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New Leads in a Cold Case
September/October 2008
by Hannah Karmin ’11
Were you at Yale in December 1998? If so, you may
have information that could help solve the brutal murder of a Yale student. On
the evening of December 4, 1998, Suzanne Jovin '99 was found dead on a sidewalk
in an affluent part of the East Rock neighborhood, with 17 stab wounds to her
back and head. Nearly ten years later, the crime is still unsolved.
A team of four retired Connecticut State Police
detectives took over the case in 2006, working for dollar-a-year salaries and
reviewing all the evidence from previous investigations. The team recently
issued appeals for information from the public regarding two leads that had
never been released before.
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In 1998, Suzanne Jovin ’99 was found dead with 17 stab wounds.
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The first is an e-mail message that Jovin wrote only
54 minutes before police found her body. In the message, Jovin responded to a
friend’s question about study materials for the Graduate Records Examination
(GRE). Jovin wrote that she had lent the materials to another, unnamed person
but would retrieve them and leave them in her apartment building foyer. The
investigators would like to know who the unnamed person was and whether Jovin
made contact with him or her that night.
The second lead is a report by a local woman who was
driving north on Whitney Avenue in New Haven shortly before 10 p.m. on the
night Jovin was killed. The woman told police that a man ran in front of her
car, glanced quickly at her, and fled. Investigators have released a police
sketch of the man and have posted it at numerous area businesses.
The investigation team is appealing to alumni for
information on these leads—or any other relevant information. They can be
reached at jovincase@gmail.com or (203) 676-1575.
James G. Clark '72, assistant state’s attorney, says
there is still hope that the crime could be solved, even after nearly ten
years. "The best chance of solving a case is in the first 24 hours," concedes
Clark, but he adds, "the fact that we are now asking for information that
people have not heard about before is positive.”
Jovin’s senior thesis adviser, former political
science lecturer James Van de Velde ’82, was identified as a suspect in the
days following the crime, but neither he nor anyone else was ever charged, and
the investigators say he is no longer under suspicion in the case. Yale
canceled Van de Velde’s spring classes after he was named as a suspect, and Van
de Velde later sued both the New Haven police and the university for damage to
his reputation. A federal judge dismissed the suit.  |