Murder With My Husband - 194. The Stanford Killer - Annie Le
Episode Date: December 11, 2023In this episode, Payton delves into the case of Annie Le, a brilliant woman who disappeared on Stanford's campus. Social Media, Discount codes, and More: https://linktr.ee/murderwithmyhusband “Mur...der at Yale” by Stella Sands NYTimes.com - https://www.nytimes.com/topic/person/annie-le ABC News - https://abcnews.go.com/US/annie-le-suspect-raymond-clark-released-giving-dna/story?id=8588970 TheCrimeWire.com - https://thecrimewire.com/true-crime/Lab-Murder-The-Brutal-Slaying-of-Annie-Le-A-Yale-University-Student Oxygen.com - https://www.oxygen.com/a-wedding-and-a-murder/why-yale-student-annie-le-murdered-before-wedding Yale Daily News - https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2009/09/14/body-identified-as-annie-le-grd-13/ NBC News - https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna32810822 Medium.com - https://kympasqualini.medium.com/lab-murder-the-brutal-slaying-of-annie-le-a-yale-university-st udent-58273c9f99bd NY Post - https://nypost.com/2009/09/21/yale-grads-bones-broken-to-fit-in-hole/ Fox News - https://radio.foxnews.com/2023/05/30/murder-in-the-ivy-league-the-death-of-annie-le/ Middletown Press - https://www.middletownpress.com/news/article/BOOK-ON-ANNIE-LE-SLAYING-Possible-motives-11864959.php The Guardian - https://www.theguardian.com/world/2009/sep/17/annie-le-raymond-clark-charged CNN.com - http://www.cnn.com/2011/CRIME/03/17/connecticut.yale.murder.plea/index.html Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey everybody, welcome back to the podcast. This is Murder with My Husband. I'm Hayden
Marlon.
No, I'm Garrett Marlon.
And he's the husband.
I'm the husband. I can't see you.
I know it's weird, right?
I just realized that how am I gonna
Well, if you are watching on YouTube you might see
Something different going on here And if you're listening on audio we will explain it
Garrett and I went to pumpkin city Christmas trees and
We found this really super mini Charlie Brown tree and flocked it black just for the set.
Black it is a fool on black Christmas tree.
Real tree.
I know what you're thinking.
Well is that the Christmas spirit?
Yes it is.
It is the Christmas spirit and it looks amazing.
And we decorated it but one of my favorite things is a couple years ago, a listener actually sent us a Christmas ornament. And so we have it here on the tree. It's our little people and
on the back it says, I love it and I hate it. But we just thought this year, you know, we might
as well get into the Christmas spirit with a black tree. Hold on, don't skip this because
you're going to want to hear it. When Garrett and I started this podcast, we had no idea
what it would become.
And honestly, it's just a train that has run away from us and we cannot even believe how
big this community has grown.
With that being said, it gives us a lot of cool opportunities.
And one thing that we really want to do this year was have MWMH help out some families.
I know holidays can be hard and we really want everyone to just have a good time this year.
So we thought that we could maybe help out some families
this year around the holidays.
We know it can be hard and we just want everyone
to have a peaceful holiday season.
And so that being said, we are going to, like I said,
help some families out.
And what we are going to do is there's
going to be a Google form, whether you're listening on YouTube or on audio, there will be a link down below
that has that form, you can click it, you can suggest any
families that you may know, any individuals that you may know
that need help around the holidays and please only suggest it if you know that these families need help
because we want to make sure that we are able to go through the list that we hopefully get from you guys.
And I know it's going to be hard,
but choose a few of those who need help
around this holiday season.
And like you said, please only submit people
who you really think could use it.
We really want it to matter.
And it can be a person, it can be a family.
We'll have a little section for you to tell us a little bit
about why you think this person could use the help.
And we are going to go through every single submission and really make sure that this
gift goes to those who need it.
And we aren't going to be able to help everybody.
Like Peyton said, we're only going to be able to do a few people, whether it's money, Christmas
gifts, we don't know what that looks like yet.
Peyton and I are still figuring that out.
But again, we don't know what that looks like yet. Peyton and I are still figuring that out, but again, we're really excited.
