Chapter 719
Moments later, Yu Dazhang looked up at Li Dui:
“Have you checked the medical service agency where Gu Dingwen worked?”
Any legitimate medical institution typically makes its related information publicly available.
These public records include not only basic details about the institution but also personal information about each doctor, allowing patients and families to choose and reference them.
Take China’s tertiary A-class hospitals as an example.
When searching online for a specific hospital, you can learn about its departments, see which doctors work in each department, and review their resumes and areas of expertise in detail.
For instance, when I had my surgery, I researched everything online first before going.
“Checked.”
Li Dui nodded and replied:
“The medical service agency is legitimate, well-known, and has an excellent reputation—so far, there are no issues.”
No issues? This answer caught Yu Dazhang off guard.
Gu Dingwen had no relatives or connections abroad—who else could have helped him besides that agency?
No.
Yu Dazhang suddenly realized he had been assuming too much.
Gu Dingwen is a suspect, but that doesn’t mean everyone and everything he contacted is suspicious.
You can’t condemn an entire group because of a few bad apples.
It’s not uncommon for one or two corrupt individuals to appear in a legitimate institution—but that doesn’t mean the whole institution is compromised.
Perhaps someone was watching that medical agency, looking for a suitable candidate, and just happened to pick Gu Dingwen.
This was the most logical assumption Yu Dazhang could make.
There’s another possibility…
When that medical agency invited Gu Dingwen to work there, it might have been a prearranged setup.
Money isn’t everything, but it’s the most tempting tool.
If someone donates a substantial sum to the agency, they can sometimes request certain conditions.
One such condition could be placing a specific person in employment there.
That would explain why Gu Dingwen was invited to work there.
Perhaps someone powerful noticed Gu Dingwen and wanted to use this method to get him into the agency for some purpose.
Of course, this is merely a possibility Yu Dazhang deduced from various assumptions—there is still no concrete evidence to support it.
Keep reading.
The second page records Gu Dingwen’s domestic spending history.
The earliest entry is from last November, when Gu Dingwen booked a room at a four-star hotel in Yanjing.
Subsequent ticket records show he made multiple round trips between Yanjing and Songkou.
Why does this feel familiar?
Yu Dazhang suddenly felt he had seen this document before.
He quickly remembered: Zhang Jiangke’s travel itinerary was the same—except for one trip to Jinling, he too traveled back and forth between Yanjing and Songkou.
Did Zhang Jiangke lie?
He remembered clearly: Zhang Jiangke said that after Gu Lao arrived in China, he could no longer reach him directly.
But these two men’s itineraries seemed intertwined, as if they had traveled together.
“Bring me Zhang Jiangke’s investigation file,” Yu Dazhang ordered.
Moments later, an officer placed a file on his desk.
Yu Dazhang opened it, flipped through quickly, found the section recording Zhang Jiangke’s hotel stays, and studied the dates—immediately noticing a discrepancy.
Although both men traveled between Yanjing and Songkou, their ticket purchase times and train numbers were completely different.
Zhang Jiangke didn’t lie—he truly didn’t know Gu Dingwen’s movements.
And he had no means to access Gu Dingwen’s ticket information.
End of Chapter
