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John Connolly

Wendy Murphy

An Ivy League Tragedy

BS Top - Connolly Wedding That Wasn’t Thomas Cain / AP Photo Police have found a body in the lab where Yale grad student Annie Le was last seen—on the same day her wedding was to take place.

Perhaps it was a family’s necessary optimism in the face of possible tragedy, or perhaps it had been overlooked due to far more momentous issues, but as of Friday afternoon, a spokesperson at the North Ritz Club in Syosset, on New York's Long Island, where the groom’s family resides, told The Daily Beast that they had not heard from the family of missing Yale graduate student Annie Le, or her fiancé’s, about canceling the wedding that was scheduled there for today. By yesterday, the mood had changed. Nadeen Fotopoulos, the manager of the facility, issued a statement: “The hall will be dark Sunday morning. It is very sad.”

That cops are bothering to do tests to determine the source of the blood suggests the clothes were not a size XL and that the blood did not come from a lab rat.

The case shifted dramatically yesterday. Bloody clothes were found hidden above ceiling tiles at the Yale University laboratory where the attractive 24-year-old Ph.D. student was last seen Tuesday morning, five days before she was to be married to her fiancé, a physics graduate student at Columbia University, Jonathan Widawsky, who is not a suspect.

Officials say there's no connection, yet, between the bloody clothing and Ms. Le—but that's law-enforcement code for "we haven't had enough time to run the DNA or any other forensic tests.” That they didn't say whether they found female clothes the size of Ms. Le's body is telling. She was unusually tiny—4-foot-11, and 90 pounds—so it would have been obvious that the clothes were hers. That cops are bothering to do tests to determine the source of the blood suggests the clothes were not a size XL and that the blood did not come from a lab rat.

The entire laboratory building has been declared a crime scene, and Le's purse, cellphone, credit cards, cash, and other property were found in her office at the lab. Le reportedly entered the lab last Tuesday morning around 10 a.m., but never left—according to 75 surveillance cameras that monitor who comes and goes in a building where everyone who enters has to swipe a coded card to get in.

Not long after, a smoke alarm went off, but authorities have not made any statements linking the two. But there have been reports that detectives have questioned one of her professors. Annie was a working on her doctorate in pharmacology at Yale and was to have attended the professor’s class Tuesday afternoon. For unexplained reasons, that class, which was to have begun at about the time Annie was reported missing, was canceled—before Le was reported missing. FBI agents were seen questioning an unidentified man outside the lab—who then left in an FBI vehicle. Neither man has been identified as a subject.

Without proof that Le ever left the building, it makes sense that investigators brought blueprints into the laboratory on Saturday, indicating they feel a need to search for evidence in ventilation ducts and other hidden locations. Hence, the discovery of the bloody clothes.

Although in the first hours after her disappearance there had been speculation that she was another “Runaway Bride,” a la Georgia’s infamous Jennifer Wilbanks, those thoughts were quickly discarded. Classmates report that Le was excited about the wedding, and Le’s family have categorically said from the beginning that they were sure their daughter did not run away.

“From what I have read and heard from confidants, it would be out of character for this young woman to have just taken off,” says Joe Keenan, a retired detective who was a decorated member of New York’s elite Major Case squad. “I doubt very much that she would terrify and hurt her family, fiancé, and friends by such a selfish act."

Keenan tells The Daily Beast that this case had frightening similarities to what first was thought to be a missing-persons case in New York this summer. On July 7, 46-year-old Eridania Rodriguez disappeared from her cleaning job at an office building in New York’s Financial District. Despite a building search by cadaver dogs, it was not until four days later that police the body bound and gagged in one of the air ducts.

Keenan says he fears that the outcome of this case will be similar. “If they have found bloody clothing in the building, it’s a good bet that the clothes belong to the missing young woman. If so, it’s only a matter of time before they find the body and the person responsible.”

Keenan adds that in the Rodriguez case, the New York detectives used a somewhat different approach in going after the prime suspect. “In years past, all too often the suspect would be scooped up and taken in for questioning before the detectives had time to build a case. All too often they would have to let that person go because they did not have enough evidence.” In the Rodriguez case, they had men following their prime suspect 24/7. A few days later, they grabbed a co-worker of the cleaning woman named Joseph Pabon and charged him with murder. Keenan surmises that law enforcement, including the FBI, may be applying the same tactics in this case. A sad probability on what should have been the happiest day of Le’s life.

John Connolly is a former New York City detective turned journalist. He is a contributing editor for Vanity Fair magazine, and is currently finishing a book called The Sin Eater on disgraced and imprisoned Hollywood private investigator Anthony Pellicano.

Wendy Murphy is a former child abuse and sex crimes prosecutor who teaches at New England Law/Boston.

For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.


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September 13, 2009 | 8:27am
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Comments ()

sophia5

Is it true Wendy Murphy assumed the
Duke LaCrosse team was guilty,
and if so what credibility does she have ?

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9:55 am, Sep 13, 2009

amapola101

I heard this morning ,early,that she had written an article,about yale, and danger, ..maybe it is someone who read her article and followed her.I am sorry for her, her fiancee and her family.I wish it could turn out well.Very sad,terrible.Such a cute couple, what a terrible thing to have dissapeared,before her wedding.Awfull,this is awfull.!!

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11:15 am, Sep 13, 2009

david87501

This leaves me wondering if Annie Le was studying microbiology. There have been quite a few suspicious deaths of microbiologists over last few years, including: David Kelly; two French biochemical students, Laurent Bonomo and Gabriel Ferez; Caroline Coffey; Benito Que; Don Wiley; Valdimir Pasechnik; Robert Schwartz; Nguyen Van Set; Victor Korshunov; Ian Langford; Tanya Holzmayer; David Wynn-Williams; Steven Mostow; there are more.

