(CNN)On the nights the father can sleep, he awakes
crying.
The
grief becomes even more overbearing during the day, when his only
daughter stares back from photographs in the family home. Her
presence lingers in every room. Sometimes, the father must close
his eyes.
His
daughter was an extraordinary student. Loved the arts. Played
piano. Dreamed of becoming a sculptor. She devoured her mother's
homemade dumplings and hot pots.
Mother and father scrimped and saved. Part of
China's burgeoning middle class, they tucked away their life
savings, more than $100,000, for her education. They were thrilled
to send her to the United States for college; she hoped to repay
them one day.
Tong
Shao majored in chemical engineering at Iowa State University in
Ames, a field that made her father happy because not many women are
brave enough to enter the male-dominated profession.
Like
so many of today's Chinese youth, Tong was the product of Beijing's
one-child policy. She had grown up the only child in a coastal city
in northeastern China. Her mother and father were sold on the idea
of sending their daughter to a bucolic setting in rural America. In
central Iowa, they believed she would be safe.
But
last September, the 20-year-old college junior was found stuffed in
the trunk of her car. Killed more than 6,500 miles from her home.
Her body rotted in the heat for three weeks before the gruesome
discovery.
"We've given all our love to our daughter,"
Chunsheng Shao says through an interpreter. "I feel my life is
meaningless after losing her."
It's
been more than six months since Tong's mother and father were
notified of her death. They remained quiet in their sorrow and
figured U.S and Chinese authorities would find their daughter's
killer. They decided to speak up now, hoping it might force
investigators to do more.
"We
are miserable, as the killer is still at large," the father
says.
The
last person to see Tong alive, police records show, was her
23-year-old boyfriend, Xiangnan Li, a Chinese student studying
business at the University of Iowa. Iowa authorities say they want
to talk with Li. He and Tong stayed in a hotel together in early
September. The same weekend, police say, Li bought a one-way plane
ticket to China and vanished.
Tong's father weeps. "What has she done to
deserve such a crime? Why?"
Tong Shao with her father in China. The
killing has devastated him: "I can't stop thinking about this whole
thing."
No extradition treaty
complicates case
Iowa
and China have an exceptionally strong relationship, one that dates
back more than 30 years. Iowa and the province of Hebei formed a
sister-state relationship to build trade relations, forge business
ties and form global friendships.
A
young Xi Jinping -- now the president of China -- traveled to Iowa
in 1985 on an agricultural tour, getting a firsthand look at
America's farming technology. When Xi visited the United States in
February 2012 before becoming the leader of the world's most
populous nation, he visited three places: Washington, California
and Iowa.
At a
private dinner in the town of Muscatine, Xi ate with friends he met
on his trip decades before. "You were the first group of Americans
I came into contact with,"
Xi told his Iowa friends. "To me, you are America."
Those strong ties can be seen on the campuses
of Iowa's two flagship universities, Iowa State University in Ames
and the University of Iowa in Iowa City. At both, 1 in every 10
students is Chinese.
The
killing of Tong Shao has shaken the more than 5,000 Chinese
students across the state. Many wonder whether authorities have
done enough to seek justice.
Some
ponder: What would happen if I went missing? Would anyone be held
accountable?
There is little precedent for a case like this
-- when a Chinese student is wanted for questioning in the killing
of another Chinese student on U.S. soil.
There is no extradition treaty between the
nations, and the likelihood of China handing Li over for
questioning -- if he can be found -- is slim, according to legal
scholars.
"China generally does not in any case
extradite Chinese citizens, so the most likely outcome were this
person to be found would be prosecution within China," says Ben
Liebman, director of the Center for Chinese Legal Studies at
Columbia Law School.
"China will prosecute people within China for
crimes they commit against citizens overseas."
A
murder case in 2010 in which a Chinese citizen killed a taxi driver
in New Zealand and fled to Shanghai was eventually tried in China,
over the objections of Auckland officials who wanted the suspect
tried in their country. The man was sentenced to 15 years in
prison. Media reports at the time said it was the first time a
killing in New Zealand was tried outside its borders.
