Deceased/Not Found IL - Yingying Zhang, 26, Urbana, 9 June 2017 #9 *Arrest*

Status
Not open for further replies.
  • #721
The mother is very, very sensitive, and even the sight of the defendant could lead to an emotional reaction," said Steve Beckett, the family's lawyer in Urbana, on WDWS on Friday morning.
"My impression of the family is that they have a real quiet dignity," Beckett said. "They're not educated, sophisticated people. They're from an agricultural region in southeast China, but they're just really wonderful folks. And of course, what happened to their daughter is just a tragedy."
LIVE: The trial of Brendt Christensen, Day 8


This should be on a podcast. I’ll listen to it later, as I was busy earlier. I had been wondering about the family, and my assumption was that they were not in a good place 3motionally, so the press had been leaving them alone.
 
  • #722
@dm92 wow, I didn't know about the restraining order. Mind you, I'd be scared too if my husband told me he had a new hobby like that.
 
  • #723
I'm sorry to speculate, but the only sure fire ways of a body never showing up, ever, (which seems to be both BC and the police's consensus that she is gone, no more looking for her?) would be cremation or hydrochloric acid? Is this why the trial is rolling along ignoring the insult of a missing person to be returned for proper burial for her mother's comfort? Please God, after this additional insult, if the defense doesn't supply this info, but still asks for mercy, I hope they are collectively committed for mental treatment and disbarred for making an absolute mockery of a murder trial.
 
  • #724
If I remember correctly..it was either because she was a foreigner or something to do with the use of the phones. IE interstate boundaries?


Basically, its a federal case because BC used a means or instrumentality of interstate commerce in commission of the offense. Cars and cellphones are instruments of interstate commerce.
 
  • #725
@dm92 wow, I didn't know about the restraining order. Mind you, I'd be scared too if my husband told me he had a new hobby like that.

She asked about how to get one, but never tried to do it.....
 
  • #726
  • #727
Is there a link to where we can listen to those recordings and phone calls?
 
  • #728
Is there a link to where we can listen to those recordings and phone calls?
here's link to exhibit list CU. It's not been updated since 18th.. lots of reading and good info though
Exhibits | Central District of Illinois | United States District Court
The tape of the vigil is being vigorously debated, yet again this morning
here's what the defense submitted
Miscellaneous Relief – #392 in United States v. Christensen (C.D. Ill., 2:17-cr-20037) – CourtListener.com
Awaiting Judge's ruling.. not sure how long this will delay things.
It didn't go well for defense yesterday They were unable to effectively bully and discredit TB. She was very well prepared for them.
It appears as though his drunkenness at the vigil was an important anchor in their case, she tossed it effectively; he was not drunk because he was drinking highly diluted rum. She knew because she drank it with him.
So, unable to locate a suitable new crutch for Frankenstein overnight, they had another tantrum today.
It's exhausting.
 
  • #729
Thank you, Kitty
 
  • #730
I'm so impressed with how TEB held up against Defence. 7 hours is a long time for anyone. Just goes to show how if you want something strongly enough, it can be done. Well done TEB.
 
  • #731
I'm so impressed with how TEB held up against Defence. 7 hours is a long time for anyone. Just goes to show how if you want something strongly enough, it can be done. Well done TEB.
I hope the judge commends her for her courage, at the end.. if it ever ends..
 
  • #732
All the waiting for tweets and reports day after day has me very tired yawnnnnnnnn
 
  • #733
this is all I got
Mistrial motion was denied, but Shadid did order a limiting instruction be given to jurors about any alleged previous victims. Prosecutors had no objection.
Matt Masterson, bless his heart!
 
