Global EditionASIA 中文双语Français
World
Home / World / China-US

Motions filed by defense in scholar slaying

China Daily USA | Updated: 2018-01-18 17:14
Share
Share - WeChat

The girlfriend of a 28-year-old man charged in the kidnapping and killing of a University of Illinois scholar from China was so nervous as she secretly recorded him for the FBI before his arrest last year that she fainted at least once in front of him, according to court filings.

The revelation came in a flurry of pretrial motions filed Monday by Brendt Christensen's lawyers in central Illinois, where the university is located and where 26-year-old Yingying Zhang was last seen getting into Christensen's black Saturn Astra on June 9 last year.

One motion asks US District Judge Colin Bruce in Urbana to dismiss the main charge - kidnapping resulting in death. It argues there's no evidence that Christensen forced or tricked Zhang into the car. Authorities say Zhang is dead, though her body has never been found.

His attorneys also asked to change the trial's location to western Illinois or Chicago, citing what their motions describe as a "tsunami" of "inflammatory and inherently prejudicial" media reports that render a fair hearing in the region impossible.

Investigators first questioned Christensen three days after Zhang disappeared, then on June 16 enlisted the girlfriend's help. Agents want people wearing wires to stay calm so suspects aren't tipped off they're being recorded, which can put people recording in danger.

But in texts to agents supervising her, the girlfriend - referred to only by the initials T.E.B. - describes being overwhelmed, her "heart ... pounding" as she recorded Christensen. She says she "went into shock and passed out while talking to" Christensen, the filings say.

One place where she recorded Christensen was at a June 29 vigil for Zhang amid the search for her. He was arrested the next day.

Among the other revelations in the filings was that another female student reported earlier the day Zhang disappeared that a man wearing sunglasses pulled up to her in a car, flashed a badge and claimed to be an undercover officer. He asked her to get in; she refused and walked away. The woman later indicated the man looked similar to Christensen. The defense wants any testimony on that incident barred.

In addition to having a girlfriend, Christensen was also married at the time. Another of the new defense motions argues some statements he made to his spouse in private - including about "disturbing dreams" he'd been having - were protect by marital privilege.

His lawyers also contend agents misused a warrant allowing them to search Christensen's car to enter his apartment on June 14, waking him and his wife around midnight. They say his wife consented to a search of the home under duress.

Christensen's trial is slated to begin Feb 27. He has pleaded not guilty.

Sharon Paul, spokeswoman for the US attorney for the Central District of Illinois, said in an email to China Daily that the prosecution has until Jan 29 to file its responses to the defense motions. "The variety of filings and motions is not unusual and is part of the process," she wrote.

Zhang's family, including her father, mother, brother and boyfriend returned to China on Nov 13, 2017, after about five months in the US looking for Zhang.

Associated Press - China Daily

Most Viewed in 24 Hours
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US