And because of you guys listening and because of those who paid a listen to our extra
episodes on Apple and Patreon, we're able to do this.
So we are really excited.
I mean, essentially, this is coming from all of us, not just us.
So 100% okay.
That being said, care, I think we are ready for your 10 seconds.
Update on the marathon training. I'm still running. I'm still hanging in there.
My body hurts everywhere. That's okay. I'm pushing through it. I got some recovery tools in.
I think I'm gonna be okay. Like the more I run, it's hard, but I'm feeling more and more comfortable.
And I know 26.2 miles is a lot, but I'm getting there.
And I'm slowly convincing Peyton to do it with me, right, babe?
Nope.
Slowly convincing Peyton to do it with me.
It's kind of all I've got for an update on the 10 seconds
besides this black Christmas tree I have next to me.
Thanks to everyone who's sending me tips
and recommendations for the marathon.
I feel like I'm gonna start it
and all I'm gonna think about is I have to finish this
or all of our listeners are gonna be so disappointed in me.
Hopefully that motivates me to finish it.
Otherwise, I'm just gonna be a huge disappointment.
Anyways, we love you all,
and let's get into today's episode.
Our sources for this episode are Murder at Yale
by Stella Sands, New York Times.com, ABC News,
The Crime Wire, Oxygen, YELL Daily News, NBCNews, Medium.com, New York Times dot com ABC news to crime wire oxygen. Y'all daily news NBC news medium dot com New York post Fox news,
Middletown press the guardian and CNN dot com.
So many of us are familiar with that pre COVID work environment in the days
before work from home.
The norm was to trudge into an office five days a week from nine to five
while we mingled with people that were for all intents and purposes, strangers.
Sure, you might spend the occasional evening sharing a beer or two over happy hour, but
a lot of the time we don't really know what goes on with our co-workers after hours.
What they go home and complain to their partner or roommate about what they do with their
spare time, what plagues them as they lie awake in bed at night.
We like to think that we can trust our employer,
that they've done their due diligence
and hired people that play nice with others.
But how can you ever be sure?
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
in 2020 alone, there were close to 400 workplace homicides
in the US, which means someone is out there right now
sharing a workspace with a dangerous individual. And like today's victim, they
probably have no idea. So to kick off today's case, I want to introduce you to a
young woman named Annie Lay. Born on July 3rd, 1985, Annie grew up in a small northern California town
called Placerville, in a tight-knit family of first-generation Vietnamese Americans.
Raised mostly by her aunt and uncle, Annie and her brother Chris, along with their three
cousins, all shared a modest ranch-style home nestled in a quiet wooded neighborhood. But from a young age,
Annie was eager to stand out to make her family proud of her accomplishments. They'd worked so
hard to give her the opportunities that she had, she wanted to give a little something back.
So in high school, Annie worked hard enough to become a member of the National Honour Society,
which eventually turned into valedictorian.
But Annie wasn't just wildly intelligent. She was also quite popular, winning superlatives
like best of the best, and most likely to be the next Einstein in the yearbook.
During her graduation speech, the 4 foot 1190 pound Annie stood before her classmates with
the confidence of a towering CEO.
She wore her heart on her sleeve, laying out her hopes and dreams for the future.
With a passion for cellular biology, Annie told her classmates she was planning to become
a laboratory pathologist and was prepared to spend the next decade getting her MD.
Can you imagine in high school being like, yeah. We're just gonna say that.
I, gosh, the last thing I was thinking,
I wasn't good at school first of all,
but the last thing I was thinking in high school was,
I'm gonna be a doctor, I'm gonna go get my freaking MD,
like that's insane.
I know.
A laboratory pathologist, I wouldn't even have known
that that was a career choice.
I would need her, but you know what?
That's what I'm talking about.
We need people like that.
So the problem was, despite Annie's incredible academic record, she didn't have an easy
time receiving the scholarships that she needed to make the future she wanted a reality.
It's expensive.
102 applications later.
Annie had cobbled together enough money to finally get herself into college.
Okay. How long did that take to fill out 102 applications for scholarships?
I don't even want to know. Her first choice was Princeton University because of its unprecedented
science program, but when Annie sent through her application in the spring of 2003,
she was met with a rejection
letter. And I also have to mention here, so she gets rejected from Princeton, right? And something
funny, and I'm including this because I want you to get a picture of Annie's personality.
