Chicago Sun-Times

Parent of Chicago Board Options Exchange plans to sell headquarte­rs on La Salle Street

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO,

CHAMPAIGN — The family of a visiting Chinese scholar whose body was never recovered after a former University of Illinois doctoral student kidnapped and killed her has been told the woman’s remains may be in a landfill in eastern Illinois, an attorney for the slain scholar’s family said Friday.

In a statement, attorney Steve Beckett said the family of Yingying Zhang was notified by prosecutor­s that Brendt Christense­n’s attorneys provided informatio­n that led investigat­ors to think the “potential site” of the remains is the landfill in Vermilion County along the Illinois-Indiana border. A spokeswoma­n for the U.S. attorney’s office, Sharon Paul, declined to comment on Beckett’s statement.

Christense­n was convicted in federal court last month and sentenced to life in prison. Prosecutor­s had sought the death penalty.

Authoritie­s have told family members of Zhang, who vanished in 2017, that she was likely dead. From the time they arrived from China, family members have made it clear that their goal was to recover the remains and bring them back to their country for burial. And after jurors sentenced Christense­n, the family stood before the news cameras outside the Peoria courthouse where the trial was held to beg him to reveal the location of the 26-year-old woman’s remains.

“If you have any humanity left in your soul, please end our torment,” said Zhang’s father, Ronggao Zhang. “Please let us bring Yingying home.”

Prosecutor­s say Christense­n beat Zhang to death with a baseball bat before decapitati­ng her. He never testified during the trial and has never told authoritie­s what he did with her remains. Prosecutor­s have acknowledg­ed that they considered a plea deal with Christense­n after his 2017 arrest in which they would abandon plans to seek the death penalty if he divulged what he did with the remains and where they could be found.

Christense­n’s attorneys suggested that a deal should be contingent only on Christense­n’s providing informatio­n about her remains and not the actual recovery of the remains because Christense­n had no control over whether the remains could be found. Prosecutor­s ultimately abandoned the idea of a plea deal after concluding that Christense­n likely destroyed the remains, making it impossible to verify any details he might provide.

Beckett was to have a press conference Friday afternoon to offer further details about his statement, but in a statement he said that press conference has been postponed until next week so that the family’s Chinese attorney could attend.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO/AP FILE ?? Yingying Zhang, a visiting scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, disappeare­d June 9, 2017. Brendt Christense­n, a former graduate student, was convicted of her murder.
FAMILY PHOTO/AP FILE Yingying Zhang, a visiting scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, disappeare­d June 9, 2017. Brendt Christense­n, a former graduate student, was convicted of her murder.
 ?? MACON COUNTY
SHERIFF’S OFFICE ?? Brendt Christense­n
MACON COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Brendt Christense­n

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States