Man held over Yale killing

Police in the US have taken a Yale University animal research technician into custody to collect DNA samples and searched his…

Police in the US have taken a Yale University animal research technician into custody to collect DNA samples and searched his apartment for evidence that might link him to the death of a graduate student who worked in the same lab.

More than 20 police officers and FBI agents searched the apartment of 24-year-old Raymond Clark III last night and led him away him as neighbors leaned over the building's iron railing and cheered.

New Haven Police chief James Lewis described Mr Clark as a person of interest, not a suspect, in the death of Annie Le. The 24-year-old graduate student's body was found stuffed behind a wall in a campus research building on Sunday, the day she was to be married.

Police said Mr Clark would be released after they obtain evidence they need from him and his Middletown apartment. Investigators are hoping to figure out within days whether Mr Clark can be ruled out as the killer.

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Mr Lewis said police were hoping to compare DNA taken from Mr Clark's hair, fingernails and saliva to more than 150 pieces of evidence collected from the crime scene. That evidence may also be compared at a state lab with DNA samples given voluntarily from other people with access to the crime scene.

"We're going to narrow this down," Mr Lewis said. "We're going to do this as quickly as we can."

Police have collected more than 700 hours of videotape and sifted through computer records documenting who entered what parts of the research building where Le was found dead.

Investigators began staking out Mr Clark's home on Monday, a day after they discovered Le's body hidden in the basement of a research building at Yale's medical school. She vanished on September 8th.

Mr Clark shares the apartment with his girlfriend, Jennifer Hromadka, whom he is engaged to marry in December 2011, according to the couple's wedding website.

Police have said Mr Clark is a lab technician at Yale. It's unclear how long he worked there and his supervisors would not comment.

Le worked for a Yale laboratory that conducted experiments on mice, and investigators found her body stuffed in the basement wall of a facility that housed research animals.

Authorities had been tightlipped since Le was reported missing, just a few days before her wedding day. Police say they have ruled out her fiancee, a Columbia University graduate student, as a suspect but have provided little additional information.

The Le family issued a statement yesterday through a family friend, the Rev Dennis Smith, that thanked friends and the Yale community for their support during their grieving. The family also asked for privacy.

Officials had promised yesterday to release an autopsy report that would explain how Le died. But then prosecutors blocked release of the results out of concern that it could hinder the investigation.

The lack of information has led to some measure of fear at Yale, which last dealt with a homicide in 1998 — the sensational and still-unsolved stabbing death of 21-year-old Suzanne Jovin about two miles from campus.

Yale president Richard Levin was more forthcoming to Yale medical students, telling them on Monday that police have narrowed the number of potential suspects to a small pool because building security systems recorded who entered the building and what times they entered. Some 75 video surveillance cameras monitor all doorways.

New Haven police said they would restrict information even more in coming days after an NBC producer was injured yesterday as reporters outside the police department pushed to surround a spokesman during a briefing.

"That this horrible tragedy happened at all is incomprehensible," said Le's roommate, Natalie Powers. "That it happened to her, I think is infinitely more so. It seems completely senseless."

AP