The News (New Glasgow)

‘The most senseless thing to do’

Police scour for details leading to student’s slaying

- BY LINDSAY WHITEHURST

Authoritie­s are trying to figure out how a longtime criminal recently released from an Alabama prison ended up in a Utah canyon where he’s suspected of killing a 23-year-old devout Mormon immigrant from China.

ChenWei Guo came to the United States in 2012 and dreamed of opening a consulting firm. He was studying computer science in his first year at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

Friends say the 23-year-old smiled easily, loved to dance and could be found trekking canyons around Salt Lake City, like the one where his body was found Monday night.

A 24-year-old ex-convict is suspected of shooting the student to death after demanding Guo’s car, according to Utah authoritie­s.

He also fired at an unidentifi­ed woman who witnessed the slaying, police said in jail documents.

Police found Guo’s body still in his vehicle in a canyon just east of campus, prompting a campuswide lockdown and a massive overnight manhunt at the school and in the rugged foothills nearby.

“It just seemed like the most senseless thing to do, take the life of such a great person,” said Steve Comrie, a leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints congregati­on that included Guo.

Austin Boutain surrendere­d without incident Tuesday afternoon after a librarian spotted him at a city library several miles away, about 15 hours after Guo was found.

Boutain was booked on suspicion of aggravated murder, robbery and other charges.

Boutain has a rap sheet that includes drug, car theft and weapons charges in Minnesota and Alabama dating back to his days a juvenile. He was paroled in May after serving a year and a half in an Alabama prison for being a convicted sex offender and failing to report his whereabout­s to police.

His parole was transferre­d to Wisconsin this spring, but he skipped and a warrant went out for him Aug. 31, according to authoritie­s there.

Alabama court records show Boutain and his wife Kathleen married in 2014 and had two children. He filed for divorce in January while imprisoned, but the split wasn’t finalized in court.

Boutain and his wife were wanted for questionin­g in the killing of a 63-year-old Golden, Col., man whose truck is missing but which authoritie­s say Boutain may have driven to Utah.

Police in Utah say he acknowledg­ed taking three guns from a home in Colorado. He told police he hid the gun used to shoot Guo in a wall near the Salt Lake City homeless shelter, but when he returned it was gone, according to jail documents.

Police said Mitchell Bradford Ingle, whose body was found Tuesday in his trailer home, may have been friendly with the Boutains but it wasn’t clear how they met and how the older man was killed.

Kathleen Boutain was jailed in Utah on unrelated drug and theft charges after she reported to police Monday night that her husband had assaulted her while they were camping in the canyon.

Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Brown and University of Utah police did not have details Tuesday about how Boutain encountere­d Guo and evaded more than 100 officers who swarmed the foothills near campus after the shooting.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Law enforcemen­t personnel comb the hills near the mouth of Red Butte Canyon in Salt Lake City in search of the gunman responsibl­e for the shooting a University of Utah student during a fatal carjacking attempt near the University of Utah late Monday.
AP PHOTO Law enforcemen­t personnel comb the hills near the mouth of Red Butte Canyon in Salt Lake City in search of the gunman responsibl­e for the shooting a University of Utah student during a fatal carjacking attempt near the University of Utah late Monday.

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