KILLEEN, Texas (KWTX) – An unloaded weapon was found in a student’s backpack at Pat Carney Elementary School Wednesday, according to a letter sent to parents.
“At no time were students or staff in danger, and there was no intent to cause harm,” Pat Carney Elementary School Principal Paige Gawryszewski said in the letter.
Gawryszewski said the school day continued as normal and school administrators in conjunction with KISD police addressed the situation with the student’s parents.
“We ask for your partnership in reinforcing with your student that weapons of any kind—including toy replicas or look-alikes—are not permitted on school grounds,” Gawryszewski said.
Copyright 2025 KWTX. All rights reserved.
Recently, a disturbing incident occurred at a Killeen ISD school when a weapon was found in a student’s backpack. This discovery has raised concerns among parents, students, and school officials about the safety and security of our schools.
The weapon was discovered during a routine search of students’ belongings, and the student in question has been taken into custody. This incident serves as a stark reminder of the importance of maintaining a safe learning environment for all students.
In light of this troubling discovery, it is crucial for parents to have open and honest conversations with their children about the dangers of bringing weapons to school. It is also important for school officials to continue to implement strict security measures to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.
As a community, we must work together to ensure the safety and well-being of all students and staff members. Let’s stand united in our commitment to creating a safe and secure learning environment for everyone in Killeen ISD.
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LEXINGTON, Ky. (LEX 18) — Tennessee is always a big game for Kentucky fans, but this year, there’s another must-win for BBN when John Calipari returns to Rupp Arena with his Arkansas Razorbacks.
LEX 18 has been asking viewers to weigh in: If you could only choose one, would you rather see UK beat the Volunteers or the Hogs?
LEX 18’s Lauren Minor went to the University of Kentucky’s campus to ask students the same question.
The message across campus was simple. “I think I will never wear that orange in my life and I love the cats,” says Freshman Celia Monte.
UK students are gearing up for Tuesday night’s tip-off, with a two-game losing streak fresh on the minds of players and fans.
“I am a little bit nervous, ” says Freshman Madeline Logston. “Tennessee is pretty good, but I do think we are going to pull out a win.”
“Tennessee is a big rival,” adds Monte. “So this is going to be a really big game and I am hoping we can come back from our loss from last week.”
Coming down the pipe this week is Arkansas, with a familiar face walking into Rupp Arena as a Razorback.
“Our old coach, Coach Calapari, coaches at Arkansas now and I would just love to see him get beat,” says Logston.
“I think we are going to beat Arkansas pretty easily,” says student Jack Wagoner. “I think Tennessee, we are going to want that one. So this is a big one no matter what.”
Tickets for Saturday’s game against the Razorback’s won’t be easy to come by. At last check, the cheapest tickets on Stub Hub were just over $200 in the upper level. The most expensive? Two floor seats behind the bench, going for just under $5,000.
Some students are going in with high expectations.
“I mean we are a hot team this year,” says Junior Myles Von Drasek. “I love Mark Pope coming in and turning the program around. Cats by 90 tonight.”
Others are realistic but confident.
“Our whole season so far has been beating ranked teams,” says Wagoner. “I think we win both games, but I am excited for Arkansas to see Calipari come back.”
As the highly anticipated game between the Kentucky Wildcats and Tennessee Volunteers draws near, UK students are getting ready to show their support for their team. From painting their faces blue and white to decked out in Wildcat gear, students are gearing up to cheer on their team to victory.
Many students are planning tailgate parties to get hyped up before the game, with grills fired up and music blaring. The excitement is palpable on campus as students count down the days until kick-off.
With both teams having strong records this season, the match-up promises to be an intense and thrilling game. UK students are ready to show their pride and support for the Wildcats as they take on their rivals. Let’s go Wildcats! #BBN #GoBigBlue.
Serbian students have staged a daylong blockage of a major traffic intersection in Belgrade with the support of farmers, stepping up pressure on the president, Aleksandar Vučić.
The wave of student-led demonstrations began as a protest against government corruption after the collapse of a roof of a railway station in the northern city of Novi Sad on 1 November, which killed 15 people.
Despite attacks on the protesters and limited government concessions, the near daily protests have grown and spread, affecting more than 100 cities and towns and drawing in increasing support from members of the judiciary, teachers, private businesses and the general public.
On Monday the demonstrators occupied the Autokomanda junction, where two major roads from the south-east converge on the way to Belgrade’s centre.
Thousands of Belgrade residents joined the protests along with some farmers who brought their tractors to the capital, some of which were used to protect the protesters, after two serious incidents of cars ramming the crowds of demonstrators.
The appearance of farmers and tractors was an echo of the mass protests and march on Belgrade that ultimately brought down the regime of Vučić’s predecessor Slobodan Milošević in 2000. Milošević’s fall, however, only came when key elements of the security forces turned against him.
