Raymond Clark III: Police Raid Apartment Of Person Of Interest In Killing Of Yale Student

RAY HENRY and PAT EATON-ROBB   09/16/09 12:51 AM ET   AP

Yale Student Murder

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Police led away a man in handcuffs to the cheers of neighbors Tuesday and plan to extract DNA samples in an attempt to link him to the killing of a Yale graduate student who died the week she was to be married.

Authorities raided the apartment of 24-year-old Raymond Clark III but did not file any charges against him. Police said he will be release after they obtain the evidence they need from him and his apartment.

Clark, dressed in a tight-fitting white shirt, was handcuffed and escorted out of the apartment building in Middletown and into a silver car. Neighbors leaned over the apartment building's iron railings and cheered as police led him away.

New Haven Police Chief James Lewis did not describe Clark as a suspect. He said police were hoping to compare DNA taken from Clark's hair, fingernails and saliva to more than 150 pieces of evidence collected from the crime scene. That evidence may also be compared at a state lab with DNA samples given voluntarily from other people with access to the crime scene.

"We're going to narrow this down," Lewis said. "We're going to do this as quickly as we can."

Police have collected more than 700 hours of video tape during the probe and sifted through computer records documenting who entered what parts of the research building where Le was found dead.

Investigators began staking out Clark's home on Monday, a day after they discovered 24-year-old Annie Le's body hidden in the basement of a research building at Yale's medical school. She had vanished Sept. 8.

Clark shares the apartment with his girlfriend, Jennifer Hromadka, whom he is engaged to marry in December 2011, according to the couple's incomplete wedding Web site. Middletown is about 20 miles north of New Haven.

Neither the couple nor Clark's parents returned repeated telephone calls Tuesday.

Clark moved to Middletown from New Haven six months ago, and shares the apartment with his girlfriend and three cats, according to former neighbor Taylor Goodwin, 16.

"I never really talked to him much, he was just some guy," Goodwin said.

It was unknown how long Clark worked at Yale or his duties. Clark's supervisors at Yale would not comment Tuesday.

Le worked for a Yale laboratory that conducted experiments on mice, and investigators found her body stuffed in the basement wall of a facility that housed research animals. Clark works in the lab as a technician.

Authorities had been tightlipped since Le was reported missing Sept. 8, just a few days before her wedding day. Police say they have ruled out her fiancee, a Columbia University graduate student, as a suspect but have provided little additional information.

Officials had promised Tuesday to release an autopsy report that would shed light on exactly how Le died. But then prosecutors blocked release of the results out of concern that it could hinder the investigation.

Investigators usually have reasons for keeping information secret during a criminal probe, said David Zlotnick, a former federal prosecutor who now teaches law at Roger Williams University in Bristol, R.I.

Secrecy helps police confront possible suspects with little-known evidence about a crime and makes it harder them to fabricate a cover story.

"Having that information secret or private helps the investigators know, first of all, what buttons to push on the person, and it makes sure they haven't tainted the investigation," Zlotnick said.

Le's body was found Sunday, the day she would have been married on New York's Long Island. Her remains had been crammed into a wall recess where utilities and cables run between floors.

The Le family issued a statement Tuesday through a family friend, the Rev. Dennis Smith, that thanked friends and the Yale community for their support during their grieving. The family also asked for privacy.

"The entire Yale community as well as our extended families and friends have been very supportive, helpful and caring," said Smith, speaking for the family. "Our loss would have been immeasurably more difficult to cope with without their support."

The secrecy surrounding the case has bred confusion in some quarters, and officials have repeatedly denied media reports.

"You guys made up the fact that we had somebody in custody, the media in general," New Haven police spokesman Joe Avery told reporters outside the police department Tuesday.

The lack of information also has led to some measure of fear at Yale, which last dealt with a homicide in 1998 – the sensational and still-unsolved stabbing death of 21-year-old Suzanne Jovin about 2 miles from campus.