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11:24 am, Sep 13, 2009

LordAlexTrebek

This is not news... except for the police and families immediately involved. Please do not lower your standards to the likes of Nancy Grace.

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11:53 am, Sep 13, 2009

nortonclybourn

They're trying to branch out from Missing White Woman stories to Missing Asian Woman. Still no word on any Black or Hispanic Women, I guess none of them are missing.

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1:07 pm, Sep 13, 2009

sophia5

Apparently stories about missing white women get higher ratings,
and sell more laundry detergent.

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9:16 pm, Sep 13, 2009

Uncommonsense

So now that they've found this woman's dead body, are you all so flip and callous?

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12:22 am, Sep 14, 2009

sophia5

Will she turn this story into a six month long Missing Annie Le Mini-Series,
with the flashing and throbbing "Breaking News?"

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9:15 pm, Sep 13, 2009

PhDiva

Would you claim this wasn't news if the victim were white? I guess you think that only the death of white people deserves media attention. You're a disgusting racist.

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12:53 am, Sep 15, 2009

Minstrel

It's news for race relations, now attractive Asian girls who go missing can get national news coverage just like missing attractive white girls.

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1:16 pm, Sep 13, 2009

bbbman

A lab attack parallell at a Canadian university?

http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/story.html?id=54435ab9- 9f40-44d6-9884-011b75b3647b

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4:51 pm, Sep 13, 2009

CarmenOhio

The same Wendy Murphy, and no, she has no credibility to people who are familiar with her rantings about the Duke lacrosse players.
This situation, however, is just awful.

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5:19 pm, Sep 13, 2009

nortonclybourn

Personally, I think Wendy Murphy's idiotic babbling about the long discredited "Satanic Ritual Abuse" hysteria is worse than her slander of the lacrosse players, but I agree she has no credibility as an expert in anything but whipping up hysteria and denigrating due process.

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9:45 pm, Sep 13, 2009

blueguitar00

Eck--what a clunkily written lead!
It should read: "Until yesterday, the suchandushc club had remained (perhaps optimistically) reserved for the wedding of Jonathan W and Annie Le, a Yale graduate who went missing on Tuesday. But this morning, when the wedding was scheduled to occur, the halls of the Long Island club were darkened, in recognition of the fact that it is increasingly unlikely that Ms. Le will be discovered alive."

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10:48 pm, Sep 13, 2009

heartofgold

I agree, this article is terribly written."That cops are bothering to do tests to determine the source of the blood suggests the clothes were not a size XL and that the blood did not come from a lab rat. " That sentence makes no sense. The whole article is written very "clunkily" indeed.

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8:27 am, Sep 14, 2009

mutterhals

I think the fiance did it. Look, I'm a profiler!

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9:10 am, Sep 14, 2009

nortonclybourn

Maybe Wendy can railroad him and ridicule any defense or presumption of innocence. Probably he did it to cover up his rape of strippers and Satanic ritual abuse of preschool kids. Is she really still teaching at New England Law? I thought that she'd given up on the rule of law because it protects rapists and insists on due process and standards of evidence.

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12:07 pm, Sep 14, 2009

iconklee

This is just so incredibly sad. A brilliant woman with an enviable brain --and career was to marry the man of her dreams -- both doctoral candidates whose future was as bright as any could be. Rather than wasting time thinking she could be a "runaway bride" insults the intelligence of bright people everywhere. THIS WOMAN knew her own mind and was the LAST one who would ever runaway.

IMAGINE if the cops had called in the FBI immediately -- if they'd searched the building IMMEDIATELY with bloodhounds and cadaver dogs ... with heat sensing equipment (the body would likely STILL have been WARM). She might have been found on the BRINK of death -- but she WOULD HAVE BEEN FOUND. Saving the family, friends, Yale's and the entire NATION ... five days of unmitigated AGONY.

It is long past time that cops STOPPED dragging their feet looking for MISSING PEOPLE. Regardless what ANYONE THINKS -- every person deserves THE BENEFIT OF THE DOUBT. THERE ARE FAR TOO MANY PSYCHOS out there butchering people. SEARCH IMMEDIATELY & THOROUGHLY.
NO MORE DELAYS.... OR WAITING before issuing Amber Alerts, etc. CONSIDER EVERY LIFE precious - use every resource available to LOOK FOR EVERYONE without delay.

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5:59 pm, Sep 14, 2009

PhDiva

This article is not just poorly written; it's also offensive. We can be sure that the authors wouldn't have tried to turn the murder of a white woman into a bad and unforgivably stupid joke.

This is not merely a poorly conceived and constructed sentence: "That cops are bothering to do tests to determine the source of the blood suggests the clothes were not a size XL and that the blood did not come from a lab rat." It is, more importantly, a failed attempt at humor deliberately triviializes and mocks this young woman's tragic murder by making fun of both her small physical size and her profession as a scientist.

Shame on you. Show some respect to this young woman and delete this sentence. It's disgustingly insensitive.

(As a woman of color who graduated from Yale, it gives me chills to know that if I had been harmed, these talentless hacks would rush to mock my tragedy.)

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12:51 am, Sep 15, 2009

PhDiva

Oops. typo. That one sentence should state: 'It is, more importantly, a failed attempt at humor that deliberately trivializes and mocks this young woman's tragic murder by making fun of both her small physical size and her profession as a scientist.

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6:42 pm, Sep 16, 2009
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An Ivy League Tragedy

by John Connolly

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John Connolly

& Wendy Murphy

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