After getting rejected, she goes and applies to a couple backup colleges, and then she also sends
a picture of her butt to the Dean of admissions at Princeton.
This was just the kind of quirky, yes, she was like screw you, screw you.
Like just her butt?
Yes.
I don't even know, okay.
This was just the kind of quirky upbeat character Annie always was.
According to a fellow student of hers, she was the kind of girl who would quote, where five inch heels while doing mouse surgeries, eat fried chicken and not gain a pound and use smiley
faces in her presentations and not lose respect because of it.
You think that sending a picture of her butt would get her in the school? You know what I'm
saying? It would be the opposite. She should have done it before she submitted her application.
I mean, if I'm going to say that it probably was a picture that looked more like
on Greece when they moon them.
Yeah, the more moaning than it was like a sexy picture for sure.
So Annie knew she had a bright future ahead of her wherever she ended up,
which at least for undergrad became the University of Rochester located in Western
in New York State right along Lake Ontario.
So Annie packed herour Bags said
goodbye to California and traveled 2600 miles east to New York State, prepared to brave
the harsh east coast winters while beginning her degree in cell development biology.
So what Annie maybe didn't expect to find at the University of Rochester was the love of her
life.
After forming a close friendship with fellow student Jonathan Woodowski, the two slowly
fell madly in love with one another.
But come 2007, Annie had finished her undergrad degree and was searching for the perfect
school to continue her graduate studies.
Jonathan had been accepted to Columbia in New York City
to pursue a master's in applied physics and mathematics.
But Annie had her sights set on a different program.
She wanted to go to Yale in New Haven, Connecticut,
where she could get her doctorate in pharmacology.
The two knew the next several years
wouldn't be easy on their relationship,
but they also knew that they wanted to stay together.
So they agreed to go their separate ways academically, but vowed to stay together by keeping in touch
daily, and visiting one another whenever their studies allowed, which wasn't that difficult.
A trip between their two schools wouldn't be more than two hours one way.
So in September 2007, Annie begrudgingly said her goodbyes to Jonathan and began her journey on the Ivy League campus.
So founded back in 1701.
Yell is somewhat of a time capsule in the town of New Haven.
With around 260 historic buildings, gorgeous, wrought iron gates, and treeline paths,
the campus is a picturesque, if not a distracting,
place to study. Today, its enrollment count is about 14,000 students.
Whoa, that's small. It does seem small, huh?
It does seem small, but I mean it's yellow.
That's true, okay.
But as former Yale president Richard C. Levin once said, the campus was, quote, large enough
to be interesting, yet small enough to be friendly.
Which was why Annie lay felt right at home,
nestled comfortably in her new living quarters.
And like many Yale students,
Annie didn't venture far off of campus too often.
The neighborhoods surrounding Yale
had their fair share of crime, drugs, gangs,
the occasional shootings.
Although there were many people in the New Haven area who came to the campus to find employment
at the university.
Even today, Yale is New Haven's biggest employer.
But as might be the case with any college town, the locals had their issues with the constantly
expanding campus and the wealth and privilege that these students brought
to their middle-class town.
You know, things like increased traffic, gentrification,
drunken college kids partying into the night,
that kind of stuff.
There was sort of an unspoken rift
between the university and those that lived in New Haven
full-time.
Interesting.
One that Annie was seemingly aware of of because campus safety was always an issue at the forefront
of Annie's mind.
In fact, she had written an article for the Student Magazine offering tips on how to avoid
becoming a victim of a dangerous crime.
In the article, Annie acknowledged that on campus thefts were on the rise, some of which
included violent confrontations and
it was important to be aware of your surroundings.
After including interviews with the Yale Police Department's Chief of Police, Annie concluded
her article with one foreboding statement.
It read,
New Haven is a city, and all cities have their perils, but with little street smarts, one can
avoid becoming another
statistic.
And unfortunately, Annie would soon learn it just wasn't that simple.
Over the next year, Annie buckled down and focused on her studies, as well as maintaining her
long-distance relationship with her boyfriend Jonathan.