Yale President Richard Levin was more forthcoming to Yale medical students, telling them Monday that police have narrowed the number of potential suspects to a small pool because building security systems recorded who entered the building and what times they entered.

Several news organizations have reported that police were interviewing a possible suspect who failed a polygraph test and had defensive wounds on his body. At least one reported Tuesday that it was the lab technician in Middletown.

Along the way, various media have reported that Le was stabbed, that police found her bloody clothes and that a professor was a prime suspect – virtually all claims unconfirmed by police or met by flat denials.

New Haven police said they would restrict information even more in coming days after an NBC producer was injured Tuesday as reporters outside the police department pushed to surround a spokesman during a briefing.

The building where Le's body is accessible to Yale personnel with identification cards. Some 75 video surveillance cameras monitor all doorways.

Her body was found in the basement, which houses rodents, mostly mice, used for scientific testing by multiple Yale researchers, Alpern said.

"That this horrible tragedy happened at all is incomprehensible," said Le's roommate, Natalie Powers. "That it happened to her, I think is infinitely more so. It seems completely senseless."

___

Associated Press writer Susan Haigh reported from Hartford, Conn. Associated Press news researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York also contributed to this report.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dukedraven
06:09 PM on 09/16/2009
I apologize for my little joke, glorialovelace. You may have a point.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dukedraven
04:14 PM on 09/16/2009
Hey, glorialovelace, don't get mad at me. I don't make the rules. This is what I've been told. Hee, hee.

http://stuffwhitepeoplelike.com/2008/01/20/11-asian-girls/
10:44 AM on 09/16/2009
here the link to his girlfriend pic, for who want to see..

http://news.limauais.com/picture-jennifer-hromadka-is-raymond-clark-ray-clark-girlfriend/
10:09 AM on 09/16/2009
Until he is charged, his name and face should not be plastered all over the internet. Lives have been ruined before by the releasing of names only to have them set free and someone else arrested.
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dems08
2012: 60 US Senators / 218 House Seats
10:11 AM on 09/16/2009
He was taken into custody, and that's public record.

The media will do what they always do.
10:21 AM on 09/16/2009
I agree. The guy has now been released, and to judge by the comments here, everybody is assuming he is a s ex criminal. At least one of the papers -- the New Haven Independent -- has said that Le and Clark had previously quarreled over the care of the animals being used. It also needs to be repeated that when the victim was found, she was fully clothed.
12:33 PM on 09/16/2009
She was fully clothed? According to whom? The media -- which on one hand reported that bloody clothes were found; and on the other, without the autopsy results, that she was asphyxiated?

The media at the moment is not reliable -- in part because of rumor and speculation; and in part because the investigators are allowing very little information out.

As example, the media reported that autopsy results were to be released, but the media now reports that the release was blocked by the prosecutors. How much the prosecutors could know at this point -- the investigation isn't completed; what are the chances it has reached the prosecutor yet? -- isn't likely much, as the investigation is continuing.

One doesn't know what to believe because the nature of evidence, the cause of death, etc., are often wihheld so as not to jeopardize the investigation.
09:59 AM on 09/16/2009
You guys are really dropping the ball today, he was RELEASED an hour ago.

Keep it up. Only the 'loons and the lazy' will keep coming here for news.
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09:57 AM on 09/16/2009
his nieghbors were cheering? they dont even know if hes guilty! guess new haven doesnt have the best nieghbors. its still innocent tll proven guilty, or have we thrown that out too?
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stepintothelight
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
10:07 AM on 09/16/2009
L y n c h Mob mentality is alive and well in Amarekuh!!!
09:36 AM on 09/16/2009
Innocent until proven guilty.

Applauding is inappropriate.