After a record 100,000 people turned out to protest in Belgrade on 22 December, Vučić threatened them, saying Serbia’s special forces would “throw them around in 6-7 seconds”. But the threat drew widespread ridicule and he has so far not attempted to use the security forces to break up the protests.
The government has sought to meet some of the students’ demands, most importantly by declassifying some documents about the Novi Sad station canopy collapse, which happened soon after the station had been renovated by a Chinese-led consortium.
The protesters claim the collapse was caused by corruption and cutting corners in the construction work. Thirteen people have been charged over the disaster, including Serbia’s former transport minister Goran Vesić, who resigned days after the collapse.
The government released more relevant documents on Sunday but it is unclear whether it will be enough to defuse the demonstrations. The protest leaders are also demanding an end to prosecutions against demonstrators, the arrest and prosecution of those involved in attacks on the protesters, and increased funding for education.
Alida Vračić, a co-founder and the executive director of Populari, a thinktank focused on the western Balkans, said the tenacity of the demonstrations represented a serious challenge to Vučić, who has dominated Serbian politics since becoming prime minister in 2014.
“They could indeed be a threat because of their unique approach. These students surpass the usual opposition and bypass the standard playbook for dealing with ineffective governance. They don’t seek dialogue or compromise, they demand that institutions simply do their jobs,” Vračić said. “This straightforwardness is what stings the most and remains far beyond the grasp of the Serbian political toolbox.
“By rallying thousands around a unifying demand – justice – they’ve found a powerful and resonant message and mobilised thousands. In the Balkans, where injustice has been endured for far too long, their call for change feels urgent. It’s about time that changed and spilled over elsewhere.”
Edward Joseph, a former US diplomat at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, said it was possible the political tide was turning in Serbia.
“Teachers – and many other professions – followed the lead of students who have protested en masse since the 1 November train station canopy collapse in Novi Sad,” he wrote in a social media post. “Reportedly, even judges – prominent state employees – left the courthouses to support passing protesters … The fear factor is gone. Even in a degraded Balkans democracy, the people still have agency and can still demand accountability.”
Serbian students have taken to the streets once again to protest against President Aleksandar Vučić’s government. In a bold move, they have blocked a major road junction in Belgrade to increase pressure on Vučić and his administration.
The students are demanding greater transparency and accountability from the government, as well as more investment in education and opportunities for young people. They are also calling for an end to what they see as the erosion of democratic institutions and freedoms in Serbia.
The blockade has caused traffic chaos in the capital city, with long queues of vehicles unable to pass through the junction. Despite the inconvenience to commuters, the students are determined to make their voices heard and force the government to listen to their demands.
This latest protest comes on the heels of a series of demonstrations against Vučić’s government, which have been ongoing for several months. The students show no signs of backing down, and their determination to bring about change in Serbia is clear.
As the blockade continues, all eyes are on President Vučić and his response to the students’ demands. Will he listen to their concerns and take action to address them, or will he continue to ignore their calls for reform? Only time will tell, but one thing is certain: the students are not backing down anytime soon.
A Florida elementary school principal was arrested for allegedly throwing an alcohol-fueled house party attended by more than 100 underage students, including one juvenile who was treated at the scene for heavy intoxication, according to police.
On Sunday, Jan. 19, police in Cocoa Beach were called to a home where a large party was taking place, Cocoa Beach Police said in a press release. There they allegedly found more than 100 juveniles in matching t-shirts, many of whom were consuming alcohol that was later learned to be available in coolers at the residence, police said.
Officers found one juvenile on the front lawn “experiencing an alcohol related medical event,” police said.
“The juvenile was so heavily intoxicated that Brevard County Fire Rescue (BCFR) had to respond to treat them,” according to the release.
Officers identified the homeowner as Roosevelt Elementary School principal Elizabeth Hill-Brodigan, 47, of Cocoa Beach, police said in the release.
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While EMTs tended to the juvenile, “Hill-Brodigan was seen by officers in the driveway of her residence turning off the outside lights and entering her residence, causing BCFR to use auxiliary lighting on their vehicle to treat the juvenile,” police alleged in the release.
After police arrived, “An intoxicated adult female identified as Karly Anderson, 45, approached officers on scene identifying herself as a teacher (who) had been at the party,” police alleged in the release.
Police learned she was a teacher at Roosevelt Elementary School.
In the following days, Cocoa Beach Police Detectives interviewed numerous juveniles and parents.
An arrest warrant was obtained for Hill-Brodigan, who is charged with child neglect, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, and holding an “open house party,” police said.
Anderson was also arrested, facing charges of child neglect and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
Brevard County Sheriff’s Office
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Hill-Brodigan was released on $3,500 bail on Saturday morning, according to the Brevard County Sheriff’s Office. Anderson was released on a $3,000 bail. It is unclear whether they have retained attorneys who can speak on their behalf.
