CousinYeti
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2020
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@dm92 - Good questions. The FBI heavily canvassed the routes north that the Astra could have taken to get to the area around One North. That area quickly turns residential, but they even went door to door looking for home security cameras. They found nothing. You are also correct that they collected video from gas stations and business along those routes. The two main problems were: (1) most businesses weren’t recording for long periods, and overwrite their security footage after short intervals, and (2) gas stations and other businesses use their security cameras to protect their business, not to film passersby, so little of the footage was usable for purposes of finding cars passing a location. There were thousands of hours of footage collected and reviewed, and all the instances we caught of the Astra were played at trial. It wasn’t many, and there was nothing of substance beyond the school as the car went north after Yingying got in the car.
There was at least one route into the cemetery in question that involves very few cameras, and none that captured any usable footage. The agents did search that cemetery though. As you can imagine, a cadaver dog is not much use in a cemetery, but the agents reviewed logs of recent burials and combed through the brush around the cemetery for any evidence. As I mentioned, there were some tips that Christensen used cemeteries to abuse women, so that’s how the cemetery theory came to the forefront. Ultimately, we don’t know what happened between the time Yingying got in Christensen’s car, and the time he got her in the apartment. The trace evidence and his statement to TEB were the only ways this case got made.
Regarding the cell phone ping, it was difficult to glean much information from that. We could triangulate the general direction of the ping, but it was not terribly reliable in pinpointing the location. I am not terribly well versed in this, I apologize. The FBI witness who testified on this (Greg Catey) is a national expert on this stuff, and if there was any way to glean anything useful out of the ping, he’d have found it. The agents even followed up on a Chinese SIM card / number that the family told us she used to call home, and it gave us nothing.
The UIPD focused heavily on the white van you referenced in the early days of the investigation after seeing it near the ping location site. It appeared like people meeting, almost for an exchange, and there was some concern that maybe Yingying had been trafficked. They were able to track that van though, and it turns out those individuals were involved in legitimate business having nothing to do with the case.
As you mentioned, there were some pings in June 12. Per Christensen, he was dumping Yingying’s belongings in business / public trash receptacles. Before the agents had that information, but after Christensen became the primary suspect (think June 17-22), they even went dumpster diving in multiple locations trying to find anything that might provide a lead close to those pings. They first made contact with Christensen, by pure happenstance, on the afternoon of June 12. He had just returned from dumping Yingying’s belongings at the time.
Yingying’s phone would have been an evidentiary gold mine if it had stayed on. Christensen turned it off or destroyed it shortly after incapacitating Yingying. That’s something most criminals don’t do to cover their tracks.
Regarding your trial question, I think the prosecution team believed Christensen did what he said he did on the tapes: sexually assaulted and tortured her in the bedroom, and murdered her In the bathroom. It’s grotesque to talk about, but I think he probably dismembered Yingying on the bed he slept with his wife in after killing her in the tub, and that’s why there was blood behind the headboard. I think the prevailing thought regarding the small bloodstains on the mattress were that they came from the sexual assault. Yingying was cycling at the time of the offense.
The defense was trying to cast doubt on Christensen’s statements to mitigate the damage in the penalty phase of the trial. They admitted guilt, but challenged the forensic evidence, because they wanted the jury to believe he didn’t do what he said he did. Hence why they tried to paint the picture of the murder not happening in the tub, because they could then argue Christensen was lying about everything on the tape. Pretty much everything they said and did was hogwash, and some of it was downright disgusting. This was the same defense team that baselessly slandered TEB in public filings, and outed both TEB and MD, both victims, to try to scare them away from testifying. The only documents they “forgot” about were conveniently two motions that outed their identities and things they were struggling with in their lives. It was absolutely disgusting. Christensen got six taxpayer-funded attorneys. SIX. They filed a bunch of garbage designed to delay and mislead. They even told us at one of the first meetings that we were going to agree to their ridiculous trial schedule (which they wanted years in the future to distance people from the crime), or they would “create error” in the record and force us to try the case again. People wonder why the death penalty is “so expensive” and “takes so long?” It’s because of the astronomical bills redundant defense attorneys rack up filing the same frivolous motions in case after case, and the stupid games defense attorneys play trying to force the government to spend resources hoping we will throw up our hands and agree to give up.