When are we in this country going to respect the legal process?
09:40 AM on 09/16/2009
Clap, Clap, Calp.... spot on!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bsc
09:50 AM on 09/16/2009
agreed- the applauding is just inappropriate
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dukedraven
09:29 AM on 09/16/2009
It may have been unplanned, glorialovelace, but it sure looks like physical attraction (on his part) had something to do with it.
09:57 AM on 09/16/2009
Why does it look like physical attraction to you? There are lots of reasons for killing people -- and all kinds of racketeering goes on in laboratories. And, according to the newspapers, Le's clothing was undisturbed. Also -- according to the papers -- Le and Clark had quarreled in the past over the care of the mice.
09:28 AM on 09/16/2009
No charges... not under arrest... yet in handcuffs?
09:58 AM on 09/16/2009
He's been released. He's back at his apartment among the kindly folks who applauded when the cops took him away.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Imhotep40
He who comes in peace
11:01 AM on 09/16/2009
Posed a danger/threat to himself and/or the Officers escorting him to interrogation (or Extraordinary Rendition if Cheney had anything to do with it) - "arrest" not required.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Gover
09:23 AM on 09/16/2009
That's a guilty man if I ever saw one! Burn this monster at the stake!
09:33 AM on 09/16/2009
sure, lets forget about due process and all that stuff.

Seriously, if he did it, I hope he is punished and gets life in prison. But let's give the police a chance to do their work.

BTW - for those who said he should have been taken away more discreetly - sometimes easier said than done. His name had been reported in the press by some enterprising sleuth so I suspect the neighbors had been watching very carefully and warily waiting to see what happened. The cheers make me think that he might not have been the most sociable of all neighbors - usually something of this nature leads to the invariable comments of "he always seemed like such a nice young man - I never thought he would do something like this".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bsc
09:51 AM on 09/16/2009
wow. we have a legal system here in the US.
09:20 AM on 09/16/2009
Wow, if this young man is cleared, his days are ruined. Why not do this discreetly. Taken away "with neighbors cheering"! Please do not do this to this man until the time is correct.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Niasia
Tryin to make it in the Nation's Capital
09:24 AM on 09/16/2009
they do it to minorities all the time, condemn now get the truth later..it is what it is.
09:27 AM on 09/16/2009
The only way he could be cleared is if the investigators determine that this was a bizarre suicide plan that worked brilliantly.
09:17 AM on 09/16/2009
I see the HP is wholeheartedly indulging in this guy's trial by press. Remember the Olympics bomber? His reputation was ruined; then they cleared him. We don't have the details of any polygraph test -- for example, what questions were asked? Polygraph tests are not admitted in court for a reason.
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
09:41 AM on 09/16/2009
Trial by press... good name for it. Not good justice. If there's good evidence presented in court, a jury will find him guilty. Let's not have sentencing by the public before the trial. There's still juris prudence in the US unless something changed of which we haven't been made aware.
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08:51 AM on 09/16/2009
Another one of those, "if I can't have her no one can".
08:54 AM on 09/16/2009
Sonds like the Craig's List killer...he was supposed to be married this past August. His fiancee swore up and down they had the wrong guy.
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redsongia
is not Chicago
10:09 AM on 09/16/2009
Yeah, except the craigslist guy gets his own trial, and this guy seems to be getting convicted on the coat tails of the craigslist guy, because he's also getting married.
10:00 AM on 09/16/2009
You folks watch too much daytime television.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jyoti Naik
08:49 AM on 09/16/2009
sounds like a horror film. Lab tech stalking a student, possibly raping before murdering and stuffing her in a wall. I bet they make a movie out of this and somebody gets rich.
04:07 PM on 09/16/2009
Who said anything about rape? What's up with all these rape fantasies
whenever a female murder victim is found?
08:48 AM on 09/16/2009
I'm not buying that the boyfriend knew nothing. In this day and age of preplanned murdering, they were to quick to say he's not a suspect.
12:42 PM on 09/16/2009
Denial -- not wanting to believe it -- is sufficient. No "conspiracy" to it; except perhaps for those who substitute conspirabunk for thought.