A juvenile was arrested for an alleged DUI after a traffic stop was conducted near the residence, police said.
Both women have been placed on administrative leave pending the results of a police investigation, Brevard Public Schools said, per News 4 Jax.
“We are extremely troubled by these accusations and are fully cooperating with the Cocoa Beach Police Department,” the district said. “Our commitment to student safety remains our top priority.”
Police are asking anyone with information to contact detectives at 321-868-3248.
In a shocking turn of events, a high school principal has been accused of hosting an alcohol-fueled house party with over 100 students in attendance. The party reportedly spiraled out of control, resulting in one student experiencing a medical emergency.
The principal, who has not been named, is facing serious allegations of reckless behavior and endangering the lives of the students under his care. The incident has sparked outrage among parents and the community, with many calling for his immediate removal from his position.
According to reports, the party was held at the principal’s home and included a large amount of alcohol being consumed by underage students. The situation quickly escalated, with one student reportedly suffering a medical event as a result of the excessive drinking.
This egregious display of poor judgment and negligence has left many questioning the leadership and integrity of the school administration. The safety and well-being of students should always be the top priority, and it is deeply concerning to see a principal engaging in such irresponsible behavior.
As investigations into the incident continue, it is crucial that swift and appropriate action is taken to address this unacceptable behavior. The community deserves better leadership and accountability from those entrusted with the education and care of their children.
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BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — Serbia’s striking university students on Monday launched a 24-hour blockade of a key traffic intersection in the capital, Belgrade, stepping up pressure on the populist authorities over a deadly canopy collapse in November that killed 15 people.
Serbian farmers on tractors and thousands of citizens joined the blockade that followed weeks of protests demanding accountability of the deadly accident in the northern city of Novi Sad that critics have blamed on rampant government corruption.
A campaign of street demonstrations has posed the biggest challenge in years to the populist government’s firm grip on power in Serbia.
Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vucic, at a joint press conference with Prime Minister Milos Vucevic and Parliament Speaker Ana Brnabic, later on Monday urged dialogue with the students, saying that “we need to lower the tensions and start talking to each other.”
Students in the past have refused to meet with Vucic, saying the president is not entitled by the constitution to hold talks with them.
“Any kind of a crisis poses a serious problem for our economy,” said Vucic. “Such a situation in society is not good for anyone.”
Vucic has faced accusations of curbing democratic freedoms despite formally seeking European Union membership for Serbia. He has accused the students of working for unspecified foreign powers to oust the government.
Several incidents have marked the street demonstrations in the past weeks, including drivers ramming into the crowds on two occasions, when two young women were injured.
Traffic police on Monday secured the student blockade to help avoid any similar incidents. Protesting students set up tents at the protest site, which is a key artery for the city commuters and toward the main north-south motorway.
Some students played volleyball, others sat down on blankets on the pavement or walked around on a warm day. The students also held a daily 15-minute commemoration silence at 11.52, the exact same time when the canopy at a train station in Novi Sad crashed down on Nov. 1.
Serbia’s prosecutors have filed charges against 13 people, including a government minister and several state officials. But the former construction minister Goran Vesic has been released from detention, fueling doubts over the investigation’s independence.
The main railway station in Novi Sad was renovated twice in recent years as part of a wider infrastructure deal with Chinese state companies.
In a show of solidarity and support, Serbian farmers have joined striking university students in a 24-hour traffic blockade in Belgrade. The students have been protesting against government reforms to the education system, while the farmers are protesting against unfair treatment and lack of government support for their agricultural industry.
The joint blockade, which took place near the city center, caused major disruptions to traffic and drew attention to the grievances of both groups. The farmers brought tractors and livestock to the protest, adding a rural flair to the urban demonstration.
The collaboration between the students and farmers highlights the widespread dissatisfaction with the government’s policies and the growing solidarity among different sectors of society. By joining forces, they are sending a powerful message to the authorities that their voices cannot be ignored.
As the blockade continues, the students and farmers are determined to make their demands heard and bring about meaningful change. The unity and determination of these two groups serve as a powerful reminder of the strength that can be found in solidarity and collective action.
