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The Latest: Jury deliberates sentence for scholar's killer

PEORIA, Ill. — The Latest on the sentencing in the slaying of a visiting Chinese scholar (all times local):

2:05 p.m.

Jurors have withdrawn to deliberate on whether a former University of Illinois doctoral student should be put to death for killing a young scholar from China.

Prosecutor James Nelson told jurors Wednesday during closing arguments that Brendt Christensen deserved to die because he brutally killed Yingying Zhang “for sport.”

Christensen’s attorney, Elisabeth Pollock said that, while the defence admits their client killed Zhang, his life as a loving, gentle child and other positive characteristics should spare him the death penalty.

A tearful Pollock stood behind Christensen as she ended her remarks, put her hands on his shoulders and told jurors: “He is a whole person. He is not just the worst thing he did.”

She also told jurors that Christensen was going to leave prison “in a casket” no matter what their decision.

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12 a.m.

Prosecutors and defence attorneys are delivering final arguments to jurors on whether a former University of Illinois doctoral student should be sentenced to death for killing a young scholar from China.

Closing arguments Wednesday come after testimony in the death-penalty phase of 30-year-old Brendt Christensen’s case. Jurors will begin deliberating after closings. If they can’t agree unanimously on the death penalty, he’ll go to prison for life.

The same jurors took under 90 minutes to convict him at trial last month for kidnapping 28-year-old Yingying Zhang, raping her and beating her to death with a bat.

Prosecutors have emphasized the brutally of the 2017 slaying. The defence tried to humanize Christensen, showing him in videos as a child.

Zhang’s body was never found and Christensen hasn’t said what he did with the body.

The Associated Press