The Beliefs Involved In The Murder Of Chandra Levy

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George Gordon Bryon, a vivacious poet and English nobleman once said, ¨Where there is mystery, it is generally suspected there must be evil¨ which is absolutely correct in the case of Chandra Levy´s disappearance. Free-spirited, ambitious, and beastly independent Levy was welcomed into the world on April 14, 1977 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her dreams of ghosting her remote, rural town is what enhanced her to look at the world as a future FBI agent. She had always knew what she felt her calling was; her highschool Modesto Police uniform explains it all. Ingmar Guandique, an illegal immigrant and Gary Condit, a California congressman, are two key suspects who people believe were involved in the murder of Chandra Levy.
As part of her final semester …show more content…

Gary was a married congressman, he denied having affair with Levy until later on.Unidentified police sources alleged that Condit had admitted to an affair with Levy during an interview with law enforcement officers on July 7, 2001.Condit described her to police as a vegetarian who avoided drinking and smoking. He thought that Levy was going to return to Washington, D.C. after her graduation and was surprised to find out that the lease on her apartment had ended.Investigators searched Condit's apartment on July 10. They questioned flight attendant Anne Marie Smith, who claimed that Condit told her she did not need to speak to the Federal of Investigation about his personal life. Gary Condit was later not found …show more content…

police and federal prosecutors were contacted by the lawyer of an informant, held in a D.C. jail, who claimed to have knowledge of Levy's killer. The informant, whose identity was protected for his safety, said that Ingmar Guandique, a 20-year-old illegal alien from El Salvador also being held in the jail, told him that Condit paid him $25,000 to kill Levy (Brook). Investigators ruled out the story about Condit, because Guandique had already admitted to assaulting two other women in the same park where Levy's remains were found.Guandique failed to show up for work on the day of Levy's disappearance. His former landlady recalled that his face appeared scratched and bruised at around that time.The investigators on the Levy case did not interview the other Rock Creek Park victims. Police chief Ramsey avoided calling Guandique a suspect and described him as a "person of interest",telling reporters not to make "too big a deal" about him. Assistant chief Terrance W. Gainer said that if Guandique had been considered a suspect, D.C. police would have been after him, Guandique denied attacking Levy. On November 28, the FBI had the informant take a polygraph test, which he had failed. Guandique sentenced was to 10 years in prison for his attacks on two other women at Rock Creek Park.(Brook) When Judge Noel Anketell Kramer was asked about Guandique's potential connection to the Levy homicide, she responded, "This is such a satellite issue. To me it