Murder of Cha Vang
On January 5, 2007, 30-year-old Cha Vang was murdered by 28-year-old James Nichols near Peshtigo, Wisconsin, United States. Nichols had shot and stabbed Vang before hiding his body, later admitting to the murder, but insisting the killing was self-defense. Prosecutors believed that Vang's murder had been racially motivated.
In October 2007, Nichols was convicted of second degree intentional homicide and sentenced to 69 years in prison.
Background
Cha Vang was born in Laos, but spent most of his life in a refugee camp in Thailand due to the Laotian Civil War. He immigrated to the U.S. in mid-2004, settling in Green Bay, Wisconsin. He worked at a factory and was the father of five children.James Allen Nichols was born on May 27, 1978 and worked at a sawmill in Peshtigo. He had previously been convicted of burglary and on parole at the time of the murder. In October 2006, Nichols proclaimed a hatred for Hmong immigrants to his boss. He alleged that a different Hmong hunter had stolen a tree stand and stated that he would have murdered the hunter, had Nichols been in possession of his rifle instead of a bow.
Murder
On January 5, 2007, Cha Vang was with a larger group of squirrel hunters from Green Bay, who went to different parts of the forest on their own. He was eventually spotted by Nichols, who was also in the woods hunting squirrels. Mark Witeck, who performed the autopsy on Cha Vang, testified that Vang was shot from about 50 feet away by a shotgun, and stabbed six times in his face and neck. Vang's body was then hidden under a log.On January 6, Nichols arrived at a hospital with a gunshot wound to his hand, claiming a stranger had shot at him from a distance with a.22 caliber. When asked why he did not called police, Nichols changed his initial explanation and led emergency services to where he had hidden Vang's remains.