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		Jury selection set in death penalty case 
		of Illinois man charged with murdering Chinese scholar 
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		 [June 03, 2019] 
		By Keith Coffman 
 (Reuters) - Jury selection is set to start 
		on Monday for the trial of an Illinois man charged with kidnapping and 
		murdering a visiting Chinese scholar two years ago, in a case where 
		federal prosecutors say they intend to seek the death penalty.
 
 Brendt Christensen, 29, has been held without bond since his arrest in 
		June 2017 for the abduction and presumed slaying of University of 
		Illinois at Urbana-Champaign student Yingying Zhang, 26, whose body has 
		not been found.
 
 Christensen, a onetime master's student at the university, has been 
		charged with murder, kidnapping and lying to federal investigators. He 
		has pleaded not guilty to all counts.
 
 Jury selection is scheduled to start Monday in U.S. District Court in 
		Peoria, Illinois, and is expected to take a week.
 
 Zhang came from southeastern China to study photosynthesis and crop 
		production at the university two months before she was reported missing 
		on June 9, 2017. A professor and several of her classmates told police 
		they were unable to contact her for hours, authorities said.
 
 Investigators were led to Christensen after surveillance cameras in 
		Urbana recorded Zhang getting into a black car which authorities later 
		traced to him, according to an arrest warrant affidavit filed with the 
		court by an FBI agent.
 
 Under questioning by investigators, Christensen admitted giving Zhang a 
		ride, but said he dropped her off in a residential area a few blocks 
		from where he picked her up.
 
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            Detectives said an examination of Christensen's cell phone showed he 
			had searched the internet for topics such as "Abduction 101" and how 
			to plan a kidnapping, the affidavit said. While under surveillance 
			by law enforcement, he was also heard explaining how he kidnapped 
			the victim, took her back to his apartment and held her against her 
			will, it said.
 In court filings outlining their reasons for seeking the death 
			penalty, prosecutors said Christensen met several of the legal 
			criteria for capital punishment, including murder during the 
			commission of another crime, premeditation, and the crime being 
			"heinous, cruel or depraved."
 
            
			 
			Prosecutors also cited "non-statutory aggravating factors" such as 
			the impact on the victim's family.
 "The victim ... was particularly vulnerable due to her small stature 
			and limited ability to communicate in English," prosecutors said in 
			the filing.
 
 (Reporting by Keith Coffman in Denver; Editing by Diane Craft)
 
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