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1. World’s Smallest Mobile phone: With a length of only 3.54inch and a width of 1.97inch, the soyes mini phone fits in the palm of your hand and is easy to carry. It is fully unlocked and compatible with a wide range of global network bands. Before use, please confirm that your SIM card supports the following frequencies: 2G GSM 850/900/1800/1900 and 3G WCDMA B1/B2/B5/B8 2. Perfect gift for Christmas: soyes mini phone combines an adorable design with practical functionality, making it ideal for kids’ small hands. Its lightweight, playful design and user-friendly features not only captivate children but also make it a great backup phone for travel and business trips. Offered in three colors—Black, Blue, and Pink—it’s a fantastic choice for Christmas or New Year gifts. A perfect gadget for kids 3. Dual-Camera mini phone: The Soyes small phone is equipped with a 3MP front camera and a 5MP rear camera, allowing you to capture every moment with ease. Whether it’s breathtaking landscapes, dynamic scenes, or personal selfies, the phone delivers exceptional image quality. Additionally, it features built-in facial recognition technology to safeguard your privacy at all times 4. Small body big memory: This mini phone supports dual SIM, allowing you to easily insert two SIM cards from different carriers, eliminating the hassle of carrying two phones. It also supports inserting a memory card, significantly expanding storage possibilities. Whether you need to store a large number of photos, videos, music, or big files, this phone handles it effortlessly, freeing you from worries about insufficient storage space 5. Powerful function cellphone: soyes mini phone is equipped with a quad-core processor, ensuring smooth and lag-free performance. Thanks to the Android 8.1 system, it supports most apps and is compatible with popular applications from the Google Play Store, including Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, WhatsApp, TikTok, Twitter, and more
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Introducing the Mini Phone World’s Smallest 3.0″ HD Touch Screen Mini Smartphone! This compact mobile phone is perfect for kids and students who are looking for a small and easy-to-use device.
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Dozens of New York City educators have been accused of having inappropriate, often sexual relationships and communications with students, with some requesting nude snaps or plying them with money, gifts or drugs, newly released records show.
Thirty-two more cases of educators and other school staffers engaged in improper communications with kids were substantiated by the city’s Special Commissioner of Investigation — boosting the total to at least 121 cases from 2018 to 2024, up from 89 tallied in May, according to reports released to The Post.
Special Commissioner Anastasia Coleman has recommended 54 times from 2019 to 2023 that the city Department of Education prohibit all employees from contacting students using personal cell phone numbers, social media accounts, or other apps.
Dozens more New York City public school employees were accused of having inappropriate relationships and communications and students, according to an independent watchdog group. Bits and Splits – stock.adobe.comStudent journalists at Townsend Harris High School helped expose English teacher and baseball coach Joseph Canzoneri, who had sex with a female student, the SCI alleged.
The DOE repeatedly rejected the recommendation but told The Post it may finally tighten the rules.
Among allegations in the newly revealed cases:
Daniel Matuk allegedly began communicating with one of his 15-year-old graphic design students at William Cullen Bryant HS in Queens in 2020, exchanging over 700 messages between 2022 and 2023, investigators found. Matuk texted about her “brown ass” and “little butt,” and called her “b—h” and “whore.” Matuk would force the junior to hug him in his empty classroom. “I blocked Daniel Matuk’s number after graduation, but have been living with trauma because of what had happened,” she told investigators. SCI said he was “grooming” her. He collected $112,191 in FY 2024.
Anthony Schiliro, a history teacher at the elite Eleanor Roosevelt HS in Manhattan, sent “excessive” late-night texts to three female students, investigators found. On one occasion, he joked about one student having sex in front of the other two.
Jorge Luna, a social studies teacher at the Bronx Center for Science and Mathematics, repeatedly texted and called a female student starting when she was a freshman, and made inappropriate comments on her Instagram even after being disciplined for his communications with her. In 2020, Luna called the girl on FaceTime at midnight to wish her a happy birthday, according to SCI. In 2022, he commented on her breasts, and her “sexy” legs in a photo and wrote, “you should have opened” them, the girl told investigators. Luna collected $111,738 in 2023-24.
Steven Perez, a social studies teacher at Fort Hamilton HS in Brooklyn, texted one of his students about his “girlfriend problems” and child support, calling her “sweety” and “beautiful” from when she was 15, investigators found. He’d give her cigarettes and oil for vaping, and once tried to kiss her after driving her home. He was arrested in December 2021, but the Brooklyn DA declined to prosecute.
Ellen Huynh, a teacher at the Civic Leadership Academy in Queens, exchanged more than 9,000 texts with a male student between 2022 and 2023, including hundreds after 9 pm and on weekends. Witnesses, including teachers, told investigators they saw the two hugging alone in a classroom with the door shut, and in a park together. The student refused to tell investigators about their conversations but said “there was no sex.” She collected $80,701 in 2023-24.
Dulaina Almonte, 33, formerly a French teacher at Harry S. Truman High School in The Bronx, allegedly sent a 17-year-old female student a shocking 28,075 late-night texts and traded nearly 1,900 texts with a male 12th-grader, according to a 2022 SCI report.
Scott Biski, 50, was accused of sexually abusing and grooming a female student when he was a music teacher at Jamaica Gateway to the Sciences High School. He sent the girl nearly 700 messages and told her to save his number under a fake name “so as to not arouse suspicion,” according to investigators.
