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Yale lab tech pleads not guilty in student killing

An animal research technician charged with killing a Yale graduate student has pleaded not guilty.
Raymond Clark III
Raymond Clark III, 24, is led into court in New Haven, Conn., last September for a hearing in the murder of Annie Le.Douglas Healey / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

An animal research technician charged with killing a Yale University graduate student pleaded not guilty Tuesday to murder and a new charge of felony murder.

Raymond Clark III is accused of strangling 24-year-old Annie Le, of Placerville, Calif., in September, five days before her planned wedding. He appeared in New Haven Superior Court on Tuesday in an orange jumpsuit with his hands and legs shackled to enter the pleas and to waive his right to a probable cause hearing at which he could have challenged whether prosecutors had enough evidence to try him.

Clark, 24, has been jailed in lieu of $3 million bail on the murder charge. Prosecutors on Tuesday revealed that they were adding the felony murder count.

Felony murder is alleged when someone dies during the commission of a felony, such as robbery, burglary, kidnapping and sexual assault, or an attempted felony. Under Connecticut's felony murder law, prosecutors don't have to prove that a killing was intentional.

Details of the new charge, including what the alleged felony was, weren't released. Prosecutors said in court they would give details later.

Clark's attorney declined to comment. A prosecutor declined to comment, citing an ongoing investigation.

Murder and felony murder each carry a sentence of 25 to 60 years in prison.

Le's body was found stuffed behind a research lab wall in September on the day she was supposed to get married on Long Island. An autopsy concluded she was strangled, but the motive remains unclear.

Two days before Clark was arrested, investigators found blood "in plain view" on the kitchen floor near the entrance to his apartment, according to search warrants. The warrants do not indicate the source of the blood.

Authorities took plastic door panels and carpeting with "blood-like stains" from the car in which Clark was riding in the hours after Le's disappearance.

Police say a green-ink pen under Le's body had her blood and Clark's DNA. Police have said Clark signed into the secure building with a green pen on Sept. 8, the day Le disappeared.

They had also said DNA from Le and Clark was on a bloody sock found hidden in a ceiling.

Court papers previously released describe a bloody crime scene and Clark's efforts to scrub floors. Investigators say Clark tried to hide a box of cleaning wipes that later was found to have traces of Le's blood.

Clark had a scratch on his face and left arm that he said came from a cat, investigators wrote in court papers.