The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Qinxuan Pan, charged in Yale student’s death, has case continued

- By Ben Lambert william.lambert@hearstmedi­act.com

NEW HAVEN — The case of Qinxuan Pan, accused of the slaying of Yale graduate student Kevin Jiang, was continued again during a short hearing Thursday, with plans to either hold a probable cause hearing or move forward with the matter.

Judge Gerald Harmon set Sept. 6 as a date for the hearing during brief court proceeding­s on Thursday.

Attorney Kevin Smith, representi­ng Pan, agreed to the date, saying the legal team would inform the court if they planned to waive their client’s right to the hearing.

Pan, arrested in May 2021, has not yet entered a plea to the murder charge levied against him in connection with Jiang’s death.

A potential probable cause hearing has been put off multiple times over with Harmon granting Pan and his attorneys further time to review the evidence.

Jiang was shot to death on Lawrence Street in the city’s East Rock neighborho­od Feb. 6, 2021.

Born in Seattle and raised in Chicago, Jiang served as an environmen­tal scientist/engineerin­g officer and tank operator in the U.S. Army and National Guard. He graduated from the University of Washington before coming to Yale. He was a certified fitness trainer and ran his own studio after serving in the military.

Those who knew Jiang have described him as a person of faith and energy, including his parents, speaking during his funeral at Trinity Baptist Church in New Haven.

Jiang lived “full-heartedly, enthusiast­ically,” like a “ray of sunlight,” his mother, Linda Liu said.

Jiang became engaged to Zion Perry, also a graduate student at Yale, about a week before his slaying. Photos later emerged online appearing to show Perry and Pan together at a Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology dance in 2020. Perry and Pan were friends on Facebook, where she posted about the engagement.

New Haven police obtained a warrant charging Pan with Jiang’s slaying in February 2021. The department had named him as a person of interest in the case Feb. 10, 2021.

Pan allegedly stole a GMC Terrain on Feb. 6, 2021 and changed his cellphone number before coming to Connecticu­t, according to a police report from Mansfield, Mass.

North Haven police stopped Pan that evening as he drove onto railroad tracks near Sims Metal Management.

According to an affidavit from that community, North Haven officers had received a different descriptio­n for the New Haven homicide suspect, so they let Pan go.

On the day after the interactio­n with Pan, North Haven police were called to the Arby’s at 267 Washington Ave., where employees reported finding a bag containing a firearm and ammunition, along with other items, according to the North Haven affidavit.

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