Natalie Black, 30, a teacher at Hillside Arts and Letters Academy, allegedly sent raunchy photos and videos of herself to a 17-year-old boy and sent other kids videos of herself “deep throating” a liquor bottle and dancing naked from the waist down.
Joseph Canzoneri, 57, exchanged flirty messages with female Townsend Harris HS students and had sex with one who he allegedly brought to an apartment and plied with wine and marijuana, according to SCI.
Danielle Medellin, then 24, exchanged nearly 5,500 “very flirtatious,” “sexual tension”-filled texts with a boy in one of her 11th-grade math classes at Manhattan’s Institute for Collaborative Education. She resigned before she could be fired, as SCI recommended — and then snagged a job as a New York Times data analyst, according to her LinkedIn page.
Bryant HS teacher Daniel Matuk exchanged over 700 messages with a female student between 2022 and 2023, investigators found, Obtained by The New York Post
Those employees did not respond to inquiries from The Post. They have all either resigned or been terminated, the DOE said.
Other educators denounced the alleged misconduct.
“There’s no reason to be calling or texting a student on a personal device unless it’s something you don’t want said on a DOE computer or email address,” an NYC high school teacher told The Post.
The teacher used her own phone to contact students during the COVID-19 pandemic and has done so occasionally to call students she believed were in crisis.
But the practice has been “so grossly abused” that she supports the SCI’s recommendation of a ban.
“Most schools have communications policies prohibiting private communications at this point because they recognize the risks,” said Dr. Elizabeth Jeglic, a John Jay College of Criminal Justice professor who researches child sexual abuse and grooming. “I am not sure why this is not being done in New York City.”
“Most schools have communications policies prohibiting private communications at this point because they recognize the risks,” said Dr. Elizabeth Jeglic, a John Jay College of Criminal Justice professor who researches child sexual abuse and grooming. CUNY.eduDanielle Medellin taught at the Institute for Collaborative Education HS.
The DOE’s social media policy says employees “should not communicate with students currently enrolled in DOE schools on personal social media sites,” except in an emergency, and then a supervisor should be notified as soon as possible.
The DOE has no prohibition on staffers using personal phones or email addresses.
Natalie Black allegedly sent at least 15 raunchy snaps of herself “in lingerie or nude” to a 17-year-old male student. youtube.comScott Biski, a music teacher at Jamaica Gateway to the Sciences High School, who investigators say exchanged hundreds of texts with a student he sexually abused. biskisan/Facebook
Officials have insisted that stricter rules are not needed because a disciplinary process is in place to punish misconduct.
“Our educators are trusted individuals in the lives of our students, and every teacher is always expected to behave appropriately,” said DOE spokeswoman Jenna Lyle.
But officials told The Post they are reviewing the DOE’s social-media rules, and “an updated policy is in development.”
In a shocking revelation, over 100 educators in New York City have been accused of engaging in sexual relationships and inappropriate communications with students. These disturbing allegations have sent shockwaves through the education community and raised serious concerns about the safety and well-being of students.
The accusations range from inappropriate text messages and social media interactions to physical relationships with students. The educators involved come from a variety of schools and backgrounds, making the scope of this scandal even more alarming.
As parents, students, and community members, it is crucial that we hold educators accountable for their actions and ensure that our schools are safe environments for all students. It is unacceptable for those in positions of authority to abuse their power and prey on vulnerable students.
The Department of Education must take swift and decisive action to address these allegations and protect students from further harm. It is imperative that we work together to create a culture of accountability and transparency in our schools to prevent these egregious acts from occurring in the future.
We must not turn a blind eye to these troubling accusations and must stand up for the rights and safety of students. Our children deserve to learn in a secure and nurturing environment, free from the threat of predatory behavior. It is up to all of us to ensure that our schools are safe places for all students to learn and grow.
Kevin Jiang was a 26-year-old Yale graduate student, an Army veteran, and, his friends say, a man of faith who volunteered with the homeless. He seemed to have no enemies, and no one could figure out why someone may have targeted him on Feb. 6, 2021, when he was shot in the street not far from his fiancée’s apartment in New Haven, Connecticut. Jiang had been driving down the street when his car was struck from behind, and when he got out, possibly to exchange information with the other driver police say, that driver opened fire, shooting him eight times.
Kevin Jiang
Trinity Baptist Church YouTube
At first, it seemed like the murder may have been a random shooting — possibly an act of road rage. But as detectives looked into the case, they began to unravel the truth — unbeknownst to Jiang, someone had meticulously planned his death. Who would want to kill Kevin Jiang? And how would detectives track down the killer?
Thew story begins with another shooting in December 2020, nearly two months before Jiang’s murder.
Dec. 11, 2020 – Feb. 6, 2021: A string of shootings in New Haven
Bullet holes found in the window of one of the affected homes.
