A bloody rubber glove found next to the body of a Penn State senior fatally stabbed 93 times in June yielded two DNA profiles -- the victim's and former Penn State football player LaVon Chisley's, police said.
The glove was found a few feet from Langston Carraway's mutilated body in his residence at 110 Northbrook Lane, according to the criminal complaint. Police have said Carraway and Chisley were known to be friends.
According to the complaint, the only DNA recovered on the inside of the glove matched that of Chisley -- who was arrested yesterday and charged with first- and third-degree murder for his alleged role in the slaying of Carraway, 26. The complaint indicates that DNA found on the glove's exterior matched Carraway's DNA.
Karen Muir, Chisley's lawyer, would not comment on the DNA evidence.
Holding his mother's hand, Chisley, 23, calmly walked into Patton Township police custody yesterday morning at the Centre County Courthouse. He entered through the back entrance of the courthouse, where police handcuffed him and asked him to kneel on a bench so they could shackle his ankles.
Muir said Chisley is innocent, but chose to cooperate with authorities.
"It is still Mr. Chisley's position that he had absolutely nothing to do with this homicide," she said, adding that she will be speaking on behalf of Chisley.
Other evidence revealed in the criminal complaint filed Sunday was a bloody shoe print, measured at about 13 inches long, on the carpet of Carraway's apartment. According to the criminal complaint, the shoe print matched the length of a shoe found at the crime scene that police say belongs to Chisley.
Carraway died of massive blood loss as a result of 93 separate wounds, including slashes on the neck and stab wounds to the right side of his torso and face, according to the criminal complaint. A knife or knives were used, police said, and in a deep stab wound, a broken blade was found in Carraway's chest. Also, the doctor who performed the autopsy said multiple injuries to Carraway's arms were defense wounds.
A friend of Chisley, Kerry Onaka, told police that on June 3 she saw Chisley in possession of the same thick rubber gloves found at the crime scene, according to the criminal complaint. The complaint also indicates that she told police she and Chisley had a scheduled trip to Baltimore and that he called "agitated" and with a "sense of urgency" requesting to leave at 6 a.m. June 4, about two hours earlier than they had planned.
According to the criminal complaint, the murder happened between 8 p.m. June 3 and 6:30 a.m. June 4, and Onaka told police Chisley called her June 20 claiming he was in trouble and told her to tell police he stayed with her the night of June 3 if asked.
Chisley was arraigned at about 11:30 a.m. yesterday by District Judge Thomas Jordan, who set Chisley's preliminary hearing date for 9 a.m. Jan. 26 at the county courthouse. Chisley is being held at the Centre County Correctional Facility. He was not given the right to bail, which is normal for most first-degree murder cases, Centre County District Attorney Michael Madeira said.