Johnson County Attorney Janet Lyness is
leading the prosecution in Iowa City. When quizzed about the case,
she was guarded. She said Li is wanted for questioning and
"certainly a person of interest" because he "would have information
that would be helpful to the investigation."
Police records show Xiangnan Li, 23, stayed
with Tong the weekend she disappeared. He then left for
China.
"When somebody who may be a witness is not in
this country, obviously that adds to the complexity," Lyness
says.
The
FBI would not comment on the case, saying only that agents are
assisting in the investigation. China's Ministry of Public Security
has not responded to CNN's questions about what it is doing in the
hunt for Li.
Tong's family is left to wonder whether
justice will ever prevail.
Her
father issued a plea in late January for U.S. officials to share
everything they know with Chinese authorities. He puts the blame
for the killing squarely on his daughter's boyfriend.
"We
now plead with you, the U.S. authorities, to issue an arrest
warrant ... and share the evidence you have gathered with the
Chinese authorities," he wrote. "This honorable act could very well
save the life of other innocent and vulnerable victims, and will
most assuredly allow the soul of our precious daughter to be
comforted and rest in peace."
Her
father is aided by hundreds of Chinese who have taken to WeChat, an
instant messaging tool and social media platform, and Weibo,
Beijing's version of Twitter. They post photographs of Xiangnan Li
and ask for anyone who has seen him to turn him in. They use the
hashtag #FindLi.
"Everybody please #FindLi," one Chinese
graduate student from Boston University wrote recently.
Roommate: Her boyfriend was a
problem
About 10 inches of snow blanket the field at
Innis Grove Park in Ames. Tong and her roommate came here on their
last Sunday together with about 20 others from their church. They
ate stir fry vegetables, mixed fruit, grilled meat and hot dogs.
Tong brought frosted cookies.
While others played kickball, Tong quietly
nibbled on her treats.
"I
never imagined that would be my last memory," says Jean, who asked
that only her American name be used for her own
security.
Tong Shao liked to cook for friends. Her
roommate says her boyfriend was a point of friction among
them.
The
snow serves as a reminder of another memory. At the end of last
winter, Jean and Tong tried to make a snowman after a storm swept
through. The snow was soft, not wet enough to make a snowball. The
two went to YouTube and learned how to make a proper snowman. They
pledged to try it during the next snowfall.
"We
were going to do it again this year," Jean says, before adding
softly, "But it never worked out."
The
killing has taught her to appreciate special moments, to live for
today because you never know when will be your last. "One day
you're here," she says, "the next ..."
Tong
was known as "Little Sister." At 20, she was the oldest of three
roommates, but her nickname stuck because of her diminutive
5-foot-2 stature.
Jean
laughs when looking at a family photograph of her roommate from
2007. It shows Tong dressed in a T-shirt and with short hair. Tong
embraced America and shed T-shirts for clothes with frills. Her
hair was long, almost down to her waist, with a dyed brown streak
and curls. "That is the her I remember."
In
the classroom, she was one of those supersmart students who drove
the others crazy. You know, the smart kid who always complains of
being behind and then gets straight A's.
"I'd
be, like, seriously! That's not cool."
Jean
and Tong met their freshmen year. Their friendship blossomed over
the next two years. When Jean introduced her roommate to friends at
church, Tong interrupted: "We're friends first; roommates,
second."
"That has always stuck with me," Jean
says.
Known as "Little Sister," Tong wore her hair
long in the U.S. "She is such a girlie person," her roommate
recalls.
There was one point of friction in their
friendship: Tong's boyfriend, Xiangnan Li.
Jean
didn't like him. He moved into their apartment in summer 2013. She
says he didn't ask permission, and never offered to help
clean.
"We
wanted to kick him out, but he refused to leave," she says. "Tong
knew we didn't like him, so she didn't talk about him around
us."
"We
just didn't want a guy in our apartment. It's not
normal."
She
never had a confrontation with Li, but she let her roommate know
she believed he was a jerk.