Paul and Nyree Whyte
Beginning on Dec. 11, 2020, a seemingly random shooter fired bullets into four different homes in a couple of New Haven neighborhoods. One home was fired into in December, two in January 2021, and one in February 2021. These shootings had a few key things in common: homes were fired upon and no one was harmed, In two cases a dark-colored SUV was seen fleeing, and .45 caliber fired cartridge casings were found at all four scenes.
Apart from these similarities, however, police were unable to find any other connection between the incidents. In time, it would become clear that these shootings were linked and were part of a larger plan.
Jan. 30, 2021: Kevin Jiang proposes to the love of his life
On Jan. 30, 2021, Jiang proposed to his girlfriend Zion Perry while on a hike to a waterfall. The two had been dating for about a year and had met at a Christian retreat. They both loved nature, attended church, and were science students: Jiang was a graduate student in the Yale School of the Environment, and Perry was also at Yale, working on a PhD in molecular biophysics and biochemistry.
Kevin Jiang and fiancée Zion Perry.
Kevin Jiang/Facebook
“They’re both brilliant and hardworking students,” said Pastor Greg Hendrickson, who was Jiang’s pastor and mentored the couple, “and yet… they didn’t feel like their accomplishments were what defined them at the deepest level.”
Perry posted a video of the engagement to her Facebook page.
Feb. 6, 2021 | 8:30 p.m.: Kevin Jiang’s death
At 8:30 p.m. on Feb. 6, police responded to the scene of a shooting in New Haven. When they arrived, they found Jiang deceased in the street. About 100 feet away was his car, a Prius. .45 caliber casings were also found at the scene, and it appeared Jiang had been shot multiple times.
Kevin Jiang
Kevin Jiang/Instagram
Police obtained video surveillance from a nearby residence. In the video, a vehicle crash can be heard prior to Jiang’s Prius entering the frame, closely followed by a dark SUV. The Prius comes to a stop, then the SUV reverses out of frame. Jiang exits his Prius and walks toward the SUV. A few seconds after he moves out of frame, eight gunshots and a scream can be heard.
One witness reported that she looked at her window after hearing gunshots and saw the shooter standing over Jiang, who was already down on the pavement, firing additional shots. Detectives observed stippling — a burn pattern caused by gunpowder exploding from a weapon fired at close range — on Jiang’s face.
The evidence of close-range gunfire made detectives think there might be more to Jiang’s death than a random shooting or a case of road rage. “It seems a little bit more personal,” said New Haven homicide detective David Zaweski. “When you have someone laying on the ground and not moving, what would cause someone to continue firing at them?”
Just one week after Jiang’s engagement, police were now informing his mother and fiancée about his tragic death. According to detectives the two women were distraught and couldn’t understand why anyone would have done this to Jiang.
Feb. 6, 2021, 8:57 p.m.: A man stuck on train tracks
At 8:57 p.m. on the same night Jiang was killed, police in the nearby town of North Haven responded to a separate incident: a 911 call was made by a security guard at Sims Metal Management, a scrapyard near a highway entrance. The guard told 911 dispatch that a suspicious vehicle — a dark SUV — had driven through his yard.
When officers responded to investigate the vehicle, they found the SUV — and its driver —stuck on snowy railroad tracks behind the scrapyard. The officers had not yet heard about Kevin Jiang’s murder, which had occurred just half an hour before in New Haven, and to them this call was nothing out of the ordinary.
Police body camera shows Qinxuan Pan in his vehicle
North Haven Police Department
“I’ve been on the tracks I don’t know how many times with vehicles that were, you know, called in as suspicious,” said Sergeant Jeffrey Mills of North Haven Police Department, who responded that night. “People always come down there… and they turn around in the front lot and they leave ’cause they missed the highway or something.”
The driver was Qinxuan Pan, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate student from Malden, Massachusetts. His driver’s license came back clean, and officers said he seemed calm about his situation. Mills didn’t notice anything odd – just a yellow jacket on the passenger seat, and some bags in the car including a black briefcase and a blue bag with a Massachusetts logo.
Officers called a tow truck to help Pan get off of the tracks. Since he didn’t have cash to pay for the tow, officers helped him get a hotel room for the night at a nearby Best Western, telling him he could pick up his car in the morning and head home. Pan agreed and went to the hotel. To Mills, nothing seemed suspicious about the encounter. But that would soon change.
Feb. 7, 2021, 11:00 a.m.: A shocking discovery
The next morning at 11 a.m., another 911 call was made, this time from an employee at an Arby’s restaurant in North Haven. Sergeant Jeffrey Mills was at the end of his shift and about to head home when he heard about the call, but he decided to stop by the Arby’s anyway to investigate.
Items found at an Arby’s captured on police bodycam.
