LA police arrest 2 in killings of Chinese students
Topics: From the Wires, News
This combo made from undated file photos released by the Los Angeles Police Department on Friday, April 13, 2012 shows shooting victims Ming Qu, left, and Ying Wu. Los Angeles police on Friday, May 18, 2012 arrested two young men in the killings of the Chinese graduate students who were shot to death near the University of Southern California campus last month. (AP Photo/Los Angeles Police Department, File)(Credit: AP)LOS ANGELES (AP) — Anson Cheung says the shooting deaths of two international graduate students near the University of Southern California made headlines back home in Hong Kong, unnerving his parents.
“When I talk to them now, they remind me to be careful, and I know they’re thinking about the shooting,” said Cheung, a 20-year-old business major, adding that he’s never felt unsafe on or around campus.
A day after a pair of arrests were announced in the April killings of two students from China, those on campus for summer programs said Saturday that they’re relieved the crime was solved, but it hasn’t changed their day-to-day behavior.
“If you live around here, you just have to be aware of your surroundings,” said 19-year-old Eduardo Millinedo-Pinon, who grew up in Los Angeles and went to high school just a few blocks from USC. “I knew it as a kid too, the neighborhood can be dangerous. But I’ve seen it get much better over the years, much safer.”
A week after graduation, the usually-bustling campus was relatively calm Saturday, with some students arriving for summer sessions and others packing up for break.
Millinedo-Pinon, sitting on a bench in a sun-drenched campus courtyard, said students know to avoid certain areas, to walk in groups after dark and to keep valuables hidden. Others said students are told on day one to exercise caution in the neighborhoods around the school, located a few miles south of downtown Los Angeles in an area that has faced high crime and gang activity.
On April 11, grad students Ming Qu, of Jilin, and Ying Wu, of Hunan, were shot while sitting in a BMW about a mile away from the school. Both victims were 23 years old.
Javier Bolden, 19, and Bryan Barnes, 20, were arrested Friday on suspicion of killing the students during an apparent robbery attempt, Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said.
The victims’ parents filed a lawsuit this week accusing USC of misrepresenting security at the campus, where nearly one-fifth of the 38,000 students are from overseas, including 2,500 from China. The school has more international students than any other U.S. university, USC says.
The motive for the shootings was still under investigation, Beck said, but the “evidence points to a street robbery.”
Ballistics tests on shell casings recovered at the scene show they were fired from the same gun used in two other shootings in LA, the Los Angeles Times reported, citing law enforcement sources.




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