Thursday, September 17, 2009

Raymond Clark III Facebook

Raymond Clark III Facebook
Raymond Clark arrest Raymond Clark III Facebook. Finally Raymond Clark, a lab technician, has been arrested for possible involvement in killing Anne Le, the graduate student at the Yale University. He was under suspicion for the last several days. The last video showing Anne Le alive was that of Anne Le entering university laboratory. Earlier there were reports that there were beating marks on the body of Raymond Clark. In fact these were taken as signs of struggle that might have taken place between him and Anne Le. These marks made him a suspect in the eye of law enforcement agencies.
Meanwhile policing has been substantially increased in the university campus following the disappearance and later recovering of dead body of Anne Le. Her body was found stuffed in a wall within the campus. Le was set to marry this past Sunday, the same day her body was discovered. Reports say that Raymond Clark was led out of a Super 8 Motel in handcuffs and placed in an unmarked police car about 8:30 a.m. Traffic was halted on two major boulevards outside the Cromwell, Conn., motel as Clark was transported to the New Haven police stationhouse.
James Lewis police chief of New haven following his arrest said, “Based on numerous interviews, forensic evidence, and information learned from viewing video surveillance, detectives have secured the arrest warrant for Clark”. Police officials say that Anne Le was not sexually assaulted before her tragic killing.

Constitution Day 2009

Constitution Day 2009
Constitution Day 2009 As you know, federal law requires that all high schools, colleges and universities that receive federal funds hold an educational event about the Constitution on Constitution Day, September 17. Sunnylands Classroom, a project of the Annenberg Foundation Trust at Sunnylands, has created classroom-ready digital resources to help schools celebrate Constitution Day. The enclosed films are being provided at no cost. Please share this information with other social studies or civics teacher at your school.
A Conversation on the Constitution with Justices Stephen G. Breyer, Sandra Day O’Connor, and Anthony M. Kennedy: Freedom of Speech, in which the Justices discuss students’ free speech rights and the landmark cases Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District and Morse v. Frederick with a group of high school students A Conversation on the Constitution with Justices Stephen G. Breyer, Sandra Day O’Connor, and Anthony M. Kennedy: Jury Service, which explores the history and responsibilities of juries and the role they play in the United States judicial system
FAQs: Juries, a series of 11 short video segments featuring constitutional experts, lawyers and judges discussing the importance of jury service, types of juries, qualifications for jury service and what to expect as a juror The Constitution Project: Korematsu and Civil Liberties, a documentary on the landmark Japanese internment case, Korematsu v. United States (1944), concerning the constitutionality of the presidential executive order 9066 during World War II The Constitution Project: Yick Wo and the Equal Protection Clause, a documentary on Yick Wo v. Hopkins (1886), in which the U.S. Supreme Court held that non-citizens had due process rights under the 14th Amendment

Raymond Clark Arrest

Raymond Clark Arrest
A Yale lab technician was arrested and charged with murder Thursday morning in the killing of Annie Le, the grad student whose body was found in the basement wall of a university building after she was strangled, authorities said. Raymond Clark III was taken into custody at about 8:10 a.m. ET at a Super 8 motel in Cromwell, Connecticut, according to New Heaven police. The 24-year-old had spent the night there after being released Wednesday following his submission to DNA testing.
Police matched DNA from Clark to evidence found at the crime scene on the university where the medical examiner said Le was suffocated. Clark and Le worked in the same building, but little beyond that was known about whether there was any connection or relationship between them. Le, a pharmacology student, was last seen alive on September 8. Undercover investigators were massed in the parking lot overnight - and one motorist passing by shouted, "Get him, get him!" at police.
Clark apparently decamped to the motel after cops hauled him from his home in handcuffs Tuesday, obtained DNA samples and let him go. While police were waiting for DNA results, they had gathered circumstantial evidence. Clark reportedly failed a lie detector test and had scratch marks on his chest. And computer records from Yale suggested he was the last person to see Le. Swipe cards Le and Clark used to move through different areas of college buildings showed they were in the same room shortly after 10 a.m. on Sept. 8, The Hartford Courant reported. Le, 24, wasn't seen alive after that, and her card wasn't used again. But Clark swiped into the area where she was found strangled five days later in a crawlspace, a law enforcement source told the paper.
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