“I have CPR for my wife, who was killed by the Atlanta shooting, but the US police are blinded by the side… ”

Korean man who lost wife in shooting case proceeds to raise money

Losing a 36-year-old wife and asking for help due to trauma

Park Soon-jung and her husband, Lee Kwang-ho, died in the Atlanta shootings / Capture of the late fund me

Lee Kwang-ho, 38, who lost his wife, who is 36 years old in a shooting incident in Atlanta, USA on the 16th, started raising money.

On the 22nd, Lee Gwang-ho posted a post on the fundraising website’go fund me’ saying, “I am the husband of Park Soon-chang, who died in a shooting at an Atlanta spa. We are raising money for rent and utility bills.”

“I am currently unable to work because of this shooting and the trauma of my deceased wife. I would be very grateful if you could help me get through this terrible situation,” he said.

Lee Kwang-ho is the husband of Park Soon-jung (74), one of three Korean women who were killed in the Atlanta spa shooting. The two met with the introduction of a friend in 2017 and married after overcoming the 36-year age gap. Park helped him find a job and get a driver’s license. Mr. Lee made the proposal.

Lee learned of the shooting through a text message from a friend who works at the spa. He called the police and ran to the spa. A few minutes later, my wife was bleeding at the spa.

In an interview with the Daily Beast of the US media on the 22nd, he burst into anger, saying, “I was standing blankly” while his wife collapsed and attempted CPR. Mr. Lee yelled at the officer standing near his wife, “It’s an emergency. Where’s the ambulance?” The officer, who was still in an emergency, was there when the ambulance arrived and moved his wife’s body.

Husband of Atlanta Victim Soon Chung Park Tried to Perform CPR at Crime Scene Gwangho Lee initially believed his wife had fainted. After he tried to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, he pleaded to a cop, “This is emergency!

The Daily Beast

Meanwhile, the “Atlanta Asian Contingency Committee (Non-Captain),” formed by Korean groups shocked by the Atlanta shootings, will hold a candlelight rally to commemorate the victims and condemn Asian racial hatred from 7 p.m. The event is held in front of a shopping mall in Duluth, a Korean-popular area near Atlanta.

Atlanta shooting suspect Robert Aaron Long / Yonhap News

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