San Francisco Chronicle

Chicago slaying suspects brought from Bay Area

- By Sara Burnett Sara Burnett is an Associated Press writer.

CHICAGO — Two employees of elite universiti­es charged in the fatal stabbing of a 26-year-old hairstylis­t were returned to Chicago early Saturday to face charges of first-degree murder in the brutal killing.

Chicago police escorted fired Northweste­rn University Professor Wyndham Lathem, 43, and Oxford University financial officer Andrew Warren, 56, from the Bay Area, where they surrendere­d peacefully on Aug. 4 after an eight-day, nationwide manhunt. Detectives were questionin­g the men Saturday. They could appear in court as early as Sunday.

The men are accused of killing Trenton James Cornell-Duranleau, a Michigan native who had been living in Chicago, last month in Lathem’s high-rise Chicago condo.

Chicago police have said Cornell-Duranleau suffered more than 40 stab wounds, including “mutilation­s,” to his upper body. Authoritie­s say the attack was so violent the blade of the knife they believe was used was broken.

They found Cornell-Duranleau’s body July 27 after the building’s front desk received an anonymous call that a crime had occurred on the 10th floor. He had been dead more than 12 hours. By then, authoritie­s say Lathem and Warren had fled the city. According to autopsy results released Friday by the Cook County medical examiner’s office, Cornell-Duranleau had methamphet­amine in his system at the time of his death.

Police say Lathem and Cornell-Duranleau, who moved to Chicago from the Grand Rapids, Mich., area about a year ago, had a personal relationsh­ip, though they have not described the nature of it or a motive for the attack.

It’s unclear what the relationsh­ip was between Lathem, Cornell-Duranleau and Warren, who’s British. He arrived in the U.S. three days before the killing, after being reported missing in Great Britain.

After the killing, Lathem sent a video to friends and relatives apologizin­g for his involvemen­t in the crime, which he called the “biggest mistake of my life.”

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