In fact, during one visit in 2008, he got down on one knee and asked Annie if she would spend the rest of her life with him and
She was over the moon eager to start planning their wedding immediately
The couple set a date and a location Sunday September 13th
2009 in a gazebo overlooking a pond in New York
But Annie didn't let the wedding planning get in the way of her research projects. By her second year, she had already begun working on her dissertation topic.
The effects certain proteins have on metabolic diseases, such as diabetes or cancer, which
meant that Annie spent a lot of her free time in yells state-of-the-art medical building
at 10 Amistead Street, about a 20-minute walk just outside of campus.
Most of her time in that lab was spent monitoring and testing the effects of different medicines
on mice and rats.
But the way Annie saw it was all for a good cause.
Her ultimate goal was to find new ways to cure any of these debilitating conditions.
So basically, Annie is doing the work that I can't do.
So come September 8th 2009, Annie was less than a week away from walking down the aisle.
With all of the final details in place, Annie calmed her nerves by distracting herself with her research.
That morning, the first chill of fall was already descending upon the campus. As the leaves were preparing
to change their colors, Annie lay was packing her books and hopping aboard the campus
shuttle for her office at Stirling Hall just a few blocks down from 10 Amstad. Annie put
her books down on her desk and finished a bit of homework, and afterwards she grabbed
her magnetic ID card to go check on the status of her mice over Amestad.
Like she'd done several times before, Annie left her purse, wallet, and cell phone in
her office, and locked the door.
She planned to be back in less than an hour or two.
It was around 9 a.m. when video surveillance captured Annie entering the Amestad building.
A building with one of the most intense security systems on-yell property.
There were more than 70 different cameras focused on the complex.
This is what I'm talking about.
This is my type of case.
And the only way to get in and around the inside of the building was by using one of those
magnetic ID cards.
This was mainly due to the neighborhood and the fact that the medical research building
had been targeted before by animal rights activists looking to
Free the lab subjects got it. Yep. So after entering the building Annie's ID card swiped into her professor Bennett's lab
It's room G 13. She put on her white lab coat checked on the mice in their cages and began riding up that day's observation report
But around 12.40 pm, a fire alarm went off
in the 10 Amestead building
and hundreds were forced to evacuate,
waiting a safe distance outside for the all clear
to go back in.
And many presumed Annie was among them,
but come 5 pm, Annie's housemates
who'd been awaiting her return
were starting to wonder about her. Interesting. It wasn't unheard of for Annie's housemates who'd been awaiting her return or starting to wonder about her.
It wasn't unheard of for Annie to get caught up in the lab and spend several hours longer
on her work than initially promised.
However when 7pm rolled around and her roommates began trying her cell phone to no avail, they
started to worry.
It got even worse when they realized no one had heard from Annie for most of the day, including her fiance, Jonathan, who she was set to marry in just a week.
Once 10pm came with no sign of Annie, her roommates decided it was time to alert campus
police. The roommates mentioned that not only had no one heard from her all day, she'd
also missed her late afternoon class, which was highly unlike her. What was even more alarming was the fact that Annie was just a few days
away from getting married, like I said. She wouldn't just up and disappear like that.
When campus police hear this, they think, yeah, maybe. I mean, it's not completely unheard
of for someone to get cold feet. I feel like it's so hard because it's probably just
the stories that we do, obviously, because we're a true crime podcast. I feel like it's so hard because it's probably just the stories that we do.
Obviously, because we're a true crime podcast. It seems like every time we do a case like this,
the police or campus police say the same thing, you know, it's just this pattern of,
oh, they probably ran away. They're probably just decompressing blah, blah, blah. But I mean,
I know there's plenty of opposite times where people report it and they go and help.
It just, again, you know what I'm saying?
Well, I will say in this case,
the theory falls to the wayside pretty quickly.
When the police check on Annie's office
over at the Sterling building,
because there they find that her cell phone,
purse, and wallet are still there.
Okay, good.
Knowing that Annie was planning to head over to Amistad, they spent that night and into
the following day closely examining footage from the outside of the building.
So they're like, this was her kind of whereabouts.
So we're going to look.
Thank goodness there's footage.
Well come the next day, news of Annie's disappearance was already catching on while
police were combing the footage.