  • #734
another crumb, don't ask

Prosecutors have rested their case against Brendt Christensen. The defense has already called three witnesses, including Christensen's ex-wife Michelle Zortman
 
  • #735
now she's pushing it
Zortman was out of town on a trip with her boyfriend the weekend Yingying Zhang disappeared (June 9). When Zortman returned the following Monday, she said she didn't notice anything off about the apartment she shared with Christensen (MM)
 
  • #736
Eades
Court begins w/ defense making third motion for mistrial (denied), motion for defendant's acquittal (denied), motion that the trial evidence was insufficient (denied), and motion for limiting jury instruction as to BC's state of mind (granted)
 
  • #737
Zortman did say she'd filled up their black Saturn Astra with gas on the Wednesday before she left for her trip. When she returned home, the tank was half empty, meaning it had been driven some 200 miles. Christensen was the only one with access to that car while she was away.

0 replies0 retweets0 likes(MM)
 
  • #738
The defense called Manganaro again, and Taseff's PI. They went over Charles Hill's testimony. More on that late (Aaron)
MZ details concerns with his drinking, says the marriage begal falling apart
Says she still talked to him after he was arrested, and still cares about him
I have MUCH more on what she said but out of time now-- back to court
(gimme smelling salts someone)
 
  • #739
"Are you a fan of being in that chair right now?" Pollock asks. "No," says Zortman. EP: "Do you wish you werr not there?" MZ: "Very much."
Aaron Eades on Twitter link is to a drawing that does not even remotely resemble her...
 
  • #740
Basically, its a federal case because BC used a means or instrumentality of interstate commerce in commission of the offense. Cars and cellphones are instruments of interstate commerce.

Yes, that is the simple answer. It is even more than just that:

Why Brendt Christensen Can be Sentenced to Death in a State That Abolished the Death Penalty


Christensen, who allegedly committed his crimes in Champaign, faces a possible death sentence if he is convicted. That’s because he’s charged in federal court with a federal crime. And federal prosecutors can seek a death sentence on any capital charge regardless of where it is believed to have occurred, or where the defendant lives.

“Everywhere in the United States people live under two or more systems of law simultaneously,” said Robert Owen, a clinical professor of law at Northwestern University’s Pritzker School of Law. “Where you live is governed by state law – local law made by the state legislature – and then it’s also governed by federal law governed by Congress. And those two spheres of legal authority coexist everywhere in the country.

“In some places the laws are harmonious, they’re the same. But the death penalty is an area where that’s not the case. So there is a federal death penalty on every inch of the United States of America.”
........

From the document "Motion (Doc. 113) to Strike Notice of Intent to Seek the Death Penalty ..." which was denied:

U.S. v. CHRISTENSEN | Case No. 17-cr-20037-JES... | 20190219b24| Leagle.com
BACKGROUND
Defendant Brendt A. Christensen was arrested by federal agents on June 30, 2017, pursuant to a criminal complaint which charged him with the kidnapping of Yingying Zhang, a female Chinese national, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1201. Doc. 1. Christensen was later indicted by a federal grand jury sitting in the Urbana Division of the Central District of Illinois. SeeDoc. 13 (Indictment), Doc. 26 (Superseding Indictment). The Superseding Indictment charges Christensen with kidnapping resulting in death, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1) (Count 1), and making false statements to FBI agents investigating Yingying Zhang's disappearance, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2) (Counts 2, 3). Doc. 26. The Superseding Indictment returned by the grand jury also included a notice of special findings regarding the nature of the offense charged in Count 1, including that the death of the victim was intentional, that it occurred during the commission of kidnapping, that it was committed in an especially heinous, cruel, or depraved manner, and that Defendant committed the offense after substantial planning and premeditation. Id. The special findings alleged in the Superseding Indictment made the case eligible for capital punishment. See 18 U.S.C. § 3591 et seq. On January 19, 2018, the United States filed its Notice of Intent to Seek a Sentence of Death. Doc. 54; see also 18 U.S.C. § 3593(a).
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
52
Guests online
1,735
Total visitors
1,787

Forum statistics

Threads
632,332
Messages
18,624,860
Members
243,095
Latest member
Lillyflowerxx
Back
Top