Crime | Annie Le Another Murder Defies Race Stereotypes Annie Le case latest to stir ugly racial fears, which proved false By Jason Farago Posted Sep 18, 2009 8:37 AM CDT Copied Police officers arrest Raymond Clark III, left, at the Super 8 motel in Cromwell, Conn., on Thursday, Sept. 17, 2009, for the killing of Yale graduate student Annie Le. (AP Photo/George Ruhe) When news of Annie Le's murder first emerged, scaremongering commentators seized on the dangers of studying on an "urban" campus, blogs author and sportswriter Jeff Pearlman—by which they didn't mean "an endless stream of Starbucks storefronts." Lo and behold, her alleged murderer is a "khaki-wearing white guy" named Raymond Clark III. The "hidden message" was clear to Pearlman—"Beware of the blacks!"—but "once again, they didn't come." Susan Smith drowned her two sons in a car and then blamed a fictional black man for the crime. Charles Stuart murdered his pregnant wife and concocted his own fake black assailant. Now we have another mythical black killer, displaced by "a white guy—short and nerdy looking and nattily dressed." What a pity, Pearlman writes, that "these sort of conclusions rarely change social takes." Read These Next Trump laid a 'trap' for Democrats, and GOP aims to pounce. Men's, women's hockey players stick together after Trump joke. Christina Applegate pulls back the curtain on her real life. Cindy McCain says she's leaving the World Food Programme. Report an error