On Wednesday, September 9th, Annie's faculty advisor reported that
she hadn't shown up for work at the lab that morning. Plus, she'd felt to notify the
eight other students in her group of her absence, which was the usual protocol. And when
Annie missed more classes that afternoon, the whole campus kind of started to whisper.
Had Annie run off with someone else, was she kidnapped or was the truth even worse.
They need to hire me to start combing through footage. I'll get that done in like two hours.
Later that day after the police had completed combing through footage of the exterior of Amistad,
they discovered a grainy shot of Annie. She was entering the building in the same
clothes that she left the house in the morning. She went missing carrying some sort of boxy looking object. Problem was they never found another image of Annie leaving the building.
So was it possible the four foot eleven brunette had been lost somewhere in the crowd during
that fire drill and never made it back inside? Because if you remember, everyone exited the building at one point
and they couldn't find her exiting it. But I mean, that was a lot of people leaving. For now, police
found it important to zero in on Amstad. Since as of now, it was the last place she was seen. So
they searched through the parking lots, sifted through trash cans and dumpsters, but nothing turned up.
By 7.30 p.m. that evening, with still no sign from the 24-year-old
Annie, campus police officially declared her a missing person. By Friday afternoon, September 11th,
Annie should have been getting a manicure preparing for her weekend wedding. Instead, the entire town
of New Haven was on high alert searching for the missing bride. A local news outlet offered a $10,000 reward for any information pertaining to Annie's case.
Jonathan had come up from New York to help assist in the search for his soon-to-be wife
and a full-on manhunt had begun in earnest.
And it had been planned because what are the chances there is a fire alarm that goes off?
There's enough commotion so she goes.
The cameras can't see her.
You know, if there's that many, you know what I'm saying?
Like it had to, I mean, obviously you know it.
But it had to have been planned.
He had to have targeted her here.
She is.
There's no way with that many cameras you can get away with this so easily.
Carrots series.
My theories.
By Saturday, campus police were joined by
Connecticut State Police, combing every inch of 10 amstad for signs of the
missing Annie. Every door, locker, bathroom and lab were scanned when one small
detail caught in investigators eye. A ceiling tile that looked askew. No,
break-in-way.
Almost as if it had been tampered with.
When one detective removed the tile and reached into the space above it,
they found a white sock with what appeared to be blood stains,
and a single rubber glove.
I mean, this is out of a movie.
Yes.
After bagging and tagging the items as evidence,
police uncovered even more disturbing
signs that they might be honing in on Annie Lase fate, including a pair of work boots in the locker
room that appeared to be blood stains and missing a shoelace. They also discovered a pair of scrubs
with blood on the shirt pocket. In one room, they found what appeared to be aspirated blood stains on a wall,
and in Annie's lab, another sign of blood splatter that someone had tried to clean up. Here's the thing.
This is a lab, right? And there's a lot of animal testing going on. So detectives have to ask
themselves, is this blood they're finding even human? Oh, 100%. Well, that's what DNA testing is for. But unfortunately, that's a bit of a waiting game.
Yeah. So come Sunday, September 13th, Annie should have been slipping into her wedding dress and putting the final touches on her
vows. That's horrible. Her family should have been preparing to walk her down the aisle as she and Jonathan danced the afternoon away.
Instead, police were back in the halls of Amstad this time with a K9 unit to search for any
new clues about the missing brides whereabouts.
And unfortunately, that day, they found the biggest clue of them all.
At around 4.30 pm, officers entered a locker room on the lower level of the facility and
were met with a disturbing odor.
Now the season detectives knew
this wasn't just some old socks and gym shorts.
They were definitely smelling a decomposing body.
All right, I just have to stop
because there has to be,
and I'm hoping we get to the point where
there has to be cameras that catch someone
lugging all this stuff around.
It just seems impossible that
this can all be done with this many cameras and the
person's not caught or seen. So I hope we get to that point.
So one of the dogs followed the scent to a toilet and began barking towards the wall
behind it. There was a panel about the size of a computer screen which detectives removed
to find an 8 inch space used to hide the piping.
Only on that piping and insulation was a bunch of blood stains.
And how does this person know all these crevices and spaces?
Right.
And as they moved in deeper, they found the source.
