On day Yale student’s body was found, suspect was playing shortstop in softball game
By Pat Eaton-robb, APFriday, September 18, 2009
Yale suspect played softball on day body was found
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — A lab technician charged with killing a Yale University graduate student and cramming her body in a wall tried to hide evidence even as investigators worked around him, officials said, then coolly played a softball game on the day the victim’s body was found.
An investigator observed Raymond Clark III trying to hide cleaning equipment that contained blood splatters as teams probed the disappearance of 24-year-old Annie Le, according to a law enforcement official familiar with the investigation who spoke to The Hartford Courant.
Investigators have records of Clark, also 24, cleaning areas that Le was in before she was reported missing Sept. 8, the official told the Courant, speaking on condition of anonymity.
But despite Clark’s efforts, investigators found the DNA of both suspect and victim in the ceiling and in the wall recess where Le’s body was hidden, the official told the paper. New Haven police wouldn’t confirm that information to The Associated Press.
The body of Le, a pharmacology student from Placerville, Calif., was recovered Sunday — the day she was to get married on New York’s Long Island.
Also that day, Clark played shortstop in a softball playoff game for his team, the New Haven Wild Hogs, an opposing player said. And he played under the gaze of undercover police officers, Lt. John Velleca told the New Haven Independent.
One of the opposing players, Vinnie Mauro of New Haven, said he knew Clark as a plain, calm New York Mets fan who usually wore a David Wright jersey.
“You couldn’t tell anything,” Mauro told the AP. “There was absolutely nothing out of the ordinary. He was just nondescript, kept to himself.”
Prosecutors may face difficult questions in Clark’s trial about why they didn’t restrict access to the lab after Le was reported missing, legal experts said. Le disappeared on a Tuesday, and authorities didn’t close it until the weekend.
“If a jury is looking for something to grab onto, then this could be something for them to grab onto,” said Hugh Keefe, a top state defense attorney.
Police charged Clark with murder after arresting him at a motel Thursday, a day after they took DNA samples from him to compare with the evidence from the crime scene. His bond was set at $3 million, and he did not enter a plea.
A law enforcement source who talked to the AP on condition of anonymity told the AP on Thursday that Yale co-workers called Clark a “control freak” who was territorial about the mice whose cages he cleaned. Authorities are investigating whether that attitude might have set off a clash between Clark and Le.
Her work involved experiments on mice that were part of research into enzymes that could have implications for treatment of cancer, diabetes and muscular dystrophy, while Clark’s technician job involved cleaning floors and mouse cages.
Ann Turner, executive director of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science, acknowledges “there is a gulf” between technicians and the researchers they interact with.
“There’s a gulf in any workplace where you have a person with a higher level of education and no education,” she said, noting that gap shouldn’t necessarily lead to tension.
However, “if there is a culture of trust and a culture of respect, the researchers will respect the animal care technicians, and vice versa,” Turner said.
A memorial service for Le is planned at the Huntington, N.Y., temple her fiance’s family attends between the high holidays of Rosh Hashanah, beginning sundown Friday, and Yom Kippur on Sept. 28, cantor Sandra Sherry said.
The family of fiance Jonathan Widawsky, a graduate student at Columbia University, had already announced they would not attend services “for the foreseeable future” to ease things for the synagogue, Sherry said.
Clark is jailed in Suffield, about 20 miles north of Hartford. His next scheduled court date is Oct. 6.
Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Jay Lindsay in Boston, Ray Henry and Michael Hill in New Haven, and Susan Haigh in Hartford.