Chapter 566 After Robert returned to New York and visited his son in the hospital, he invited two leaders from the police station and the chief investigating officer of the Royce poisoning case to his home that same evening.
In the Stark familyâs guest room.
The three people saw Robert and all respectfully greeted him in unison, âSir Stark.â
Although Robert held a high status and had great influence, he never acted arrogantly. He nodded slightly and gestured for them to sit.âPlease, have a seat.â
The guest room was spacious, with a rectangular golden table on which porcelain glass sets were placed.
Robert sat in the middle, facing the three of them.
Lennon sat on the right side of Robert.
However, the three didnât sit immediately. Instead, they greeted Lennon one by one, âMr. Stark.â
After Lennon responded politely, they sat in front of Robert, briefly introduced themselves, and then started reporting the current progress of the case.
As soon as Robert returned to New York, he got to know the details of Royceâs case.
The police had already gathered some clues.
The host was Quentin Robinson, a middleâaged male police officer in his forties.
Quentin looked serious as he said, âAccording to Mrs. Stark, Lauryn is the prime suspect. She told us that when Lauryn was the Stark familyâs adopted daughter, she made nourishing soup for Mr. Stark every few days. Mr. Stark had a habit of drinking a cup of black coffee every morning without fail. So we investigated these two aspects and indeed found some clues.â
Quentin handed two reports to Robert.
âThis is the inspection report for Mr. Starkâs frequently used coffee cup and the clay pot brewing nourishing soup.â
for Robert frowned and took the report, flipping through it.
Worried that Robert might not understand the professional terms, Quentin explained in plain language, âThe toxin detected in the clay pot is the same as the one in Mr. Starkâs body. This shows that the soup he usually had was poisoned.
âThe clay pot has a special material. When cooking soup at high temperatures, toxins seep into the pot. Even if itâs thoroughly cleaned, there will still be residual toxins. But Mr. Stark drinks iced black coffee every morning, and the glass cupâs material isnât conducive to toxin seepage. After being washed, there are almost no residual toxins. So the test data for the coffee cup is normal.