The dead body of a young woman still wearing surgical gloves
with a stained lab coat and one white sock.
Her body had been so contorted, so mangled to fit
into this tiny space that she was hardly recognizable, but there was no denying
this was the missing Annie lay. And I just want you to think about how
horrifying her missing sock is up in the ceiling. Her body is contorted into this
tiny space.
There's blood everywhere. After Annie's body was analyzed by the state medical examiner,
they found that her cause of death was traumatic esphyxiation by neck compression. So in
other words, Annie had likely been choked to death. They also discovered that her jaw
and her collarbone had been broken, which they believed happened before Annie had died.
Her bra had been pushed up and her underwear was around her ankles, and it appeared as if her attacker had left his DNA behind.
Which meant they had a pretty good chance of figuring out who killed Annie lay. especially thanks to the location where Annie was discovered because remember the
Amstead building requires a badge to each room. So not only was it likely this
person had a badge and worked inside of the building, maybe another student, a
professor, even a janitor, it was also likely that the key card system recorded
when they entered each room. But here's the thing,
police didn't seal off Amstad until after they found Annie
Lay's body.
So people were moving in and out of the building before this.
So for six full days, while she was missing,
people were coming and going,
literally contaminating a crime scene.
Although to be fair, police claimed that they weren't aware
that they were dealing with a homicide at the time
It was just a missing person's case. The other complication was while the security system outside of Amistad was seemingly very tight
There were no surveillance cameras inside the building. You know
No one learns
No one ever learns. What year is this again? 2009. Okay, so I mean we're in an age
where yeah there's a lot of cameras but it's also not 2023 where there is cameras everywhere.
But it does seem odd that they have so many cameras outside the building to protect
and then nothing inside. Gosh. Plus most of the rooms were soundproof, which meant anyone screaming for help probably
wouldn't have been heard.
But there was one witness who came forward on September 9th, four days before Annie was
found to say he saw something that might be useful to the investigation.
So we're kind of jumping back in time.
Yeah, a little bit.
So let's back up to that Wednesday morning before police found Annie Leisbody.
That day, they're still combing every inch of Amstad
looking for evidence when one of the lab techs
approaches officer Jennifer Garcia
with the Yale Police Department.
He says he has some information about Annie.
The day before, the last day she was seen,
he saw Annie leaving the building at around 12.30 pm
right before the fire alarm went off.
She was carrying a notebook and two bags of mouse food,
but he didn't speak to her or ask her where she was going.
So Detective Garcia takes note of this
and she figures at least now they have a window of time frame
where they can recheck those cameras,
maybe see if they spot Annie leaving.
Now the following day Garcia returns to Amstead with Officer Sabrina Wood and a team of
others, and this time something even more alarming is brought to their attention. That day,
a different coworker of Annie's goes up to Wood to say, hey, there's something I think
you need to check out. She leads Wood over to a box of wipes on a steel
push cart and says, doesn't that look like blood to you? And it absolutely does. So would
pages the other members of her team to come take samples. But as she waits for them to arrive,
this lab tech comes over and starts chatting them up. Meanwhile, he's leaning on this steel cart
trying to move that box of wipes out of their line of sight.
And then strangely, he starts mopping the area around the cart.
Now I have no idea why this tech was even allowed in a potential crime scene while they were
investigating.
The whole thing just reads very strange to me and very unprofessional because I'm just screaming
while researching like, stop him. Like what's going on.
But on the other hand, it ends up leading them to their first real suspect once they find
her body, right?
Because surprise, surprise.
This tech is the same one who told Garcia the day before that he saw Annie leave the
building before the fire alarm.
Big, big, big red flags.
His name was Raymond Clark.
So who was Raymond Clark?
Raymond was a 24-year-old handsome former athlete, a star pitcher and quarterback for his
high school teams.
What the freak?
The kind of guy people described as a bit shy but also extremely personable with a great
sense of humor.
Despite graduating from high school with honors, Raymond decided he wasn't interested
in pursuing a college degree. He wanted to stay in town, be close to his family, and get
a job nearby. In fact, he figured maybe he could get some work at one of Yale's medical
labs, where his sister and brother-in-law were already employed. After all, the tech jobs
paid fairly well if you could stomach much of that work. So most of Raymond's day was spent scraping dirty animal cages, lifting heavy bags of
food and bedding, and euthanizing the animals when asked.
