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‘Could it kill someone?’ A Seoul woman allegedly used ChatGPT to help carry out two murders in South Korean motels

Catherina Gioino
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Catherina Gioino
Catherina Gioino
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Catherina Gioino
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Catherina Gioino
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March 2, 2026, 4:29 PM ET
OpenAI logo is seen in this photo illustration with the South Korean flag in the background
According to police, her online search history and chat conversations with ChatGPT showed an intent to kill.Avishek Das/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
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Careful how you interact with chatbots, as you might just be giving them reasons to help carry out premeditated murder.

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A 21-year-old woman in South Korea allegedly used ChatGPT to help answer questions as she planned a series of murders that left two men dead and another briefly unconscious.

The woman, identified solely by her last name, Kim, allegedly gave two men drinks laced with benzodiazepines that she was prescribed for a mental illness, the Korea Herald reported. 

Although Kim was initially arrested on the lesser charge of inflicting bodily injury resulting in death on Feb. 11, it wasn’t until Seoul Gangbuk police found her online search history and chat conversations with ChatGPT and upgraded the charges, her questions establishing her alleged intent to kill.

“What happens if you take sleeping pills with alcohol?” Kim is reported to have asked the OpenAI chatbot. “How much would be considered dangerous? 

“Could it be fatal?” Kim allegedly asked. “Could it kill someone?”

In a widely publicized case dubbed the Gangbuk motel serial deaths, prosecutors allege Kim’s search and chatbot history show the suspect asking for clarification on whether her cocktail would prove fatal.

“Kim repeatedly asked questions related to drugs on ChatGPT. She was fully aware that consuming alcohol together with drugs could result in death,” a police investigator said, according to the Herald. 

Police said the woman admitted she mixed prescribed sedatives containing benzodiazepines into the men’s drinks, but previously stated she was unaware it would lead to death.

On Jan. 28, just before 9:30 p.m., Kim reportedly accompanied a man in his twenties into a Gangbuk motel in Seoul, and two hours later was spotted leaving the motel alone. The following day, the man was found dead on the bed. 

Kim then allegedly carried out the same steps on Feb. 9, checking into another motel with another man in his twenties, who was also found dead with the same deadly cocktail of sedatives and alcohol.

Police allege Kim also attempted to kill a man she was dating in December after giving him a drink laced with sedatives in a parking lot. Though the man lost consciousness, he survived and was not in a life-threatening condition.

The questions Kim asked the chatbot follow a factual line of questioning, a spokesperson for OpenAI told Fortune, meaning the questions wouldn’t raise alarms, that say, would arise were a user to express statements of self-harm (ChatGPT is programed with respond with the suicide crisis hotline in that instance). South Korean police do not allege the chatbot provided any other responses other than factual ones in response to Kim’s alleged questions above.

Chatbots and their toll on mental health

Chatbots like ChatGPT have come under scrutiny as of late for the lack of guardrails their companies have in place to prevent acts of violence or self-harm. Recently, chatbots have given advice on how to build bombs, or even suggested nuclear annihilation in hypothetical war-game scenarios.

Concerns have been particularly heightened by stories of people falling in love with their chatbot companions, and chatbot companions have been shown to prey on vulnerabilities to keep people using them longer. The creator of Yara AI even shut down the therapy app over mental health concerns.

Recent studies have also shown that chatbots are leading to increased delusional mental health crises in people with mental illnesses. A team of psychiatrists at Denmark’s Aarhus University found that the use of chatbots among those who had mental illness led to a worsening of symptoms. The relatively new phenomenon of AI-induced mental health challenges has been dubbed “AI psychosis.” 

Some instances do end in death. Google and Character.AI have reached settlements in multiple lawsuits filed by the families of children who died by suicide or experienced psychological harm they allege was linked to AI chatbots.

Dr. Jodi Halpern, UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health University chair and professor of bioethics as well as the codirector at the Kavli Center for Ethics, Science, and the Public, has plenty of experience in this field. In a career spanning as long as her title, Halpern has spent 30 years researching the effects of empathy on recipients, citing examples like doctors and nurses on patients or how soldiers returning from war are perceived in social settings. For the past seven years, Halpern has studied the ethics of technology, and with it, how AI and chatbots interact with humans. 

She also advised the California Senate on SB 243, which is the first law in the nation requiring chatbot companies to collect and report any data on self-harm or associated suicidality. Referencing OpenAI’s own findings showing 1.2 million users openly discuss suicide with the chatbot, Halpern likened the use of chatbots to the painstakingly slow progress made to stop the tobacco industry from including harmful carcinogens in cigarettes, when in fact, the issue was with smoking as a whole.

“We need safe companies. It’s like cigarettes. It may turn out that there were some things that made people more vulnerable to lung cancer, but cigarettes were the problem,” Halpern told Fortune. 

“The fact that somebody might have homicidal thoughts or commit dangerous actions might be exacerbated by use of ChatGPT, which is of obvious concern to me,” she said, adding that “we have huge risks of people using it for help with suicide,” and chatbots in general.

Halpern cautioned in the case of Kim in Seoul, there aren’t any guardrails to stop a person from going down a line of questioning.

“We know that the longer the relationship with the chatbot, the more it deteriorates, and the more risk there is that something dangerous will happen, and so we have no guardrails yet for safeguarding people from that.”

If you are having thoughts of suicide, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline by dialing 988 or 1-800-273-8255.

This article has been updated with remarks from OpenAI regarding the content of Kim’s alleged questions with the chatbot.

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