Family says task to find scholar’s body daunting
The family of slain Chinese student Zhang Yingying acknowledged on Wednesday that there is little likelihood her remains will be recovered.
They spoke at a news conference in Urbana, Illinois, two weeks after learning what the man convicted of the murder of the visiting postgraduate student at the University of Illinois did with her remains two years ago.
Brendt Christensen, a former University of Illinois graduate student who was convicted of kidnapping and killing Zhang in a recently concluded trial, told his attorneys that after killing Zhang on June 9, 2017, he placed her remains in three garbage bags. Christensen said he put the bags in a garbage bin outside his Champaign apartment and later disposed of her other personal items in various trash receptacles around the area.
“If what that man said is true, it further confirms that he is a heartless and evil person,” said Zhang Ronggao, Zhang’s father, in a translated statement.
“We condemn his brutal and malicious actions, and we hope that he suffers the rest of his life, as he made Yingying suffer in the final moments of her life,” he added.
Overwhelmed by grief, Zhang’s mother had to leave the news conference in tears halfway through, according to the website of local newspaper, The News-Gazette.
The family, who flew from China months ago for the federal murder trial at which Christensen, 30, was sentenced to life in prison without parole, was told about Zhang’s possible whereabouts during a meeting with prosecutors on July 25.
Prosecutors and other investigators got the information from the defense team under an immunity deal six months ago. They were prevented by the agreement from using the information in Christensen’s trial and sentencing proceedings or disclosing it to anyone, including the Zhang family, who had repeatedly expressed their desire to find Zhang and take her home.
Zhang Ronggao asked Christensen to “unconditionally tell us what he knows about Yingying’s location” after the trial concluded on July 18.
While still considering finding his daughter a “primary goal”, Zhang admitted on Wednesday that it might be impossible.
“Based on what we have been told by the authorities, we think the best thing to do now is to let them look into the feasibility of recovering Yingying’s remains,” he said in a translated statement.
The contents of the garbage bin, where Christensen said he put Zhang’s remains, were taken to a private landfill in the vicinity of Danville, Illinois, attorney Steve Beckett said.
No search has been undertaken so far, but the authorities are still considering an attempt to locate and recover Zhang’s remains, according to the family, who said they would allow the authorities to handle the situation and recover Zhang’s remains if feasible.
“The prosecutors indicated the strong desire of the agencies involved to go forward with the search — the family welcomes that,” Beckett said.
“If Yingying’s remains are ever found, we will return to take her home to China where she belongs,” said Zhang, who added that the family has not yet decided if they will stay in the United States to wait for the result of a search.
The university also has established a fund in Zhang Yingying’s memory to support foreign students. The fund had raised more than $30,000, with Zhang’s family providing the lead gift for the endowment.
“I am truly inspired by the Zhang family’s desire to create Yingying’s Fund. … Their gift will make an enormous impact when these students and their families need it most,” University of Illinois Chancellor Robert Jones said in a statement.