Mansfield car theft linked to Connecticut murder
WCVB-TV
MANSFIELD A person of interest in the slaying of a Yale University graduate student this month stole a car from Station Buick GMC in Mansfield on the day of the killing before driving to Connecticut, according to a police report obtained by WCVB-TV.
The report filed by police in Mansfield, Massachusetts, alleged Qinxuan Pan of Malden took a blue GMC Terrain for a test drive from the dealership on Route 106/Chauncy Street on Feb. 6 and never returned it. Pan also allegedly put a commercial Connecticut license plate on the vehicle to conceal its identity, the New Haven Register reported.
Qinxuan Pan, person of interest sought in murder of Yale student Kevin Jiang, is believed to have stolen vehicle from Massachusetts dealership
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Police report: Qinxuan Pan allegedly switched license plate of car he drove to CT
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Qinxuan PanNew Haven Police Department
NEW HAVEN Qinxuan Pan, named a person of interest in the investigation of the slaying of a Yale graduate student, allegedly stole an SUV and changed his cellphone number before coming to Connecticut, according to a police report.
But Pan also allegedly attached a commercial Connecticut license plate to the vehicle, replacing a Massachusetts dealer plate, and “concealed the identity” of the SUV, according to the police report.
The Attleboro District Courthouse in Massachusetts released the report, written by Mansfield, Mass., police to secure a warrant for Pan’s arrest on a larceny charge..
What is abatement ab initio ?
According to Oklahoma Bar Association, The doctrine of abatement ab initio applies when a convicted defendant, like Hernandez, dies before his appeal rights are fully exhausted. When applicable, the doctrine wipes clean the defendant’s slate, as though the indictment, conviction and punishment never happened.2 For example, if as a result of a conviction, a criminal fine had been levied but not collected, abatement ab initio makes the obligation to pay go away.3 The converse, however, is not true. When a defendant dies before exhausting his appeal rights but after having already paid costs, fines and restitution as a result of his conviction, despite the conviction being wiped clean, the deceased’s estate has no right to recoup the money previously paid.4 Until now..
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