Charles Ng
Charles Chi-Tat Ng (born December 24, 1960) is a Hong Kong serial killer. He is believed to have raped, tortured and murdered between 11 and 25 victims with his accomplice Leonard Lake at Lake's cabin in Calaveras County, California, in the Sierra Nevada foothills 150 miles east of San Francisco.
After a lengthy dispute between Canada and the United States, Ng was extradited to California and was convicted of 11 murders. He is currently on death row at San Quentin State Prison.
Early life
Ng was born in Hong Kong, the son of a wealthy Chinese executive and his wife. As a child, Ng was harshly disciplined and abused by his father. As a teenager, Ng was described as a troubled loner and was expelled from several schools. When he was arrested for shoplifting at age 15, his father sent him to Bentham Grammar boarding school in Lancashire, England. Not long after arriving, Ng was expelled for stealing from other students and returned to Hong Kong.
Ng moved to the United States on a student visa in 1978, and studied biology at the College of Notre Dame in Belmont, California. He dropped out after one semester. It was at this time that he first met Leonard Lake. Soon after, he was involved in a hit-and-run accident, and to avoid prosecution he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps.
U.S. Marine Corps
Although not a United States citizen, Ng became a Marine with the help, he said, of a recruiting sergeant, and false documents attesting to his birth in Bloomington, Indiana. After less than a year of service he was arrested by military police for the theft of heavy weaponry and machine guns from MCAS Kaneohe Bay in Hawaii.[citation needed] He was further charged with escape from confinement and attempted desertion, though the desertion charge was dropped.[citation needed] Ng was convicted on the remaining charges and sentenced to 14 years, but less than two years later his sentence was commuted and he was dishonorably discharged.
Murders
After his release Ng immediately contacted Lake, who was renting a remote cabin near Wilseyville, California, and invited Ng to join him.[8] Lake had custom-built a dungeon next to the cabin. It is presumed[by whom?] that by then Lake had already murdered his brother Donald and his friend and best man, Charles Gunnar, in order to steal their money, and in Gunnar's case, his identity. Over the next year Lake and Ng indulged themselves in an orgy of rape, torture, and killing. Their victims included their rural neighbors Lonnie Bond, his girlfriend Brenda O'Connor, and their infant son, Lonnie Jr. Another young family, Harvey and Deborah Dubs and their young son, Sean, were also victims. In both cases the two men quickly killed the men and babies, keeping the women alive for repeated abuse. They filmed themselves raping and torturing their victims before murdering them. Other victims included workmates of Ng's, relatives and friends who came looking for Bond and O'Connor, and two gay men. In all, the two are believed to have murdered between 11 and 25 victims at the cabin.
Their murderous career may have gone on longer if it had not been for Ng's addiction to stealing. On June 2, 1985, he was caught shoplifting a vise from a San Francisco hardware store, and fled the scene. Lake arrived later to try to pay for the vise, but by then police were there. Officer Daniel Wright noted that Lake's car's license plates were registered to another vehicle, and that Lake's ID, in the name of Robin Stapley (a San Diego man who had been reported missing by his family several weeks earlier), was suspicious. When Wright found a gun with a silencer in the trunk of the car he arrested Lake. In custody, Lake swallowed cyanide pills that he had sewn into his clothes and died four days later, after revealing his and Ng's true identities.
Further investigation led police to the cabin. Ng was nowhere to be found, but they did find Robin Stapley's truck and Lonnie Bond's car, and behind the cabin, the dungeon. Officers noticed a foot poking through the earth and proceeded to unearth roughly 40 pounds of burned and smashed human bone fragments, relating to at least a dozen bodies. Police also found a hand-drawn "treasure map" that led them to two buried five-gallon buckets: One contained envelopes with names and victims' IDs, suggesting that the total body count might be as high as 25. In the other bucket were Lake's handwritten journals for the years 1983 and 1984, and two videotapes documenting the torture of two of their victims. In one of the tapes, Ng is seen telling victim Brenda O'Connor: "you can cry and stuff, like the rest of them, but it won't do any good. We are pretty—ha, ha—cold-hearted, so to speak."
Ng, meanwhile, had fled to Canada, and on July 6, 1985, he was arrested in Calgary, Alberta, by the Calgary Police Service after he shot security guard Sean Doyle in the hand while resisting arrest for shoplifting. He was charged and subsequently convicted of shoplifting, felonious assault, and possession of a concealed firearm, and sentenced to four and half years in prison. Following the completion of his sentence, he remained incarcerated pending extradition to the United States.
Ng fought a protracted legal battle against extradition to the United States, on the grounds that Canada—which has no death penalty—would be violating his human rights by permitting him to stand trial in California for capital murder. A habeas corpus request failed, as did an application to the Alberta Court of Appeal. In 1991, the Canadian Supreme Court ruled it was legal to extradite him even if he were to face the death penalty in Reference re Ng Extradition, and he was extradited that same year.
Murder trial
Following his extradition, Ng managed to delay his trial by repeatedly filing a series of frivolous motions, firing his lawyers, and requesting his trial be held outside Calaveras County. In October 1998, six years after his extradition, Ng's trial on twelve counts of first degree murder began. In 1999, he was convicted of eleven homicides—six men, three women, and two male infants—and sentenced to death. Ng's prosecution cost California approximately $20 million, at the time the most expensive trial in the state's history. He is currently on death row at San Quentin State Prison.