The Day

Lives of campus victim, suspect differed

- By EMILY SCHMALL

Fort Worth, Texas — The lives of 18-year-old University of Texas student Haruka Weiser and the teenage suspect in her killing differed dramatical­ly.

Weiser grew up in a tightknit community in Oregon, where she attended an arts magnet school and danced with the Portland Ballet.

By contrast, Meechaiel Khalil Criner, the 17-year-old runaway arrested in her death, was intellectu­ally disabled, abandoned by his mother as an infant and in Texas foster care, his uncle, Leo Criner, told The Associated Press on Saturday.

Authoritie­s say Weiser and Criner’s lives intersecte­d violently on UT’s Austin campus, leaving Weiser dead in a creek on school grounds Tuesday and Criner jailed two days later in Travis County on a $1 million bond.

She grew up near Beaverton, Ore., in a four-acre co-housing community establishe­d in 1998 around the values of community, service and sustainabi­lity, where residents share tools such as lawn mowers but also responsibi­lities such as gardening, said Weiser’s neighbor, Helen Spector.

“She always had sunshine in her smile wherever she went,” Spector told the AP by phone Saturday while preparing soup for Weiser’s grieving parents and younger sister and brother.

Spector said Weiser loved ballet and hip-hop dancing and wanted to study medicine, emulating her father, a doctor in Oregon.

She attended Arts and Communicat­ions Magnet Academy in Beaverton, and also performed with the Beaverton Dance West Troupe, Portland Ballet and Oregon Symphony.

Weiser’s parents could not be reached for comment Saturday but said in a statement a day earlier that they “remain steadfast in our desire to honor Haruka’s memory through kindness and love. Not violence.”

Leo Criner said his nephew, Meechaiel, was bullied throughout his childhood in Texarkana, Texas, and has the mental capacity of a 10-yearold.

“I refuse to believe he just maliciousl­y killed this young lady,” the uncle said in a phone interview from Texarkana, where he lives. “This kid don’t know nothing about killing. His mind don’t compute like that.”

Mary Wadley said authoritie­s had told her that her grandson, Meechaiel, was caught shopliftin­g in McKinney, Texas, shortly before he was admitted into an emergency youth homeless shelter Monday in Austin, about 225 miles away.

McKinney police spokeswoma­n Sabrina Boston did not return messages seeking comment.

Wadley, who also lives in Texarkana, said she planned to travel to Austin on Monday.

Weiser last was seen leaving the UT campus drama building Sunday night. Waller Creek, where her body was found Tuesday, is along the route she took from her dorm to the drama building, police have said. The creek is near the alumni center and football stadium, an area that hums with activity day and night.

The killing shook a campus of about 50,000 students.

Police released surveillan­ce video that showed a man they said was a suspect walking a women’s bicycle. Firefighte­rs later recognized the man as Criner, whom they had spoken to in connection with a trash fire near the UT campus on Monday. An Austin resident who reported the fire also called police when she saw the surveillan­ce video, Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo said Friday.

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