Students, administrators and faculty gathered on Monday, Sept. 14, 2009, at the Yale University campus in New Haven, Conn., to mourn the death of medical school graduate student Annie Le. Le's remains were found on Sept. 13, the day she was to be married.
Annie Le and fianc
Yale University Chaplain Sharon Kugler, right, consoles student Natalie Powers, Annie Le's roommate. Le was found dead in a space behind a wall in the basement of the laboratory building where she worked at the Yale School of Medicine. Police ruled her death a homicide.
This undated photo provided by Union Mine High School principal Tony DeVille shows Annie Le, front row, center, with other members of the "Culture Club." Le grew up in Placerville, Calif. and completed her undergraduate degree in bioscience at the University of Rochester in 2007.
Yale student Meng Li, 18, from China, participates in a candlelight vigil for Annie Le in New Haven, Conn. Monday, Sept. 14, 2009. The body of Annie Le, 24, was found Sept. 13 -- the day she was to be married.
Yale University President Richard C. Levin, left, bows his head in a moment of silence for slain graduate student Annie Le during a candlelight vigil in New Haven, Conn., Monday, Sept. 14, 2009.
Annie Le, 24, planned to marry Columbia graduate student Jonathan Widawsky on Sept. 13, 2009. The same day, her body was found behind a wall in the Yale research building where Le was last seen on Sept. 8.
Members of the Yale University community gathered Monday, Sept. 14, 2009, to mourn slain graduate student Annie Le. The pharmacology graduate student was described as friendly and smart.
This undated photo provided by Union Mine High School principal Tony DeVille shows Annie Le, left, as one of two 2003 graduates selected as the "Most Likely To Be The Next Einstein." While at the University of Rochester, Le did a summer project at the National Institutes of Health. She said her career goal was to work as an NIH investigator or as a professor.
Yale University graduate students carry flowers on their way to 10 Amistad St. in New Haven, Conn., Sunday night, Sept. 13, 2009. A body was discovered in a wall of the building, which was the last place Annie Le, a Yale grad student, was seen on the morning of Sept 8. Authorities identified the body as Le on Sept. 14.
Sophomore Abeer Gulzar joins other students during a candlelight vigil held for graduate student Annie Le at Yale University in New Haven, Conn., on Monday, Sept. 14, 2009. Le was pursuing a doctoral degree in pharmacology at the Yale School of Medicine.
Yale University graduate students set up a makeshift vigil in front of 10 Amistad St. in New Haven, Conn., Sunday night, Sept. 13, 2009. Late Sunday afternoon, a body was discovered in a wall of the building. Police later identified the body as graduate student Annie Le, who had been missing since Sept. 8.
Yale University President Richard C. Levin speaks to members of the university at a candlelight vigil for slain graduate student Annie Le. The 24-year-old doctoral student was working in a laboratory building on Sept. 8, the day she was reported missing. Her body was found behind a wall in that same building five days later, on what was supposed to be Le's wedding day.
According to friends of Jonathan Widawsky, left, his fianc
Freshman Diana Stoianov, 17, and other students hold a candlelight vigil for graduate student Annie Le on the Yale University campus in New Haven, Conn. on Monday, Sept. 14, 2009. Police have ruled Le's death a homicide. Evidence suggests the murder was an inside job, since the building and the floor her body was found on require security card access.
This undated photo provided by Union Mine High School principal Tony DeVille shows Annie Le, right, dissecting a cat with another student in a human physiology class. Le was found dead on Sept. 13, 2009, in the research building where she was working.
Yale University President Richard C. Levin addresses Yale students, faculty and administrators at an on-campus candlelight vigil for Annie Le, a graduate student who was killed last week on Monday, Sept. 14. Le was working in a medical school laboratory building doing pharmacology research before she was reported missing on Sept. 8. Her body was discovered hidden behind a wall in the same building on Sept. 13.
Yale University graduate students leave arm-in-arm after setting up a vigil for graduate student Annie Le, in front of the laboratory building where she was last seen on Sept. 13, 2009. Le was reported missing on Sept. 8 and her body was discovered five days later. Police have ruled her death a homicide.
Annie Le's roommate, Natalie Powers, left, is consoled by Yale University chaplain Susan Kugler at a candlelight vigil for the slain graduate student on Sept. 14. Le was to be married on Sept. 13, and according to friends and colleagues, she was very excited about the wedding.