SHERBURNE COUNTY, Minn. — Minnesota investigators on Thursday closed a decades-old case without filing charges.
On April 23, 1989, a baby girl was discovered dead inside a box by the roadside in Santiago Township in Sherburne County.
The case remained unsolved for more than 35 years as investigators were unable to identify the baby or her parents.
Last year, Sherburne County investigators revisited the case with assistance from the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and the FBI.
Investigators say they were able to use DNA to identify the mother, who, in interviews, admitted to concealing her pregnancy and the birth from her family. She told authorities that the baby was not alive at birth and that, in a state of panic, she did not know how to handle the situation.
The original 1989 autopsy and re-examination done last year could not definitely determine if the baby had been born alive. Sherburne County officials say that two pathologists believe the baby was likely stillborn.
Sherburne County Attorney Kathleen Heaney reviewed the case earlier this month before closing the case, citing the statute of limitations.
In 1989, the Sherburne County Coroner’s Office arranged a burial for the baby but the sheriff’s office says that despite “extensive efforts to locate the records showing where the child was buried,” they have not had success.
Anyone with information about where the baby is buried is asked to contact the Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office at 763-765-3500.
Riley Moser is a digital producer who covers breaking news and feature stories for CBS Minnesota. Riley started her career at CBS Minnesota in June 2022 and earned an honorable mention for sports writing from the Iowa College Media Association the same year.
Newly discovered DNA could shed light on one of Italy’s most famous cold cases, finally revealing the “Monster of Florence” serial killer who murdered young couples in the 1970s and 80s.
More than half a century since the first shocking murders sowed terror in Tuscany, doubt over the murderer or murderers continues to cloud the case, even though three different men have been convicted and sent to prison over the years for some of the 14 or more murders.
But some are still unaccounted for and many questions remain.
Now, a new scientific finding has given hope to some of the victims’ families, even while experts advise caution.
A prominent Italian doctor practicing oncology and hematology in the United States, Lorenzo Iovino, recently studied earlier analyses of DNA samples from a .22 caliber Winchester bullet found in 2015 in a cushion belonging to Nadine Mauriot and Jean-Michel Kraveichvili, a French couple shot dead in their camping tent in 1985.
Stock pictures of Jean Michel Kravcichili and Nadine Mauriot, two french tourists found murdered in 1985 in San Casciano Val di Pesa, near Florence.
BRUNELLESCO TORRINI via AP
That same DNA was taken from similar bullets found after the September 1983 murder of two German university students, Horst Wilhelm Meyer and Jens-Uwe Rusch, who investigators believed were probably mistaken for a couple — and the murder of Italians Pia Rontini and Claudio Stefanacci in July 1984.
The DNA could prove to be “very important,” Daniele Piccione, a lawyer who chaired a parliamentary inquiry commission into an unsolved aspect of the case that ended in 2022, told AFP.
Murder weapon never found
The “monster” or “monsters” of Florence terrorized the capital of Tuscany and its countryside between 1974 and 1985 by murdering 14 people, including six couples, most of whom were shot in their cars during or immediately following sexual intercourse.
Italy was then going through a bloody period of political violence dubbed the “Years of Lead,” in which the Red Brigades and armed groups of the extreme right, together with mafia violence, caused thousands of deaths.
The murder weapon in the cold case — a Beretta semi-automatic pistol — has never been found. Often, the assassin stabbed his victims after death, committing atrocious sexual mutilations on the corpses of the young women.
A man covers with a tent the lifeless body Nadine Mauriot, of France, killed along with her boyfriend Jean Michel Kravcicvili in San Casciano Val di Pesa, Italy, in this Sept. 9, 1985 file photo.
AP Photo/Torrini
The sprawling case was hindered by competition between two investigating authorities — the regular police and the carabinieri force — as well as between prosecutors and judges.
Investigators followed multiple leads, from a Sardinian vendetta to the Italian secret services, from a sect to a conspiracy of notables.
Finally, a poor farmer portrayed as violent and sex-obsessed by prosecutors, Pietro Pacciani — already convicted of homicide in 1951 and imprisoned in 1987 for raping his two daughters — was sentenced to life in 1994.
Pacciani, who called himself “innocent as Christ on the cross”, was acquitted on appeal two years later, but he was awaiting retrial when he died in 1998 of a heart attack at the age of 73.
Two of Pacciani’s alleged accomplices, Mario Vanni and Giancarlo Lotti, were also found guilty and sent behind bars. Both have since died.
In 2007, an FBI profile of the serial killer said the murderer acted alone, according to NBC News.
“She could have fought with the assassin”
Lawyers for the civil parties in the case are now asking for the DNA identified by Iovino to be compared.
But with whose?
Vieri Adriani, a lawyer for the families of the French victims, wants the body of Italian victim Stefania Pettini, murdered in September 1974 with her boyfriend Pasquale Gentilcore, to be exhumed.