Lab techs like Raymond bore a lot of the responsibility of watching over the test subjects, making sure
everything was ethically up to code.
And oftentimes, if something went wrong, they were also the
ones the professors and students blamed. Because of this, there was somewhat of a divide between
the scientists and the texts, much like the divide I explained before between the students and
the locals in New Haven. So when it came to Raymond Clark, most of the students and professors working
in Amstad said he just kept his head down.
That he liked working at the lab because he not only got to work with his sister and
brother-in-law, but also his new fiance.
The couple had gotten their own apartment and a dog with plans to tie the knot in December
of 2011.
All right, so where is the motive to kill someone?
Well, there were others who said that underneath that people pleasing jokes
there was another side of Raymond Clark. Apparently he was quite a stickler for
the rules, a control freak who would berate you if you didn't do something like
where shoe covers into the lab. Even Raymond's high school girlfriend had some
choice words about her ex. She said he became extremely controlling as their
relationship went on, telling her what to wear,
who she could socialize with.
And on more than one occasion,
he got physical with her during an altercation.
When she tried to break up with Raymond, actually,
she received menacing threats in her locker
and eventually filed a police report
for both stalking and sexual assault.
But she never followed through on pressing charges. Okay.
Even Raymond's new neighbors said that they had a few uncomfortable and threatening confrontations
with the 24-year-old lab tech.
So knowing all of this, police start to zero in on Raymond Clark, and here's what they
unravel.
On September 8th, the day Annie disappeared.
Raymond's key card swiped into Professor Bennett's
lab, room G13, five different times. Now if you remember this is the same room
where Annie's key card swiped. Usually he only went in there once a day, but on
this day he goes in five times. He also swiped in several times after working
hours, which was uncharacteristic of him, including a few times
in the locker room where Annie's body was later found.
But the last time Annie had used her key card was around 10-11 a.m. that morning.
It was to enter G13, and after that her key card was never used again.
Raymond was brought in for questioning shortly after trying to cover up the blood splatter
in that room, right around September 10th
so a few days before more evidence and Annie's body was found. But things just got even worse for him when he sat across from the police.
For starters, they realized he had these deep scratches all over his face, which he claimed
and we've heard this before was actually from his cat. Allegedly, he also felt a polygraph test, so Raymond Clark was not making things easy on himself.
Then, Saturday, September 12th, rolled around and police found those bloody work boots and the blue hospital scrubs.
When police analyzed the tape taken from the morning of the 8th, Raymond was pictured entering the building in scrubs just like them.
And when he was seen leaving later, Raymond was in a completely different outfit.
All right, so it's all caught on camera, basically, and all the key card information as well.
It's also funny because if he didn't say anything to police the first time originally, I mean,
I believe that they would have eventually solved it, but it would have been a lot harder.
There might not have been as many details available.
So it's kind of interesting that he tried to cover himself
and that's what ended up screwing him.
Yeah, but it wasn't until after they found Annie's body
on the 13th that police could finally get a warrant
for the rest.
So you and the audience didn't really know
that they kind of already had this
suspect by the time they found her body. Okay. Particularly after they confirmed the DNA found on
Annie Lay's body did in fact belong to Raymond Clark. So this is open. Yeah, game over.
So on September 17th, they moved in on Raymond arresting him at a super eight motel. Knowing there was no turning back, he walked away
peacefully in handcuffs. But even with Raymond behind bars, now officially charged with murder,
there were still so many lingering questions. Questions I'm sure Garrett you have and listeners.
Of course. Like what happened between the two of them that led to Annie's death?
Yeah, why? Wait, so he didn't say any of this?
Not yet.
Okay.
And what caused Raymond Clark to commit such a twisted crime?
So again, let's cut back once more to September 8, 2009.
The last day Annie lay was seen alive.
That morning, she supposedly received a text message from Raymond asking her to come in early.
He wanted to discuss how Annie kept her work space, or more specifically the cleanliness
of her mice cages.
Apparently, the two had discussions about it before, and some thought Raymond might have been
at his wits end with her.
