Massey stabbing: the family’s daily despair after the brutal murder of his beloved mother, Manchao Li jailed for life



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Manchao Li denied killing his ex-wife, Massey’s librarian Jennifer Yang. Photo / Dean Purcell

The spiteful ex-husband of an Auckland woman has been sent to jail after stabbing her to death in a daytime attack.

On Friday, Manchao Li was sentenced after murdering Massey’s librarian, Zhimin Yang, known as Jennifer.

After years of feeding grudges and racking up personal and financial failures, Li stalked and killed his ex-wife while waiting for a bus in West Auckland in July 2019.

Li’s son, who has his name permanently deleted, told Auckland High Court that he felt guilty and wished he had died in his mother’s place.

“He was always going to kill one of us and that person should have been me.”

He said that most of the family conversations since the early 2000s had been about Li’s abuse, lies and manipulation.

The memorial on Westgate Drive, Massey, for Zhimin Yang, known as Jennifer.  Photography / Brett Phibbs
The memorial on Westgate Drive, Massey, for Zhimin Yang, known as Jennifer. Photography / Brett Phibbs

He said the family enrolled Yang in self-defense courses and helped her install gates, doors, locks, alarms and surveillance cameras around her home.

But the son told the court: “Li was a very committed murderer with a detailed plan.”

“Most of my family is in worse shape than I am,” he said in his victim impact statement.

She said her grandmother repeated the voice messages Jennifer had sent her every day.

The son said Li had smiled during the murder trial.

“I couldn’t see an iota of remorse. His words sounded like he had rehearsed them.”

Manchao Li, in white, in his first appearance in Waitakere District Court after committing a murder on July 29, 2019. Photo / Dean Purcell
Manchao Li, in white, in his first appearance in Waitakere District Court after committing a murder on July 29, 2019. Photo / Dean Purcell

He said his mother’s last moments would have been terrifying.

“She looked at this world one last time and took her last breath … My mother’s life ended in fear, sadness, worry and pain.”

At his trial, Li accepted that he must have stabbed Yang, but insisted that he was not in his right mind.

Li, 65, also denied violating a protection order.

He often tried to dodge questions during interrogation, answering questions of his own or telling Crown Attorney Nick Webby stories about mythical creatures.

The son said that Li was a serial liar.

And he told the court that the murder had tested his own will to live.

“A sudden death feels better than the slow death I’m currently experiencing.”

“It has taken the purpose out of my life.”

Webby said Friday that the murder was carefully planned and carried out with great brutality.

After Webby addressed the court and it was defense attorney Sam Wimsett’s turn, Li raised his arm and stood up.

Following a conversation with an interpreter and with Wimsett, Li was denied the opportunity to address the court.

‘Great’ killer

Judge Pheroze Jagose said Li became obsessed with revenge and hatred after a dispute over ownership of a relationship.

The judge said that even when Li lived in Christchurch for a time, he continued to harass Yang.

“He harassed her and her son, even hiring a private investigator to find her home and work addresses.”

Judge Jagose said Yang had to move house to evade Li’s harassment.

“With horrible foresight, Ms. Yang told the police that if she knew where she lived, she believed she would kill her.”

He said Yang was a university physics professor in China who came to New Zealand as a skilled migrant.

He said Li’s arrogance and his description of the relationship as a marriage of convenience was disgusting.

The judge said that Li had previously indicated a degree of murderous hatred towards Yang.

“Your roommates noticed your self-esteem and grandeur, particularly with women.”

The court once heard Li talk about wanting to cut off Yang’s hands and feet.

Judge Jagose said there were no mitigating factors and that the killing was entirely Li’s fault.

He identified multiple aggravating factors, including Yang’s vulnerability, the calculated nature of the attack, and his intense brutality.

Li was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for 19 years.

A hate story

1997: Yang and Li marry in China.
2001: Yang and Li emigrate to New Zealand and buy a house in Blockhouse Bay.
2005: The couple separates in August. Yang moves to Avondale. In December, a protection order is granted for Yang.
2007: Li is convicted of violating a protection order.
2009: Yang and Li finally divorce.
2014: Li is again convicted of violating a protection order.

Days before the murder:
June 23: At this time a letter is sent to Yang’s son, warning the addressee to leave New Zealand or be “exterminated.”
July 18: Li purchases a knife at Miter 10 Westgate.
July 22: Li buys a tactical folding knife on eBay and has it shipped to his address at Matisse Dr in West Harbor.
July 28: Li enters Hunting & Fishing, Constellation Dr. He haggles before buying a hunting knife and shows interest in buying a machete.

July 29, 2019:
7.16am: Someone using a video camera found in Li’s car begins recording Yang as he leaves his Granville property Dr.
7.59am: Images from a Pavlovich bus show Li’s car parked at Granville Dr.
8:03 am: Li, or the person using the camera in his car, stops filming Yang.
8:07 am: A security camera on White Heron Dr, Massey, shows Yang walking.
8:20 am: Witness Casey Armstrong notices a silver Honda Airwave pickup slowly driving near her in Westgate. Dr. Armstrong is scared and takes a photo of the car.
8.30am: Pavlovich’s bus footage shows Yang waiting at a bus stop.
8.33am: Yang is accosted and stabbed multiple times alongside Westgate Dr.
8.34am: Witness Daniel Harvey follows Li on foot, but Li gets into his Honda before Harvey can grab him.
8.38am: Witness Peter Simpson calls 111 and says he used his ute to stop the silver Honda.
8.40am: The police Eagle helicopter spots Li around some nearby bushes. He is arrested without incident.

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