Subject: NEWS: CT State Dept of Health Will Never Go to Jail for
Participating in Yale's Murders
Date: Sep 17, 2009 9:26 AM
Yeah, and the mass-murderers associated with
Yale will, of course, never turn themselves over
to the FBI and say, "Oh, yeah. We falsified the
diagnostic standard for Lyme in order to help Yale
set up their monopoly on goodies in the blood and
all he free grant money:"
http://www.actionlyme.org/index.htm
CT DOH's Matthew Cartter belongs on the 'To Be
Tortured' List as shown here:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CRYME_DISEASE.htm
One person gets killed at Yale but millions are
killed and tortured to death *BY* Yale, but it never
makes the major newspapers:
http://www.actionlyme.org
=====================================
http://rawstory.com/blog/2009/09/lab-technician-arrested-in-slaying-of-yale-student/
Lab technician arrested in slaying of Yale student
A Yale University lab technician was arrested Thursday in the killing
of a graduate student whose body was found stuffed behind the wall of
a campus research building.
Raymond Clark III was arrested in the slaying of 24-year-old Annie Le,
New Haven Police Chief James Lewis said. He was taken into custody at
a hotel where he was staying in Cromwell, Conn., about about 25 miles
north of New Haven, and his bond is set for $3 million.
Le was found dead Sunday, her body stuffed in the basement wall of the
building where she worked. The state medical examiner had said that Le
had been suffocated.
Authorities released no details on how she died, but the official
cause of "traumatic asphyxiation" could be consistent with a choke
hold or some other form of pressure by a hand or an object, such as a
pipe.
Le had vanished Sept. 8 from the Yale Medical School building about a
mile from the main campus, just days before she was to marry her
college sweetheart, Columbia University graduate student Jonathan
Widawsky.
The investigation has centered on Clark, 24, a Yale animal research
technician. Authorities served Clark, 24, four search warrants this
week and were comparing DNA taken from his hair, fingernails and
saliva with more than 250 pieces of evidence collected at the crime
scene on the Ivy League campus in New Haven and from Clark's
Middletown, Conn., apartment.
Clark's job as an animal services technician at Yale put him in
contact with Le, who worked for a Yale laboratory that conducted
experiments on mice. She was part of a research team headed by her
faculty adviser, Anton Bennett, that focused on enzyme research that
could have implications in cancer, diabetes and muscular dystrophy.
Members of the team have declined to comment on the case or their
work.
As a technician at Yale, Clark helped clean the cages of research
animals used by labs around the Ivy League campus and had other
janitorial duties, police said. The technicians help tend to rodents,
mostly mice, used in experiments and can help with paperwork. Clark,
his fiancee, his sister and his brother-in-law all work for Yale as
animal lab technicians.
Police are not commenting on a possible motive.
Lab technician arrested in slaying of Yale student
RAY HENRY and MICHAEL HILL
AP Features
Sep 17, 2009 07:40 EST
A Yale University lab technician was arrested Thursday in the killing
of a graduate student whose body was found stuffed behind the wall of
a campus research building.
Raymond Clark III was arrested in the slaying of 24-year-old Annie Le,
New Haven Police Chief James Lewis said. He was taken into custody at
a hotel where he was staying in Cromwell, Conn., about about 25 miles
north of New Haven, and his bond is set for $3 million.
Le was found dead Sunday, her body stuffed in the basement wall of the
building where she worked. The state medical examiner had said that Le
had been suffocated.
Authorities released no details on how she died, but the official
cause of "traumatic asphyxiation" could be consistent with a choke
hold or some other form of pressure by a hand or an object, such as a
pipe.
Le had vanished Sept. 8 from the Yale Medical School building about a
mile from the main campus, just days before she was to marry her
college sweetheart, Columbia University graduate student Jonathan
Widawsky.
The investigation has centered on Clark, 24, a Yale animal research
technician. Authorities served Clark, 24, four search warrants this
week and were comparing DNA taken from his hair, fingernails and
saliva with more than 250 pieces of evidence collected at the crime
scene on the Ivy League campus in New Haven and from Clark's
Middletown, Conn., apartment.
Clark's job as an animal services technician at Yale put him in
contact with Le, who worked for a Yale laboratory that conducted
experiments on mice. She was part of a research team headed by her
faculty adviser, Anton Bennett, that focused on enzyme research that
could have implications in cancer, diabetes and muscular dystrophy.
Members of the team have declined to comment on the case or their
work.
As a technician at Yale, Clark helped clean the cages of research
animals used by labs around the Ivy League campus and had other
janitorial duties, police said. The technicians help tend to rodents,
mostly mice, used in experiments and can help with paperwork. Clark,
his fiancee, his sister and his brother-in-law all work for Yale as
animal lab technicians.
Police are not commenting on a possible motive.
"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci