lifted into the next layer, then knotted, then lifted and put into the suitcase ... it鈥檚 quite unimaginable. 

鈥淎nd yet, that鈥檚 what she did.鈥 

Walker finished by telling the jury there were no grounds for an insanity defence. 

鈥淚t was not the altruistic act of the mother who had lost her mind and believed it was the morally right thing to do 鈥 it was the opposite. 

鈥淢s Lee deliberately and in sound mind murdered Minu and Yuna, and the right verdicts are verdicts of guilty.鈥 

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