Li Xuming, a 36-year-old doctoral student with two young children, was expelled from the University of South Florida for poisoning Indian neighbors to cause hair loss in the baby girl Li Xuming (transliteration, Li Xuming), a 36-year-old Chinese doctoral student studying at the University of South Florida, could get his doctorate in one semester. He is also the father of two children under the age of 2 and lives in a rented apartment with his wife. The upstairs neighbor is a family of Indian origin. The male owner, Umar Abdullah, is also 36 years old. He is a staff member of the University of South Florida. He and his wife have a 1-year-old baby girl. Since June, Abdullah and his wife have experienced symptoms of vomiting, dizziness and severe headaches. The children also lost their hair in piles and refused to eat. This led them to become suspicious, investigate various possible causes, and install a camera in the plant at the entrance. The captured results surprised them, and found that the downstairs neighbor Li Xuming came to his door furtively with a syringe to inject deadly chemical substances. But in August last year, when their children were born, Li came to give them gifts, which made them mistakenly regard Li as a “good neighbor like relatives”. The good times didn’t last long. Not long after the child was born and gave Abdullah a gift, Li Xuming began to complain frequently about the noise in the neighbor’s house. Text messages obtained by The Daily Mail show Lee often complained about even minor noises – ranging from toilet seats moving to people dropping phones on the floor. At one point, Abdullah offered to buy padded shoes to reduce the noise of walking, and even visited Lee’s apartment to see for himself what it sounded like. The drug ingredients that Lee has explained and analyzed so far include the opioids methadone and hydrocodone, but these two chemicals cannot explain all the symptoms of poisoning in the Abdullah family. Abdullah’s family is nervously waiting for the toxicological analysis report from the FBI laboratory. They hope that the poison will not cause lifelong harm to the child. “He is also a father with a child, and he knows that babies will cry anyway. I can’t understand how a parent can poison other people’s children?” Abdullah told reporters in pain. He has never been able to connect this seemingly “friendly” neighbor, who often stopped to chat with him in the hallway of Oxford Square in Tampa’s Palms, to these horrors after he took off his mask. But the security camera record is ironclad. South Buddha University has expelled Li Xuming’s student status, and the property management company has also expelled him through legal procedures. Li Xuming was released on bail, and his next court date is December 5. The news of this perverted Chinese doctor was widely reported by the American media, which inevitably cast a shadow on the image of the Chinese. Several recent similar cases have also made the mental and mental health issues of Chinese doctoral students a hot topic again. #CommunityBuilding #Hot Spot Tracking https://twitter.com/MoshangUsa/status/1697711374401695774?s=20 https://t.me/MoshangUS

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Li Xuming, a 36-year-old doctoral student with two young children, was expelled from the University of South Florida for poisoning Indian neighbors to cause hair loss in the baby girl

Li Xuming (transliteration, Li Xuming), a 36-year-old Chinese doctoral student studying at the University of South Florida, could get his doctorate in one semester. He is also the father of two children under the age of 2 and lives in a rented apartment with his wife. The upstairs neighbor is a family of Indian origin. The male owner, Umar Abdullah, is also 36 years old. He is a staff member of the University of South Florida. He and his wife have a 1-year-old baby girl.

Since June, Abdullah and his wife have experienced symptoms of vomiting, dizziness and severe headaches. The children also lost their hair in piles and refused to eat. This led them to become suspicious, investigate various possible causes, and install a camera in the plant at the entrance. The captured results surprised them, and found that the downstairs neighbor Li Xuming came to his door furtively with a syringe to inject deadly chemical substances .

But in August last year, when their children were born, Li came to give them gifts, which made them mistakenly regard Li as a “good neighbor like relatives”. The good times didn’t last long. Not long after the child was born and gave Abdullah a gift, Li Xuming began to complain frequently about the noise in the neighbor’s house. Text messages obtained by The Daily Mail show Lee often complained about even minor noises – ranging from toilet seats moving to people dropping phones on the floor. At one point, Abdullah offered to buy padded shoes to reduce the noise of walking, and even visited Lee’s apartment to see for himself what it sounded like.

The drug ingredients that Lee has explained and analyzed so far include the opioids methadone and hydrocodone, but these two chemicals cannot explain all the symptoms of poisoning in the Abdullah family. Abdullah’s family is nervously waiting for the toxicological analysis report from the FBI laboratory. They hope that the poison will not cause lifelong harm to the child. “He is also a father with a child, and he knows that babies will cry anyway. I can’t understand how a parent can poison other people’s children?” Abdullah told reporters in pain. He has never been able to connect this seemingly “friendly” neighbor, who often stopped to chat with him in the hallway of Oxford Square in Tampa’s Palms, with these horrors after he took off his mask. But the security camera record is ironclad.

South Buddha University has expelled Li Xuming’s student status, and the property management company has also expelled him through legal procedures.

Li Xuming was released on bail and his next court date is December 5.

The news of this perverted Chinese doctor was widely reported by the American media, which inevitably cast a shadow on the image of the Chinese. Several recent similar cases have also made the mental and mental health problems of Chinese doctoral students a hot topic among the public again.

#CommunityBuilding#Hot spot tracking

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