The night a Chinese billionaire was
accused of rape in Minnesota
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[September 24, 2018]
By Koh Gui Qing and Lawrence Delevingne
MINNEAPOLIS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - With the
Chinese billionaire Richard Liu at her Minneapolis area apartment, a
21-year-old University of Minnesota student sent a WeChat message to a
friend in the middle of the night. She wrote that Liu had forced her to
have sex with him.
“I was not willing,” she wrote in Chinese on the messaging application
around 2 a.m. on August 31. “Tomorrow I will think of a way to escape,”
she wrote, as she begged the friend not to call police.
“He will suppress it,” she wrote, referring to Liu. “You underestimate
his power.”
This WeChat exchange and another one reviewed by Reuters have not been
previously reported. One of the woman’s lawyers, Wil Florin, verified
that the text messages came from her.
Liu, the founder of Chinese ecommerce giant JD.com Inc, was arrested
later that day on suspicion of rape, according to a police report. He
was released without being charged and has denied any wrongdoing through
a lawyer. He has since returned to China and has pledged to cooperate
with Minneapolis police.
Jill Brisbois, a lawyer for Liu, said he maintains his innocence and has
cooperated fully with the investigation.
“These allegations are inconsistent with evidence that we hope will be
disclosed to the public once the case is closed,” Brisbois wrote in an
email response to detailed questions from Reuters.
Loretta Chao, a spokeswoman for JD.com, said that when more information
becomes available, “it will become apparent that the information in this
note doesn’t tell the full story.” She was responding to detailed
questions from Reuters laying out the allegations in the woman’s WeChat
messages and other findings.
Florin Roebig and Hang & Associates, the law firms representing the
woman, said in an email that their client had “fully cooperated” with
police and was also prepared to assist prosecutors. Florin, asked if his
client planned to file a civil suit against Liu, said, “Our legal
intentions with regard to Mr. Liu and others will be revealed at the
appropriate time.”
Representatives for both Liu and the student declined requests from
Reuters to interview their clients.
The police department has turned over the findings of its initial
investigation into the matter to local prosecutors for a decision on
whether to bring charges against Liu. There is no deadline for making
that decision, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office.
The Minneapolis police and the county attorney declined to comment on
detailed questions from Reuters.
Reuters has not been able to determine the identity of the woman, which
has not been made public. But her WeChat messages to two friends, and
interviews with half a dozen people with knowledge of the events that
unfolded over a two-day period provide new information about the
interactions between Liu and the woman, a student from China attending
the University.
The case has drawn intense scrutiny globally and in China, where the
tycoon, also known as Liu Qiangdong, is celebrated for his
rags-to-riches story. Liu, 45, is married to Zhang Zetian, described by
Chinese media as 24-years old, who has become a celebrity in China and
works to promote JD.com.
As the second-largest ecommerce website in the country after Alibaba
Group Holding Ltd, the company has attracted investors such as Walmart
Inc, Alphabet Inc's Google and China's Tencent Holdings.
Liu holds nearly 80 percent of the voting rights in JD.com. Shares in
the company have fallen about 15 percent since Liu’s arrest and are down
about 36 percent for the year.
"IT WAS A TRAP"
Liu was in Minneapolis briefly to attend a business doctoral program run
jointly by the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management
and China’s elite Tsinghua University, according to the University of
Minnesota. The doctoral program is “directed at high-level executives”
from China.
Liu threw a dinner party on August 30 for about two dozen people,
including around 20 men, at Origami Uptown, a Japanese restaurant in
Minneapolis where wine, sake and beer flowed freely, according to
restaurant staff and closed circuit video footage reviewed by Reuters.
Liu, who Forbes estimates is worth about $6.7 billion, ordered sashimi
by pointing his finger at the first item on the menu and sweeping it all
the way down to indicate he wanted everything, one restaurant employee
said. The group brought in at least one case of wine from an outside
liquor store to drink along with the dinner, according to the restaurant
staff.
Security video footage from the restaurant shows the group toasted each
other throughout the night.
Later the woman told a second friend in one of the messages that she
felt pressured to drink that evening.
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JD.com founder Richard Liu, also known as Qiang Dong Liu, is
pictured in this undated handout photo released by Hennepin County
Sheriff's Office, obtained by Reuters September 23, 2018. Hennepin
County Sheriff's Office/Handout via REUTERS
“It was a trap,” she wrote, later adding “I was really drunk.”
The party ended around 9:30 p.m. The tab: $2,200, the receipt shows.
One inebriated guest was helped out of the restaurant by three of
his associates, according to the restaurant security video footage.
Liu and the woman then headed to a house in Minneapolis, according
to one person familiar with the matter. Another source said that the
house had been rented by one of Liu's classmates in the academic
program to give the class a place to network, smoke, drink whiskey
and have Chinese food every night.
But they did not go in. Liu and the student were seen outside the
house before Liu pulled her into his hired car, a person with
knowledge of the incident said.
In the WeChat message to one of her friends sent hours later, the
student said Liu “started to touch me in the car.”
“Then I begged him not to… but he did not listen,” she wrote.
They ended up back at her apartment, according to sources with
knowledge of the matter.
Reuters could not determine what happened over the next two hours.
According to the police report, the alleged rape occurred at around
1 a.m.
The woman subsequently reached a fellow University of Minnesota
student who notified the police, according to two sources and her
WeChat messages.
Minneapolis police came to her apartment early that morning while
Liu was there, but made no arrests, another source familiar with the
situation said. Reuters could not determine exactly what occurred
during the police visit, but the source said the woman declined to
press charges in Liu’s presence.
In a WeChat message with one of her friends, she asked her friend
why the billionaire would be interested in “an ordinary girl” like
her.
“If it was just me, I could commit suicide immediately,” she wrote.
“But I’m afraid that my parents will suffer.”
By Friday morning, she also wrote to one of her two friends that she
had told several people about what had happened, including the
police, a few friends and at least one teacher. She wrote that she
would keep her bed sheets. “Evidence cannot be thrown away,” she
wrote.
On Friday afternoon, the student went to a hospital to have a sexual
assault forensic test, the source said.
Police officers arrived at a University of Minnesota office shortly
after an emergency call around 9 p.m that night. The student was
present at the office, alongside school representatives, and accused
Liu of rape, the source said.
Representatives for the University of Minnesota declined to comment
on detailed questions from Reuters.
Liu came to the university office around 11 p.m. while police were
there, according to the person familiar with the matter. As an
officer handcuffed him, Liu showed no emotion. “I need an
interpreter,” he said, according to the source.
Liu was released about 17 hours later. Minneapolis police have said
previously that they can only hold a person without charges for 36
hours.
Within days, Liu was back in China, which has no extradition treaty
with the United States.
“Liu has returned to work in Beijing and he continues to lead the
company. There is no interruption to JD.com’s day-to-day business
operations,” Loretta Chao, the JD.com spokeswoman, told Reuters.
(Additional reporting by Blake Morrison and Christine Chan in New
York, Adam Jourdan and Engen Tham in Shanghai, and Cate Cadell in
Beijing; Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Edward Tobin)
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