Las Vegas Review-Journal

Family waits in agony for news of daughter

Chinese scholar kidnapped, presumed dead

- By Sharon Cohen The Associated Press

URBANA, Ill. — For more than four months, Ronggao Zhang has walked to his missing daughter’s apartment almost every day. At first, he stood outside, hoping she would show up one afternoon. But even after he was told she had been kidnapped and was presumed dead, he has continued his routine.

“It brings peace and comfort to my heart,” Zhang explained in Mandarin, through a translator.

His daughter, Yingying Zhang, a 26-yearold visiting scholar at the University of Illinois at Urbana-champaign, disappeare­d June 9 on her way to sign an apartment lease. A former graduate student has been charged with kidnapping and killing her. Zhang’s body has not been found.

A few days ago, Zhang’s father made a final visit to the Orchard Downs apartments with his wife, 24-year-old son and daughter’s boyfriend as they prepared to return to China. They arrived here after Zhang vanished, hopeful in the beginning that she would be found alive. After authoritie­s relayed the grim news, they decided to stay until her remains were found so they could take her home for a proper burial.

“We don’t know where she is, and I don’t know how to spend the rest of my life without my daughter,” said Lifeng Ye, Zhang’s mother, her face tear-stained and voice trembling as she spoke through a translator. “I can’t really sleep well at night. … I often dream of my daughter, and she’s right there with me. I want to ask the mother of the suspect, please talk to her son and ask him what he did to my daughter. Where is she now? I want to know the answer.”

Authoritie­s have not said how Zhang died. Brendt Christense­n, 28, was charged in July with abduction and then last month accused in a supersedin­g indictment of kidnapping resulting in death “in an especially heinous, cruel or depraved manner, in that it involved torture or serious physical abuse to the victim.” That carries the possibilit­y of the death penalty. Christense­n’s lawyer declined comment.

Federal prosecutor­s claim that Zhang, who arrived on campus in April, had missed a bus and worried she was late to sign an apartment lease when Christense­n lured her into his car. Surveillan­ce video showed her getting into the front seat of a black Saturn Astra the FBI alleges was cleaned in a way to conceal evidence.

Audio surveillan­ce captured Christense­n talking about how he abducted Zhang and brought her back to his apartment, where she “fought and resisted” while he held her against her will, according to prosecutor­s. They contend he also talked about who makes an “ideal victim,” but prosecutor­s would not identify whom Christense­n was speaking with or the source of those conversati­ons.

A federal complaint disclosed that Christense­n used his phone in April to visit a fetish networking site online, viewing threads titled “perfect abduction fantasy” and “planning a kidnapping.” Christense­n, who earlier this year earned a master’s degree in physics, appeared at a campus vigil for Zhang in June before he was arrested.

 ?? Michael Conroy ?? The Associated Press Ronggao Zhang, left, and Lifeng Ye, display a photo Wednesday of them with their missing daughter, Yingying Zhang, in Urbana, Ind.
Michael Conroy The Associated Press Ronggao Zhang, left, and Lifeng Ye, display a photo Wednesday of them with their missing daughter, Yingying Zhang, in Urbana, Ind.
 ??  ?? Yingying Zhang
Yingying Zhang

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