California Woman Indicted for Allegedly Poisoning Husband’s Tea With Drano

California Woman Indicted for Allegedly Poisoning Husband’s Tea With Drano
The new name for the Orange County Superior Court's West Justice Center is revealed in a livestreamed ceremony in Westminster, Calif., on Nov. 6, 2020. (Screenshot via Superior Court of California County of Orange)
City News Service
4/5/2023
Updated:
4/5/2023
0:00

SANTA ANA, Calif.—A Mission Viejo dermatologist has been charged with allegedly poisoning her husband, also a physician, by putting Drano in his tea, according to an indictment unsealed April 5.

Yue “Emily” Yu is charged with three counts of poisoning and a count of corporal injury on a spouse, all felonies, according to court records. The alleged dates of poisoning are July 11, July 18, and July 25 of last year, according to the complaint.

Yu is scheduled to be arraigned April 18 at the Central Justice Center in Santa Ana.

Yu and her estranged husband, Dr. Jack Chen, have been embroiled in a child custody dispute since last year. She has been granted visitation, but recently filed to have Chen pay support to her, claiming she has been unable to work since the poisoning allegations surfaced.

Chen, a 53-year-old radiologist, filed a restraining order against his 45-year-old wife, Yu, in August.

Yu, who was arrested by Irvine police on suspicion of attempting to poison her husband, was released from jail after posting $30,000 bail in August. Chen said she called him asking him to post bail but he refused, according to the restraining order.

Yu’s previous defense attorney, David Wohl, said she was pouring the clog cleaner in a small cup to clear out the pipes like anyone else would. He denied that she did anything wrong.

In the restraining order applications, Chen said he is “fearful” of living in the same Irvine home with Yu “due to [Yu’s] attempts to poison me with Drano.”

Chen also alleged that “both children have suffered physical, verbal and emotional abuse by their mother ... and their maternal grandmother.”

Chen said that in March and April of last year he “started noticing a chemical taste in my lemonade” and soon after that he “developed symptoms that had me see the doctor, who performed an examination and diagnosed me with two stomach ulcers, gastritis, and esophagitis.”

That prompted Chen to set up surveillance video in the kitchen, and he attached videos and photos that he alleged show his wife pouring Drano into his drinks.

He said the two began dating in 2011 and married July 4, 2012.

He detailed multiple instances of alleged child abuse inflicted on their children.

“After the children were born, I became concerned about Emily’s behavior,” Chen said. “Not only was she very demanding of me that I give her massages—one time when I could not because I was sick she stepped on my head until I did—she also began hiding money from me.”

He said his wife’s “parenting—if you could call it that—revolves around yelling, insulting, verbally abusing, hitting, pushing, pulling, and being emotionally abusive.”

He claimed that if the two children said they enjoyed spending time with him, she would “put them in their room and yell at them until they assured her they would not show affection toward me.”

He also accused her of “sleep deprivation” punishment at times.

Chen turned over samples of the tea, which were tested by the FBI, which confirmed it contained a substance consistent with liquid drain cleaner, according to prosecutors.