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NEW HAVEN, CT - A New Haven Superior Court judge upheld the $20 million bond for Qinxuan Pan, the MIT scientist on trial for the murder of Yale graduate student Kevin Jiang of West Haven earlier this year, the Hartford Courant reported. The state Supreme Court wanted a review of what's reported as a "potentially record-setting amount."
The 30-year-old Pan was on the run for months after the February slaying, hunted by US Marshals and found in Alabama with almost $20,000 in cash and a family member's passport. The prosecutor argued that Pan was an extraordinary flight risk, it was reported.
But also Wednesday, the Courant reported Jiang was "executed with five gunshots to his face and head, plus additional gunshots down his torso, one arm and one leg, Senior Assistant State's Attorney Stacey Miranda revealed for the first time Wednesday."
Jiang, 26, a U. S. Army veteran, was engaged to be married to a woman who Pan also knew from MIT.
Pan is being held at the Cheshire Correctional Institution.
A second New Haven judge has ruled the MIT researcher accused of murdering a Yale grad student earlier this spring should remain held in lieu of $20 million bond. https://t.co/GmBqjdA3u0— Hartford Courant (@hartfordcourant) July 28, 2021 Read the full story from the Hartford Courant here.
Read more from Patch >> Person Of Interest Identified In Yale Student's Killing: PD
US Marshals In On Hunt For 'Person-Of-Interest' In Yale Homicide
Arrest Warrant Secured Charging Qinxuan Pan With Murder: PD
Murder Suspect Qinxan Pan Arrested In Alabama By Federal Agents
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