Stamping woman calls police
A WOMAN who was filmed smiling as she stamped small animals to death while wearing high heels, wants police to crack down on the company that hired her to shoot the videos.
The woman, identified only by her surname Huang, has asked a friend to file a case to a public security bureau in southwest China's Sichuan Province.
Huang's identity was exposed this month by Internet users outraged at a 4-minute clip featuring her crushing a rabbit to death. Other clips, recorded between 2007 and 2008, show her stamping on or crushing animals such as a lobster and a carp. She admitted she was paid between 100 and 400 yuan (US$60) for each clip.
The married woman, from Chengdu City, said she was lured into the business after she accidentally sent her resume via the Internet to the company. Huang said her boss only told her that the videos were uploaded to a website for viewers overseas, reported West China Metropolis yesterday. The report did not name the company nor give details about its staff.
The website has been closed in 2008.
Huang was exposed by online vigilantes over the widespread of the video on the Internet since November 14.
The woman, identified only by her surname Huang, has asked a friend to file a case to a public security bureau in southwest China's Sichuan Province.
Huang's identity was exposed this month by Internet users outraged at a 4-minute clip featuring her crushing a rabbit to death. Other clips, recorded between 2007 and 2008, show her stamping on or crushing animals such as a lobster and a carp. She admitted she was paid between 100 and 400 yuan (US$60) for each clip.
The married woman, from Chengdu City, said she was lured into the business after she accidentally sent her resume via the Internet to the company. Huang said her boss only told her that the videos were uploaded to a website for viewers overseas, reported West China Metropolis yesterday. The report did not name the company nor give details about its staff.
The website has been closed in 2008.
Huang was exposed by online vigilantes over the widespread of the video on the Internet since November 14.
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