Police obtain warrant charging MIT grad with murder in fatal shooting of Yale student

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Police Obtain Warrant Charging Mit Grad Murder Fatal Shooting Yale N1259069 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

Qinxuan Pan remains at large, the New Haven Police Department said.

Connecticut police have obtained an arrest warrant charging a Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate with murder in the fatal shooting of a Yale University student.

The New Haven Police Department announced the charge against Qinxuan Pan in a Facebook post on Saturday. He remains at large, according to the authorities.

Pan, 29, of Malden, Massachusetts, was previously named a "person of interest" in the death of Kevin Jiang. The second-year graduate student at the Yale School of the Environment was shot and killed outside his car on Feb. 6.

Image: Qinxuan Pan
New Haven police have identified Qinxuan Pan as a person of interest in the shooting death of Yale graduate student Kevin Jiang.New Haven Police Dept.

Police were looking into whether Jiang, 26, was a targeted victim in a road rage incident that possibly occurred after a car accident.

During a press conference earlier this month, New Haven police Chief Otoniel Reyes said that Pan should be considered “armed and dangerous” and the public should use “extreme caution” around him.

Police had said that Pan was seen in a stolen vehicle from Massachusetts at the Best Western hotel in North Haven on the night of the shooting. Authorities had previously obtained two arrest warrants for Pan, one for possession of a stolen vehicle in North Haven and another for stealing a vehicle out of Massachusetts.

On Feb. 11, he was seen driving with family members in Brookhaven, Georgia, according to the U.S. Marshals Service. Officials with the agency believe he could be staying with family or friends in suburban Atlanta.

Image: Kevin Jiang
Kevin Jiang.via Yale

U.S. Marshals said it was offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to Pan.

A spokesperson for MIT previously told NBC News that Pan received undergraduate degrees from the university in computer science and mathematics in June 2014 and has been enrolled as a graduate student in the electrical engineering and computer science department since September 2014.

Jiang’s fiancee graduated with a degree in biological engineering from MIT in 2020. It is not clear if she knew Pan.

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