The trial transcripts should be public in the next 90 days. One of the defense attorneys ordered all of them. We aren’t sure why, but it could be to pursue a post-conviction motion to attack the verdict. Christensen has one year from the date of conviction to do that, and it was odd for an attorney to order transcripts in a case that isn’t on appeal.
I will continue to answer stuff as I have time.
There was at least one route into the cemetery in question that involves very few cameras, and none that captured any usable footage. The agents did search that cemetery though. As you can imagine, a cadaver dog is not much use in a cemetery, but the agents reviewed logs of recent burials and combed through the brush around the cemetery for any evidence. As I mentioned, there were some tips that Christensen used cemeteries to abuse women, so that’s how the cemetery theory came to the forefront. Ultimately, we don’t know what happened between the time Yingying got in Christensen’s car, and the time he got her in the apartment. The trace evidence and his statement to TEB were the only ways this case got made.
Regarding the cell phone ping, it was difficult to glean much information from that. We could triangulate the general direction of the ping, but it was not terribly reliable in pinpointing the location. I am not terribly well versed in this, I apologize. The FBI witness who testified on this (Greg Catey) is a national expert on this stuff, and if there was any way to glean anything useful out of the ping, he’d have found it. The agents even followed up on a Chinese SIM card / number that the family told us she used to call home, and it gave us nothing.
The UIPD focused heavily on the white van you referenced in the early days of the investigation after seeing it near the ping location site. It appeared like people meeting, almost for an exchange, and there was some concern that maybe Yingying had been trafficked. They were able to track that van though, and it turns out those individuals were involved in legitimate business having nothing to do with the case.
As you mentioned, there were some pings in June 12. Per Christensen, he was dumping Yingying’s belongings in business / public trash receptacles. Before the agents had that information, but after Christensen became the primary suspect (think June 17-22), they even went dumpster diving in multiple locations trying to find anything that might provide a lead close to those pings. They first made contact with Christensen, by pure happenstance, on the afternoon of June 12. He had just returned from dumping Yingying’s belongings at the time.
Yingying’s phone would have been an evidentiary gold mine if it had stayed on. Christensen turned it off or destroyed it shortly after incapacitating Yingying. That’s something most criminals don’t do to cover their tracks.
Regarding your trial question, I think the prosecution team believed Christensen did what he said he did on the tapes: sexually assaulted and tortured her in the bedroom, and murdered her In the bathroom. It’s grotesque to talk about, but I think he probably dismembered Yingying on the bed he slept with his wife in after killing her in the tub, and that’s why there was blood behind the headboard. I think the prevailing thought regarding the small bloodstains on the mattress were that they came from the sexual assault. Yingying was cycling at the time of the offense.
The defense was trying to cast doubt on Christensen’s statements to mitigate the damage in the penalty phase of the trial. They admitted guilt, but challenged the forensic evidence, because they wanted the jury to believe he didn’t do what he said he did. Hence why they tried to paint the picture of the murder not happening in the tub, because they could then argue Christensen was lying about everything on the tape. Pretty much everything they said and did was hogwash, and some of it was downright disgusting. This was the same defense team that baselessly slandered TEB in public filings, and outed both TEB and MD, both victims, to try to scare them away from testifying. The only documents they “forgot” about were conveniently two motions that outed their identities and things they were struggling with in their lives. It was absolutely disgusting. Christensen got six taxpayer-funded attorneys. SIX. They filed a bunch of garbage designed to delay and mislead. They even told us at one of the first meetings that we were going to agree to their ridiculous trial schedule (which they wanted years in the future to distance people from the crime), or they would “create error” in the record and force us to try the case again. People wonder why the death penalty is “so expensive” and “takes so long?” It’s because of the astronomical bills redundant defense attorneys rack up filing the same frivolous motions in case after case, and the stupid games defense attorneys play trying to force the government to spend resources hoping we will throw up our hands and agree to give up.
The trial transcripts should be public in the next 90 days. One of the defense attorneys ordered all of them. We aren’t sure why, but it could be to pursue a post-conviction motion to attack the verdict. Christensen has one year from the date of conviction to do that, and it was odd for an attorney to order transcripts in a case that isn’t on appeal.
I will continue to answer stuff as I have time.