“We know, according to the medical examiner’s report, that she could have fought with the assassin, and it’s not impossible to imagine that there remained biological traces, under her fingernails, for example,” he told La Repubblica daily this week, confirming his comments to AFP.
Under the same logic, DNA could also be taken from Gentilcore’s clothing.
According to Iovino, the new DNA does not match that of the victims nor with anyone convicted over the decades.
For Roberto Taddeo, a former lawyer and author of a compendium on “the Monster of Florence”, the new DNA could be due to contamination by investigators, technicians or forensic scientists who worked on the case.
Taddeo recommended “the greatest caution,” warning against falling into judicial “revisionism.”
Stock pictures of Pia Rontini and Claudio Stefanacci, both shot to death in the seventh such double murder in the Florence area since 1968.
AP Photo
“Pacciani did not die innocent in the eyes of Italian law, he died before his new trial,” he told AFP.
A first murder sometimes attributed to the elusive killer or killers dates back to 1968, when a woman and her lover were murdered during their clandestine lovemaking in a car.
The deceived husband was convicted. Years later, investigators discovered that the murder weapon was the famous Beretta from the “Monster of Florence” killings.
Did the weapon change hands? Did an innocent man pay for the guilty one?
The early double homicide remains one of the many mysteries of the case.
Filmmakers and authors cover infamous case
The infamous case is the basis of a Netflix drama called “Il Mostro,” which is based on court testimony, legal documents and reporters’ investigations.
“Telling the truth, and only that, is the only way to bring justice to the victims,” director Stefano Sollima told The Hollywood Reporter earlier this year.
In 2021, Deadline reported that Antonio Banderas had been cast to play Italian crime reporter Mario Spezi in a series called “The Monster of Florence,” based on the book by Spezi and American novelist Douglas Preston. In the book, the authors uncovered a series of alleged mistakes made by police during their investigation of the murders.
Spezi was arrested in 2006 by authorities in a probe that also entangled Preston, the Associated Press reported. Prosecutors accused the journalist of slander and of sidetracking their investigation into the “Monster of Florence” murders.
New evidence discovered after Murdaugh murders reignites a cold case. “48 Hours” obtains findings of independent forensic experts. CBS News national correspondent Nikki Battiste reports.
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
Two teens killed on the same California beach six years apart. DNA on one of the victims leads to two suspects — one of them worked for the police. “48 Hours” correspondent Richard Schlesinger investigates.
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
Forensic genetic genealogical testing, a more than 20-year-old tip and a discarded water bottle at Dulles International Airport culminated in a break in the cold-case killing of a Montgomery County, Maryland, woman.
Forensic genetic genealogy testing, a 20-year-old tip buried in police files and a discarded water bottle at Dulles International Airport culminated in a break in the cold-case killing of a Montgomery County, Maryland, woman, police say.
Eugene Gligor, 44, of D.C., made his first appearance Monday before a Montgomery County judge in the death of Leslie Preer, 50, who was found killed inside her Chevy Chase house in May 2001. Police arrested him last Tuesday.
He was held without bond and did not speak during the proceedings. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 19.
“The case remained open for 23 years,” Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy said outside the courthouse Monday, where he extolled the work of the Montgomery County police’s open cold case unit. “They did an extraordinary job … and I know that the family is very thankful for them remaining diligent to this.”
McCarthy said he will be seeking a charge of first-degree murder, which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment in Maryland.
Outside the courtroom Monday, Preer’s daughter — Lauren Preer, who had dated Gligor as a teenager — spoke briefly to reporters. She said she was shocked that someone her family had known for so long is now a suspect in her mother’s killing.
“Never in a million years would we think that one of our people could hurt my mom,” Lauren Preer said.
How police zeroed in on Gligor after 23 years
In 2022, with the case apparently at a dead end, prosecutors decided to take a swab of blood from the crime scene and send it off for what’s known as forensic genetic genealogy DNA analysis.
Forensic genealogy is a technique in which investigators use a known DNA sample to build a family tree of possible connections based on DNA profiles from publicly accessible genealogy websites.
That’s “what opened up the case,” McCarthy said.
The evidence was sent to Othram Inc. Labs in September 2022. A list of shared DNA matches was identified on the Family Tree DNA database — where the last name Gligor emerged, according to court documents.
That name also turned up in the original case file that dated back to January 2002. It was in a tip from one of Gligor’s neighbors who thought Lauren Preer’s boyfriend may have been related to the homicide.
By the time the DNA results came in, Gligor was living in Northwest D.C., police said.
But investigators still did not know whether Gligor was the suspect.
McCarthy said that while it’s “not definitive proof,” the use of genealogical DNA offers a clue.
“It’s a lead that allows us to decide in what direction to take this case,” he said.
Police put Gligor under surveillance.
That took them to Dulles Airport on June 9, where they saw him throw away a water bottle he drank from. Investigators collected the water bottle and tested it; it matched the DNA profile from the bloody crime scene, according to court documents.
