I am curious if LE has any information suggesting that Yingying was taken across states lines by the perp at some point?
OK, well, I don't think this is being handled like other kidnapping cases we've seen. The Chinese Consulate is heavily involved and is putting a lot of pressure on the FBI. Also, the state of IL is broke, as in they haven't had a state budget in over 3 years. So I don't necessarily think they will be clamoring to take the case back from the US Attorney's office and all of the expenses that might incur. But I guess we will see.
Yes I agree. They will try to keep it in federal court as long as possible. It puts his lawyer in a tricky position because there is the 24 hour rebuttable presumption and you can't very well rebut that without almost admitting culpability. With the Chinese consulate involvement, this has become an international issue, so they could not very well tell the Chinese that they did not have the FBI on the case. I looked to see if her being a foreign national mattered for jxn and it does not so in theory, there is no reason to treat this case as different from many other kidnapping/murder but because of publicity/foreign relations reasons (especially given what is going on with North Korea- this is not time to annoy the Chinese), they will want to keep the feds on this at least for the near term. There may also be some federal crimes like computer stuff that he may be alleged to commit that could keep it in federal court longer.
I think Tim McVeigh was one of the only people convicted of death under federal murder law and the number on federal murder row is very small just because it is so hard to get jxn under federal murder law. They typically like to try cases all together so there will not want to do a separate trial (if jxn exists) on federal kidnapping charges if the murder took place entirely within the state of IL, with any murder, sexual assault charges having to be tried in state court. Double jeopardy does not apply to state and federal offenses, so oftentimes if there is jxn in federal court, they will want to try everything in state court first, and then leave themselves the option of federal court should the person be acquitted in state court.
They must have something that makes them think they can support the federal kidnapping charge. Maybe they have his phone pinging in Indiana or something.
Did you read the article I just posted upthread? It says the case could go to the US Attorney General if it is determined a death occurred during the kidnapping.
I am wondering about the computer/Internet communications. How could that come into play for federal kidnapping charges? Or could it?
They must have something that makes them think they can support the federal kidnapping charge. Maybe they have his phone pinging in Indiana or something.
It's a rebuttable presumption- they presume if you have been gone at least 24 hours you crossed state lines. But yeah, there could be other evidence he crossed state line. I am not sure how far Urbana is from Missouri border.
Also as I wrote above, the optics of this make them want to be in federal court as least for now.
liltexans,
With all due respect, I think the U.S. Attorney meant that the decision whether to pursue the death penalty or life in prison for this defendant would be made by A.G. Jeff Sessions. I agree that this statement implies that
this case will remain in federal court.
As another member once said, we don't know what we don't know!
Yellow,
I considered the Lindbergh Law also, and agree the 24 hour rule is rebuttable. With respect to crossing state lines, I too don't know how far Urbana is from any other state's border.
I haven't found anything yet to suggest this case that the Feds have jurisdiction because Yingying was a visiting scholar on a student visa. Have you?
Best.
Mercedes
Yellow,
I considered the Lindbergh Law also, and agree the 24 hour rule is rebuttable. With respect to crossing state lines, I too don't know how far Urbana is from any other state's border.
I haven't found anything yet to suggest this case that the Feds have jurisdiction because Yingying was a visiting scholar on a student visa. Have you?
Best.
Mercedes
From Champaign-Urbana, it's about 2 1/2 - 2 hours 45 minutes to St Louis and only about 40 minutes to the Indiana border. It takes about 3 hours to the Wisconsin border (using Kenosha, WI), and about 3 1/2 hours to Paducah, KY.
From Champaign-Urbana, it's about 2 1/2 - 2 hours 45 minutes to St Louis and only about 40 minutes to the Indiana border. It takes about 3 hours to the Wisconsin border (using Kenosha, WI), and about 3 1/2 hours to Paducah, KY.
The UI announced via massmail Friday night that a campuswide memorial would be held Saturday in Ms. Zhang's honor came across as "more than a little tasteless," (UI alumna) Emma Dorantes said, "especially since it seems the investigation is ongoing, and there has yet been no final determination about Ms. Zhang's whereabouts."
The memorial was called off Saturday morning, per the family's wishes.
"I'm not ready to give up hope," Dorantes said. "And I think we owe Ms. Zhang's family respect as they continue to seek answers and closure, good or bad, in their ordeal."
liltexans,
With all due respect, I think the U.S. Attorney meant that the decision whether to pursue the death penalty or life in prison for this defendant would be made by A.G. Jeff Sessions. I agree that this statement implies that
this case will remain in federal court.
As another member once said, we don't know what we don't know!
I assume the family and LE aren't organizing big public searches is because LE already has evidence they need to pin down - finding chemicals or traces of anything in plumbing, or that he threw her in a dumpster, or even a highly specific kind of dirt on his tires. The fact that they focused on surveillance on him for so long and said they presumed her dead says a lot, I think.
If she had a body that was either recoverable/intact or dumped in a public place or they didn't have a clue, there would be public search parties of forests and fields or they'd be skimming bodies of water.
[FONT=.SF UI Text][FONT=.SF UI Text]
[/FONT]
[FONT=.SF UI Text][FONT=.SFUIText]I don't think he's a serial killer or rapist. I agree that he's probably a first-timer who thought he could get away with it. I'm more curious about similar cases to see what kind of path and premeditation any other "normal" educated guy took toward a stranger killing. [/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=.SF UI Text]
[/FONT]
[FONT=.SF UI Text][FONT=.SFUIText]I don't think he has anything to do with other area disappearances considering they're all non-white (Hispanic, black, Native American?) teens, most more likely to be endangered runaways lured willingly with a BF or pimp or killed by an acquaintance or someone living closer. [/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=.SF UI Text]
[/FONT]
[FONT=.SF UI Text][FONT=.SFUIText]He grabbed an Asian girl - highly fetishized as submissive - and was focused on sexual fantasy. (Makes me think of the case in CA where a suspect looked up Asian bondage videos the night before his Asian sister-in-law was found dead, bound). Seems he'd be cocky looking for more of a "dream girl" situation like that, and then there's the speculation he was a racist, conservative poster.[/FONT][/FONT]
Fair enough. Thank you for explaining. I'm not going anywhere.It's going to come up in discussion, jmo. I'm sure WSers will be as delicate as possible in discussions here, we typically are. The content is unavoidable though...and unfortunately, it's relevant to the case.