North Haven Police Department
That decision changed the course of Jiang’s case. At the Arby’s, employees had found something strange — discarded bags containing a .45 caliber gun. There were also numerous boxes of ammunition, three license plates, and some clothing. Some of these items looked familiar to Sgt. Mills: there was a yellow jacket, a black briefcase, and a blue bag with a Massachusetts logo. It struck Mills that these were the same items he’d seen in Pan’s car the night before on the railroad tracks. The Arby’s was right next door to the Best Western hotel where Pan had been dropped off.
By now, Mills had heard about the homicide in New Haven, and knew detectives were looking for a dark SUV. Mills had encountered a dark SUV the night before and had reason to believe its driver was the owner of the .45 caliber gun found at the Arby’s. He called New Haven Police.
When homicide detectives arrived, they went to the Best Western in search of the mysterious Pan. But Pan had disappeared – in fact, according to detectives, it seemed like he had never stayed in the room at all.
The SUV was still at the tow facility. Where had Pan gone? And how would they find him?
Feb. 8, 2021: A stolen vehicle
In Malden, the town where Pan was from, a car had been reported stolen from a car dealership. And not just any car – the same dark SUV that Pan had been driving, which was now at a tow facility in North Haven. The dealership employee told police that Pan had asked to borrow the car for a test drive and had never returned.
On Feb. 8, police from Malden went to Pan’s home with a warrant for his arrest for the stolen car. Officers from New Haven accompanied them, as Pan was now a person of interest in Jiang’s homicide.
When they arrived at the address where Pan lived with his parents, however, neither Pan nor his parents were home. The parents could have simply been out of town or on vacation, but officers also worried about them.
“Given the heinous act that occurred in New Haven the day before, were they potentially kidnapped by their own son?” said Det. Joe Galvan, who worked with both New Haven Police and the U.S. Marshals’ Task Force in Connecticut.
That same day, the U.S. Marshals, who had joined the case, conducted a search for any phone numbers associated with Pan. They found a number and traced the phone to Garysburg, North Carolina. At a gas station there, officers found a cellphone that had been crushed.
“Like a car ran over it,” said U.S. Marshals Supervisor Matthew Duffy.
Feb. 11, 2021: Pan’s parents stopped in Georgia
On Feb. 11, the U.S. Marshals received several license plate reader hits on the license plate of Pan’s mother’s car. Georgia officials were able to locate and stop the car – inside were Pan’s parents, Hong Huang and Hao Pan, but their son was not with them.
Authorities say Hao Pan, Qinxuan Pan’s father, told them that roughly four or five days before he’d gotten a call from his son Qinxuan Pan and Qinxuan told him he was in Connecticut and needed help, though Hao Pan didn’t say why. Hao Pan did say that he and his wife Hong Huang then left Massachusetts and picked up their son in Connecticut. Qinxuan Pan then took the wheel and drove them south to Georgia, a days-long journey.
As for where their son was now, authorities say Hao Pan told them that his son had stopped the car, gotten out, and walked away, and Hao Pan did not know where he went or why. Pan’s mother, Hong Huang, refused to answer any questions without an attorney, but later volunteered that she believed her son may have walked away and killed himself.
Investigators say they were skeptical of that story, and began to suspect that in order to find Qinxuan Pan they may have to watch his parents. The Pan family had access to millions of dollars in assets in Shanghai. Financial records showed Pan’s parents had been making large cash withdrawals, possibly to give to their son. Marshals say they worried that Pan might attempt to use this money to flee the country.
Feb. 16, 2021: Military honors for Kevin Jiang
On Feb.16, Jiang was buried with full military honors. He was an Army veteran and a National Guard Reservist, trained to operate a tank. He had served in the 118th Multifunctional Medical Battalion of the Connecticut National Guard.
Kevin Jiang in uniform.
Kevin Jiang/Instagram
Nasya Hubbard, who served with Jiang in the National Guard, described him as a “very happy person, just genuine, very genuine soul,” and said that he seemed deeply in love with his fiancée Zion Perry.
At a memorial service for Jiang, Perry said, “Kevin often spoke of how precious the gift of life is, because we are but mist that may vanish in a moment. Never have I felt the impact of those words until now. Kevin would want us to cherish the gift of life we still have on earth.”
Feb. 26, 2021: A warrant and a possible motive
After New Haven detectives received samples back from the lab that indicated Qinxuan Pan’s fingerprints were on the gun found at the Arby’s and gunshot residue was on the yellow jacket and the door of the SUV, a warrant was issued for his arrest in connection with the murder of Kevin Jiang.
By now, detectives also had in mind a possible motive for Pan. Zaweski had turned to Facebook to find information about Pan and had learned that he was Facebook friends with Zion Perry, Jiang’s fiancée
Detectives say that when Perry was asked about the connection, she told officers that she and Pan met when she was an undergraduate at MIT, but they’d only been acquaintances. According to Perry they had never had a romantic relationship of any kind. Detectives found that online communication between the two was minimal – when Perry had graduated MIT, Pan had asked to video call with her to congratulate her, and she had politely declined. That was the extent of their conversation.
