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JAKARTA - Prosecutors in Osaka have charged a man for killing a female acquaintance with a talibum or commonly used as rat poison. Kazuki Miyamoto (37), the perpetrator, was accused of killing a 21-year-old student, Hinako closer to last October by mixing the victim's drink with a talibum. Talium is a soft metal that dissolves in water and has no taste or smell so it is difficult to detect outside the laboratory. This drug is classified as very dangerous. Only 1 gram can kill adults. The police, as reported by bbc.com, Monday, March 27, have not found a motive for the murder. Including, how Kazuki Miyamoto got this poison. The suspect was arrested on March 3 in Kyoto. Miyamoto, a real estate agent, is believed to have given the talibum toipelabo around October 11 and 12 when he visited his flat in Kyoto. According to the perpetrators to the police, the two were eating outside October 11 the night before heading to my house for a drink, the Japan Times quoted investigators as saying. According to Miyamoto,he had a severe cough. He then contacted his family, who took him to the hospital the next day. Badminton died on October 15 due to severe respiratory failure. While talibum was found in his vomiting and urinary water, air Shimbun reported. Polisi menduga Miyamoto telah menambuhi minuman haruso saat mereka sendiri di flatnya. Saat menaliskan ponsel Miyamoto, polisi menemukan pencarian talibum di internet sebelum karyatan di rumah sakit. Local media reported thattipo first met Miyamoto through part-time work. In addition to his real estate business, Miyamoto also runs a entertainment-related business involving a maikos, or an internship geosha. "Miyamoto and badminton sometimes win and eat together, and they look happy being accompanied by each other,"ester Shimbun said, citing his acquaintances. A relative of Miyamoto's woman, who has been hospitalized in Kyoto since July 2020 and is now unconscious, was also found swallowing a talibum. Mainichi reported that this relative was in his 60s and suddenly fainted around the summer of 2020. This substance is strictly regulated in Japan. In most cases, researchers or companies bought it from a specialist business. In 2015, a student in Nagoya was convicted of trying to kill two of her classmates with a taitam when she was in high school. The same chemicals have been used in the lethal dose by the Islamic State group in its detainees. Several countries, such as the US, have banned it

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