Suspected murderer who evaded capture for 12 years by pretending to be mute loses voice from underuse

Authored by telegraph.co.uk and submitted by ab_ovo_usque_ad_mala

A Chinese murder suspect has been apprehended after evading police for 12 years partly by pretending to be mute - leading to the genuine loss of his ability to speak .

The man, identified by his surname Zeng, has been charged with murdering his wife's uncle, identified as Mr Chai,in 2005, after a dispute over a 500 yuan (£57) rent payment.

The disagreement escalated, and Mr Zeng allegedly stabbed Mr Chai to death.

Mr Zeng then went on the run from his home in Hangzhou in the eastern Zhejiang province. He begged for money and went under the false name Wang Gui, all the time refraining from speaking, pretending he was unable to do so.

According to Chinese state media he later moved 700km north to a village in Anhui province.

He got a job in construction, meeting his second wife via an introduction from his boss, before fathering a child. All the time he kept schtum to maintain his deceit.

He was apprehended earlier this year, when police conducted household surveys in his village earlier this year, leading to officers discovering he lacked any official identification documents. Police took a blood sample and used his DNA to work out his true identity, before detaining him on the charge of murder.

MaximRecoil on December 25th, 2017 at 19:09 UTC »

The laryngeal muscle (which controls the vocal folds) can atrophy by not speaking for a long enough time, which can weaken/alter the sound of your voice (a condition known as presbylaryngis), but it is also used when eating, breathing, coughing, sneezing, clearing your throat, etc., so it wouldn't completely atrophy (unless the nerve supply was severed or otherwise lost). The road to recovery would just be a matter of starting to speak again.

Dysthymike on December 25th, 2017 at 16:50 UTC »

worryingly looks at own dick

badger991 on December 25th, 2017 at 16:32 UTC »

Gotcha motherfuckers. Still pretending.