Tong
and Li had met while taking English prep classes in Beijing in
summer 2011. He traveled to Tong's hometown of Dalian, a coastal
city of 7 million about 300 miles east of Beijing. He even met her
mother briefly, although the two didn't speak. Mom and Dad didn't
think too much about the courtship. Tong rarely talked with them
about Li, saying only that he was "chasing her."
"She
didn't tell us much about their relationship," her father
says.
For
Tong's parents, images of small-town America brought comfort. Iowa
was home to John Wayne and the artist Grant Wood, whose iconic
portrait of a farmer with a pitchfork, "American Gothic," was
inspired while visiting there for an art exhibition. Mom and Dad
preferred sending their only child to a small college town in
middle America, rather than a university in a cosmopolitan
city.
Li
was from Wenzhou, a city of about 9 million on the east coast of
China, about 300 miles south of Shanghai. He was majoring in
business in Iowa City, about 140 miles from where Tong studied, in
Ames.
Li
had transferred to the University of Iowa from Rochester Institute
of Technology to be closer to Tong. He lived in Tong's apartment
until his classes began in Iowa City in fall 2013.
He
is mostly a mystery man to the tight-knit Chinese community at the
university. He lived alone and off campus. He had few friends, but
that's not entirely unusual because he had only been at the
university for a year. One friend said he was not very outgoing,
although he would invite a few people to his apartment.
It
seemed he mingled mostly with his girlfriend across the state, and
it wasn't unusual for the couple to disappear on weekends. He'd
cruise over in his 2009 blue 325i BMW. The couple knew his presence
wasn't welcome at the apartment, so they'd find a hotel.
Jean
wishes she'd realized something was wrong when her roommate didn't
return home after that weekend. She now clings to a prayer book
Tong gave her.
She
opens it to the last day she saw her friend alive.
"Keep me focused, God, on the path before me,
even when it seems stacked with insurmountable obstacles," it says.
"Remind me that I do not walk alone, but with all those whose aim
is to walk with you."
Boyfriend's last known
message: 'Fine for now'
Mountains of shoveled snow surround the
parking lot of the Budget Inn and Suites in Nevada, Iowa, just
outside Ames. Tan and green vinyl siding decorate the side of the
hotel -- not a fancy place, more of a spot for a quick night's rest
or a hookup.
Tong
and Li checked into Room 218 on September 5, 2014, the weekend
after Labor Day. The owner of the hotel told police they arrived in
a gold-colored car, one similar to the description of Tong's beige
1997 Toyota Camry.
The
couple was familiar with the hotel. They stayed there three other
times: in September 2013, October 2013 and May 2014.
David Gonzalez, the lead investigator on the
case with the Iowa City Police Department, said he wishes Li would
come forward to answer questions. "What he was doing, the
relationship, where he was going, why he decided to leave -- those
things I'd like to ask," he says.
Li's
cellphone no longer works. When CNN called the home of his parents,
a woman answered and immediately hung up when told a reporter was
calling about the whereabouts of Li.
Tong visited Disney World in Orlando while on
a break from school last year.
Police records unsealed in January show Li may
have been angry and jealous that weekend. Just two days earlier, he
called Tong; she didn't realize it, but she answered and he stayed
on the line for 30 minutes, overhearing her conversation with a
friend, the records show.
"Li
heard (Tong) complaining about Li and saying things about him that
were not nice," according to police records.
The
owner of the hotel told police that Li left the hotel in the
overnight hours of September 6 and into the morning of September 7.
That was unusual, according to the owner, because he typically had
to ask Li and Tong to leave the room after the checkout time of 11
a.m.
Li
had purchased a plane ticket to China and by Monday morning,
September 8, according to police records, he boarded a flight in
Cedar Rapids, with a layover in Chicago. He landed in China two
days later, on September 10.
Before Li left Iowa, a text from his phone was
sent to one of Tong's roommates. "This message was purportedly from
(Tong) and read that Li had an emergency in China and was flying
back there, that she was going to take a bus to Minnesota to visit
friends, and she would return in about a week," the police
documents says.
