Austin American-Statesman

Abduction suspect makes his first court appearance

Man accused of kidnapping Chinese scholar on June 9.

- By Michael Tarm

Hundreds of people gathered outside a federal courthouse Monday as the suspect in the kidnapping of a Chinese scholar at the University of Illinois made his first appearance since being arrested last week.

During the nineminute hearing, 28-yearold Brendt Christense­n acknowledg­ed to the judge that he understood his rights, but did not say anything else. U.S. Magistrate Eric Long ordered Christense­n held without bond in the kidnapping of Yingying Zhang. Authoritie­s say facts in the case indicate Zhang, 26, is dead, although her body hasn’t been found.

Long ordered Christense­n to return to the court in Urbana on Wednesday to determine bond. A preliminar­y hearing was set for July 14, but that would be waived if a grand jury returns an indictment before then. The federal kidnapping charge carries a maximum sentence of life in prison, according to a U.S. attorney’s office spokeswoma­n.

The (Champaign) News-Gazette reported that about 45 people attended the hearing Monday, with another crowd in the courthouse lobby and yet more people across the street, many chanting “Justice for Yingying.”

After the hearing, Christense­n’s attorney, Evan Bruno, said he has talked to Christense­n a few times, but that “this case is very young and we haven’t had a really full opportunit­y to develop everything yet.”

Bruno asked the public to “be patient, to keep an open mind, wait till the evidence comes in.”

He described his client as a “very intelligen­t guy” who has no criminal history.

Bruno added that Christense­n is married, but that he and his wife do not have any children, according to the newspaper. He said Christense­n, who recently earned a master’s degree in physics from the University of Illinois, is not employed but has been looking for a job.

Zhang, who received her master’s degree in environmen­tal engineerin­g in China last year and hoped to eventually land a professors­hip and help her family financiall­y, disappeare­d June 9. Her father traveled from China to Illinois in June for the search.

Authoritie­s announced that they believed she was abducted after viewing surveillan­ce video showing her climbing into a vehicle. Authoritie­s charged Christense­n on Friday after federal agents heard him tell someone that he’d kidnapped Zhang and held her against her will.

Authoritie­s say Zhang was trying to hurry to an apartment to sign a lease and had been unsuccessf­ul in flagging down a bus when a car stopped. The video shows a woman authoritie­s have said is Zhang climb into the vehicle in Urbana, about 140 miles southwest of Chicago.

Since then, details have emerged about Christense­n and the events leading up to Zhang’s disappeara­nce.

The federal complaint says Christense­n’s phone was used April 19 to visit that website, FetLife.com, including to view threads titled “Perfect abduction fantasy” and “planning a kidnapping.”

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Christense­n
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Zhang

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