Nanny cam images of dermatologist 'poisoning her husband' emerge

Radiologist husband’s hidden ‘Nanny cam’ catches his dermatologist wife ‘repeatedly spiking his lemonade with Drano’ in kitchen of their $2.7m California mansion: She’s arrested and released on $30,000 bond

  • Dermatologist Yue ‘Emily’ Yu allegedly put Drano into husband’s lemonade 
  • Jack Chen, a radiologist, told police he had become sick after ‘poisoning’
  • He handed police video evidence from nanny cam he says proves claim
  • Chen claimed Yu verbally and physically abused him and their two children

A California dermatologist who was arrested on suspicion of poisoning her husband was allegedly caught in the act after her partner set up a nanny cam in the couple’s kitchen of their $2.7million home. 

Footage allegedly shows Yue ‘Emily’ Yu, 45, putting Drano – a brand of drain cleaner – into her husband Jack Chen’s hot lemonade on multiple occasions. 

Chen, a radiologist, told police he had become sick and suffered serious injuries before handing them the video evidence he says proves his claim. 

Chen, who is now seeking a divorce after 10 years of marriage, claimed Yu abused him and their two children for years, with the dermatologist once shouting at the youngsters to ‘go die,’ according to court documents obtained by the New York Post. 

Footage allegedly shows Yue ‘Emily’ Yu, 45, putting Drano – a brand of drain cleaner – into her husband Jack Chen’s hot lemonade on multiple occasions

Chen, a radiologist, told police he had become sick and suffered serious injuries before handing them the video evidence he says proves his claim

‘When Emily gets frustrated and yells at the children, she’ll commonly use a Chinese phrase that translates to “go die”,’ Chen wrote in a court statement as he sought a restraining order against his wife. 

‘She also says to the children, “your head has a problem,” “your head is sick,” “go f**k yourself,” “f***ing idiot,” “stupid a**hole,” and “get the f**k out of my way,’ Chen wrote. 

Yu was arrested on Thursday around 6 p.m. outside her dermatology office located in Mission Viejo, approximately 15 miles away from the couple’s home in Irvine, Calif., Lt. Bill Bingham told DailyMail.com.

Bingham said Chen called the Irvine Police Department earlier in the day on Thursday and shared with them that he was ‘being poisoned by his wife’ and said he had ‘video evidence to share.’ 

Dr. Yue P Yu, pictured, has been arrested over claims she tried to deliberately poison her husband

‘Our officers reviewed the video,’ Bingham said, before Yu was arrested on suspicion of poisoning her husband. 

Bingham added: ‘The allegations that were made by the husband was incredibly serious and we thought it was important to take quick investigative action on the case based on the allegation.’ 

Yu has not been charged but Chen has been granted a temporary restraining order against his wife while police continue their investigations. 

No motive for the shocking crime has emerged. Yu, who works at the Providence Healthcare system in Mission Viejo, has had her work headshot removed from her employer’s website. A spokesman said they were cooperating with police.

Chen said he and Yu met in 2011 and the couple married a year later on July 4, 2012. 

Chen claimed his wife’s behavior changed after their son and daughter, who are now aged seven and eight, were born in 2013 and 2014. He also claimed that Yu’s mother, Yuqin ‘Amy’ Gu, also verbally and physically abused their children. 

‘As early as two-years-old Emily and Amy were verbally and then physically abusive to [our son and daughter] which intensified as they grew older,’ Chen said. ‘They are both verbally and physically abusive to me.’ He said the women would call the children “f***ing stupid.” ‘  

Chen claimed Yu spanked her daughter when she was three-years-old because she wet her bed. Yu also allegedly hit her son on his head and arms when he was two. 

‘When the kids fall asleep without permission, even if after 11:00 p.m. she would wake them up, demand that [they] go to her room, shut the door and make them cry,’ he said. 

‘At the end sometimes she would tell the kids to get out and then slam the door behind them, making them cry outside her door.’

When the children would play piano after school, Yu would allegedly tell them they were ‘f***ing stupid’ until they cried.  

Following the alleged poisoning, Bingham said Chen began to develop symptoms that worsened over the last month.

He said Chen did seek medical treatment once he became ill but was unable to provide details to whether a blood test revealed the poison in his bloodstream.

‘Due to the integrity of the case it appears the poisoning happened over a period of time,’ Bingham said.

Yu was arrested at her office after she she was interviewed by police.

‘Our detectives contacted Yu as she was leaving her place of employment. They interviewed her and following her interview detectives placed her under arrest.’ 

He added: ‘She [Yue Yu] was arrested under a section of California law that alleges she woefully placed a poison or harmful substance in food, drink, medicine or pharmaceutical product,’ he said. 

The alleged poison attacks are believed to have happened at their $2.7 million mansion in Irvine, Calif.

Bingham told DailyMail.com they’ve not discovered any connection of this incident with Yu’s employment. 

‘The motive is still under investigation. It appears it was a domestic related incident between a husband and wife.’  

The husband told officers he suspected she had been poisoning him and set up surveillance video to confirm it. 

Bingham told DailyMail.com he has seen cases of ‘accidental poisoning among children,’ but said ‘intentional poisoning’ cases are not common. 

‘I’ve been doing this 22 years and this is a highly unusual and unique case,’ he said. 

The couple lived together in a $2.7 million home in Irvine, Calif. 

After Yu’s arrest, a search warrant was conducted by Irvine police officers at the home. The attack is said to have left Chen badly injured, although he is now recovering from his injuries. 

Yu’s attorney said his client denied poisoning her husband or abusing him or their children, reports the Post. 

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