The Paper Trail

Suspect Pleads Not Guilty in Yale Murder Case

January 27, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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This is a case that will be followed closely in the Yale University community and beyond: the trial of Raymond Clark III, a former Yale lab technician accused of murdering graduate student Annie Le. And the first big news from the proceedings happened yesterday.

In a short court appearance Tuesday, Clark pleaded not guilty to the murder of Le, the Yale Daily News reports. The prosecution added a charge of felony murder to the case, which would allow a jury to convict Clark of killing Le even if the death happened unintentionally in the process of committing another felony, the report says.

Clark also waived his right to a probable cause hearing, at which prosecutors would have had to show that they had enough evidence to proceed.

"In any hypothetical homicide, felony murder ensures the prosecution won't get boxed in," Beth Merkin, one of Clark's public defenders, tells the Daily News. "It provides for alternate theories to be made about the crime."

Clark was arrested on September 17 after the discovery of Le's body hidden in a lab building shocked Yale's New Haven, Conn., campus.

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The killer did not crush her body. That was misinformation reported by the media. The police clarified that such information was false and needs to be corrected.

joed of NJ 10:24AM August 03, 2010

some one could be murdered twice its just call an over kill

JOSE of AZ 11:08AM February 25, 2010

While I do not agree with what he did (any of it) your comment is silly. A person can only be murdered once.

BLM of TX 8:12PM February 15, 2010

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