It's believed that once Annie entered G13, Raymond came in and confronted her about the
issue. This would be a little after 10am. During that point, things must have escalated. Raymond
likely got violent with Annie, maybe shoving her or knocking her unconscious, which would explain
some of the blood spatter on the walls of that room. Trying to cover up the crime, whether intentional or accidental, Raymond likely placed Annie
in a metal cart, much like the one he was trying to conceal around detectives.
He then moved her body to a more discreet location, and in order to do so, he pulled the fire
alarm to get everyone out of the building first.
So Gary, you were on to something thinking that the fire alarm had
something to do with the case. As people were filing out of the building, he
seemingly moved Annie to the next room where he might have realized that Annie
was still conscious. That's when he began choking her, which could explain the
aspirated blood police found on the wall of a different room. After Raymond went
around the building with Annie, covered in the push cart,
looking for the perfect place to hide her body,
he eventually came to the locker room.
And that's where he found the perfect spot
to stuff the 4 foot 1190 pound Annie into the wall.
I'm confused, how do you just kill someone over mice?
Like I am over the cleanliness.
Like he was that obsessed with being clean,
like what's happening?
I don't know, and that's the things about these crimes. Sometimes like they just don't logically,
the motive just doesn't, it's sense. Obviously, Raymond didn't want to talk about it.
No. Because I'm sure there was a reason, but he probably was just like, yeah, whatever,
I'm going to job. I don't care. But I'm going to believe that the reason probably wouldn't satisfy any of our curiosities.
Yeah.
So after this, he found the time to file out of the building with the last stragglers
in order to secure himself in alibi.
So he hides the body and then immediately bolts out trying to act like he also left.
Yeah.
At least this is the theory that prosecutors laid out during Raymond Clark's
trial, but there was still one outstanding detail. What motivated Raymond to commit this crime?
Was it really just that annoyed by Annie's mess that it would cause him to kill her?
Well, according to a workplace violence prevention specialist named Hector Alvarez,
workplace-related anger does have the potential to be the soul motive here.
He claims that some people will quietly stoo-quote, allowing their emotions to escalate until
they reach a breaking point.
But a psychiatrist named Dr. Michael Wilner says that the most common cause of workplace
violence is usually triggered by romantic rejection.
Which would make sense considering that Raymond's DNA was found on Annie's body.
Perhaps with Annie's wedding getting closer, he felt he'd be losing her forever.
And if he couldn't have her, nobody could.
But he also had a fiance.
Others say that Annie's race could have played a role.
Those who knew Raymond back in high school said that as a white man, they found it unusual.
He chose to be a part of the Asian Awareness Club, which aimed to celebrate the variety
of Asian cultures among students.
Okay, that's a little interesting actually.
Which is why some wondered if Annie might have checked some sort of sexual preference
for Raymond leading to a deadly obsession.
Regardless of what was going on in Raymond's head, he stood before a court in January
of 2010 and pleaded not guilty.
But in March 2011, he changed that pleaded guilty to reduce his sentencing.
He was also found guilty of attempted sexual assault.
Raymond Clark will be serving 44 years in prison where he will remain until 2053.
But what was really going on in Raymond's head when he woke up the morning of September
8th might forever remain a mystery.
And that is the case of Annie Lay.
It's so weird.
44 years.
Like he won't be in there for life.
He'll get out and hold 70-ish, whatever, give her a take.
Like why is he even getting out of jail if he makes it that long?
Probably because he pled guilty.
And that's crazy to me.
He kills someone in a workplace.
No work place is going to want to hire him,
but he probably will get hired somewhere and that's scary.
I just think.
It's horrible.
I mean, you do hear about the drama at work
and the hatred between people at work.
But like they said at the end, most of that is romance related, like affairs.
And I don't think they were having any sort of...
I don't either.
...romantic, anything, and so, sounds like he just snapped.
Yeah.
And that's...
She had such a bright future ahead of her as well.
So like the week before her wedding.
Oh my gosh, I know, the fiance too, that's horrible.
Alright, you guys, that's horrible.
Alright you guys, that is our case for this week and we will see you next time.
Remember if you have someone in mind to submit for our holiday help, please do so and we will see you next time.
I love it.
I hate it.
you