Karen Yang, a friend of Li's who was
interviewed by police, sent him a message on September 9, asking
how things with Tong were going. "Fine for now," he responded,
according to police records. CNN reached out to Yang, but did not
hear back.
Tong's roommate, Jean, filed a missing person
report on September 18. She and her roommates hadn't been too
concerned in the days prior, because they thought Tong traveled to
Minnesota as the text indicated. Her roommates combed through
Tong's friends on social media in Minnesota and reached out to each
one: No one had heard from her.
"That's when we started to get really
worried," Jean says.
On
September 26, a stench wafted from a car parked in a cluster of
apartments on the outskirts of Iowa City. The apartment buildings,
more than 40 in all, sit in rows, like military barracks, and are
home to some of the town's poorest residents.
Tong's Toyota Camry was parked under a tree
near Building 44. Inside the trunk, police found Tong and a
15-pound barbell next to her. Workers with the medical examiner's
office wore hazmat suits at the scene.
Tong
died of asphyxiation and blunt force trauma. A towel from the hotel
was wrapped around her head, according to police
records.
Among heaps of stuff in the backseat, police
found copies of Li's flight information.
When
police finally examined Room 218 at the Budget Inn, the walls "had
splatters and drips of various dried liquids throughout the room
and behind the headboards of the beds," police records
say.
"It
is possible her death may have occurred in the hotel
room."
By
that time, Li was long gone.
In
his apartment were signs of a man who left in a hurry. Milk spoiled
on the counter; a packed suitcase was left by the front
door.
Father receives news of arrest
warrant
Tong Shao vacations with her mother and father
in 2007. Her father says the trip remains his favorite
memory.
CNN
first spoke with Tong Shao's family in early February. Her father
says he talked with his daughter for the last time on September 3.
It was an ordinary conversation: She said she lost her glasses and
would try to get a new pair.
He
exchanged text messages with her on the night of September 7,
possibly the day she was killed. He asked about the glasses; she
said she'd borrowed a pair from a friend.
"She
told me she was too busy to video talk with me," he says. "I didn't
think much of it. But in retrospect I realize those messages
weren't sent by my daughter; they were from Li. Once she said she
was busy, I didn't insist on video chatting again, as I didn't want
to bother her.
"I
never thought I wouldn't be able to talk to her
anymore."
He
spoke with Li's parents shortly after his daughter was reported
missing. He said the parents told him they had not heard from their
son. "They told us that they didn't know where he was, either," he
says. "We have not contacted his parents since Tong was confirmed
dead."
The
news was so devastating that Tong's father watched his blood
pressure skyrocket; he couldn't travel to the United States to
escort her ashes home. He cries when he looks at her smiling
photographs around the home. He cherishes a trip in 2007 to Yunnan
Province when the family glided down a river on a boat and took in
other beautiful sights.
His
psychologist has suggested the father practice Buddhism, hoping
that the faith could help ease his suffering. "I can't stop
thinking about this whole thing," he says. "I think about it all
the time, and dream of it at night."
He
and his wife had planned to travel to the United States for Tong's
graduation next May.
About a week after he first spoke with CNN,
the father received a call from police in Iowa City. He was
informed that an arrest warrant has been issued for Li; he is
wanted on a charge of first-degree murder.
In a
sign of how sensitive the case is, the prosecutor and police in
Iowa City would not confirm or deny the father's account. A
provision of Iowa law allows for a warrant to remain under seal
under special circumstances until an arrest is made and prevents
any official with knowledge of the case from speaking publicly
about it.
Police would only say they had spoken with the
father.
For
a father and mother thousands of miles away, the arrest warrant
signifies hope.
"We
don't know if our health condition will allow us to wait until the
day when justice prevails," the father says. "We hope that the case
will be resolved as soon as possible."
The
next phone call, he hopes, is news of an arrest.
CNN's Wayne Drash reported this story from
Iowa; Shen Lu reported from China and served as a
translator.