Still, it seemed that perhaps Pan had made more of this connection than Perry. Though Pan’s motive was never confirmed, the murder of Jiang occurred just one week after Perry publicly announced her engagement to Kevin on Facebook.
Said Zaweski, “It did seem like there was a secret obsession of Pan’s going on behind the scenes that Kevin wasn’t aware of, and that Zion wasn’t aware of.”
March 2021- May 2021: Patience
The U.S. Marshals knew it would take patience to track Pan, who was a brilliant MIT graduate student studying artificial intelligence.
At this point they knew that Pan was capable of disabling GPS in vehicles. They knew Pan had turned off the GPS in the SUV he had driven the night of the murder, the one he’d picked up from a dealership.
It turned out that that wasn’t the only time Pan had taken a car from a dealership for nefarious purposes. Investigators were able to find numerous other instances of Pan claiming he was going to test drive a dealership vehicle, only to drive that vehicle down to Connecticut. They compared the dates of his test drives with the four shootings that had occurred in New Haven from December 2020 to February 2021 and found that they matched.
Detectives believe Pan had a meticulous plan. They say Pan committed those four shootings in order to mislead police into thinking that Jiang’s death was just another incident in a string of random shootings.
Knowing that Pan was potentially dangerous and may be looking to flee the country, U.S. Marshals were careful and methodical in their search. For weeks they steadily kept an eye on his parents’ activities, believing that eventually something would lead them to their son.
May 2021: Pan’s mother makes a call
In May 2021, U.S. Marshals tracked Pan’s parents south to Georgia again, this time traveling with another couple. U.S. Marshal Kevin Perreault said that he believes the parents took unwitting companions along to “make it appear that it’s a regular trip. There’s no big deal, we’re just going on a trip, meet some friends … we’re not here to help our son.”
A surveillance image of Hong Huang making a telephone call at a Georgia hotel.
U.S. Marshals
The two couples stayed one night at a hotel, where Pan’s mother Hong Huang would be recorded on a surveillance camera making a phone call. The hotel clerk told investigators that Huang had asked to use his phone, had made a call, and then had deleted the number.
But U.S. Marshals were able to track the call anyway, and it led them right to Qinxuan Pan.
May 14, 2021: Qinxuan Pan arrested in Alabama
“I’m who you’re looking for,” Qinxuan Pan told authorities when he was arrested at a boarding house in Montgomery, Alabama.
U.S. Marshals
U.S. Marshals took what Duffy called a “small army” to a boarding house in Montgomery, Alabama, where Marshals had tracked that phone call. Marshals found the room where Pan was staying, and according to Duffy, Pan “just came out and said, I’m who you’re looking for.” Pan was arrested for the murder of Kevin Jiang.
At the time of his arrest, Pan had approximately $20,000 in cash on him, as well as multiple communication devices, seven SIM cards, and his father’s passport.
February-April, 2024: A guilty plea and a sentence
Qinxuan Pan in court at his sentencing.
CBS News
After multiple delays, Qinxuan Pan pleaded guilty in court on Feb. 29, 2024, to the murder of Kevin Jiang. His plea deal required a 35-year prison sentence without parole, and he was officially sentenced on April 23. He is scheduled to be released in 2056, when he will be 65 years old. Pan’s parents have never been charged with anything.
Zion Perry spoke at Pan’s sentencing. The only time Pan looked up was when she approached the podium.
“I wanted to address Pan specifically,” she said. “Although your sentence is far less than you deserve … there is also mercy. May God have mercy on you. And may he have mercy on all of us.”
The case of how an MIT graduate student planned a Yale student’s near perfect murder has shocked both the academic and law enforcement communities. The details of the carefully orchestrated plan and the meticulous execution have left many wondering how someone with such a bright future could be capable of committing such a heinous act.
The graduate student, who had been studying engineering at MIT, reportedly harbored deep-seated jealousy and resentment towards the Yale student. The motive behind the murder remains unclear, but it is believed to have stemmed from a personal vendetta.
The graduate student meticulously planned every detail of the murder, from tracking the victim’s daily routine to studying their vulnerabilities. The murder was executed with precision, leaving little evidence behind and almost fooling investigators.
However, the graduate student’s perfect plan began to unravel when a witness came forward with crucial information that led to their arrest. The graduate student is now facing charges of first-degree murder and is awaiting trial.
This case serves as a stark reminder that anyone, regardless of their background or intelligence, is capable of committing unspeakable acts. It also highlights the importance of remaining vigilant and reporting any suspicious behavior to authorities.
As the trial unfolds, the academic and law enforcement communities will undoubtedly continue to be shocked by the chilling details of how an MIT graduate student planned a Yale student’s near perfect murder.