According to court documents, Gligor has never been arrested for any crimes in which his DNA would have been entered in the CODIS database, which holds DNA profiles from convicted offenders, unsolved crime scene evidence and missing persons.
What happened when Leslie Preer did not show up for work
The first sign of trouble at the house on Drummond Avenue in May 2001 came when Leslie Preer failed to show up for work.
Preer’s employer started calling members of her family, including her husband Carl and daughter Lauren.
Around 11:35 a.m., the employer and Carl Preer went to the house on Drummond Avenue in Chevy Chase, where they found a “suspicious scene,” court documents said.
There was blood spatter and smeared blood on the walls near the front door, dried blood on the corner by the front door, a puddle of water on the floor, a corner table that was knocked over, and a bloodstained rug that was in the foyer was moved into the living room.
Officers arrived to search the house and found Preer dead inside the upstairs master bathroom shower stall. There was evidence her killer tried to clean up the crime scene.
An autopsy found that in addition to the seven lacerations to her head, Preer was also strangled. Results also show that her head was “battered onto the foyer floor and the sharp edges of the shoe molding” surrounding the foyer and front-door area.
Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.
JOHNSONVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10)– Police are asking the public for help in the six-year-long cold case of Megan Dyer-Maclean. Dyer-Maclean was last seen alive on June 2, 2018, before she was found dead along an old railroad track near her home two days later.
“We are working with a firm that specializes in Cold Case homicides they came in a couple weeks ago to do a full review of the case,” said Rensselaer County Sheriff, Kyle Bourgault.
The sheriff’s office took the NEWS10 crew behind the scenes to a never-before-seen murder investigation room to get a feel for that work and the work that continues to be done. “I have four and a half years left of my career to make my 20, but I plan on not leaving until this case is solved,” said Investigations Sargeant, Jamie Panichi.
They said that two years after Megan’s death they began investigating her death as a homicide. The sheriff’s office confirmed a toxicology report found high levels of strychnine in Megan’s system. The sheriff’s investigations team described the scene as the body being tossed and discarded somewhere along a trail behind their home in Johnsonville.
The sheriff’s office revealed there was a bruise on the top of Megan’s head that was about the size of a quarter or the head of a hammer.
The sheriff is certain that the public has the answer his team is looking for. “Somebody knows something about where that strychnine came from. Whether it came from an old barn, or where it came from an old outhouse or garage, somebody knows where that came from and we’re looking to talk to that person,” said the sheriff.
Investigations Sergeant Jamie Panichi, who has been on this case from day one, refuses to give up.
“We visit her, we just let her know that she hasn’t been forgotten about. We’re still working on it, it’s an open case and we’re going to do everything we can to solve it,” explained Panichi.
The sheriff’s office is asking that anyone with information on this case to call investigators at (518) 270-0128 through a confidential crime tip line.
A North Carolina sheriff renewed his plea for help in solving the 1981 fatal shooting of 19-year-old Rhonda Hinson, killed in a car on Interstate 40 as she returned home from a Christmas party.
BURKE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
A North Carolina sheriff this week renewed his plea for help solving the 1981 fatal shooting of 19-year-old Rhonda Hinson, killed in a car on Interstate 40 as she returned home from a Christmas party.
A combined reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction in Hinson’s death has increased to $94,700, Sheriff Banks Hinceman said on Facebook Wednesday.
“I believe that there is someone out there with credible information that could help bring the person(s) responsible for this murder to justice,” Hinceman said.
“I know it’s been 42 years,” Hinceman said. “If you are worried about what people will think about you, it’s never too late to do the right thing.”
Hinson was shot while traveling toward Valdese, N.C., on I-40 West to the Mineral Springs Mountain Road exit, Hinceman said.
“She was funny, happy,” Judy Hinson told Dateline. “She loved everybody. She never met a stranger.”
Sheriff’s investigators and State Bureau of Investigation agents have spent thousands of hours over the decades investigating Hinson’s death, Hinceman said.
“My prayer is that the Lord will weigh heavily on someone’s heart to come forward with credible information that will bring justice for Rhonda and her family,” he said.
The sheriff’s office has a tip line dedicated solely to Hinson’s case: 828-764-9549.
Related stories from Raleigh News & Observer
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
A North Carolina sheriff renewed his plea for help in solving the 1981 fatal shooting of 19-year-old Rhonda Hinson, killed in a car on Interstate 40 as she returned home from a Christmas party.
BURKE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
A North Carolina sheriff this week renewed his plea for help solving the 1981 fatal shooting of 19-year-old Rhonda Hinson, killed in a car on Interstate 40 as she returned home from a Christmas party.
A combined reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction in Hinson’s death has increased to $94,700, Sheriff Banks Hinceman said on Facebook Wednesday.
“I believe that there is someone out there with credible information that could help bring the person(s) responsible for this murder to justice,” Hinceman said.
“I know it’s been 42 years,” Hinceman said. “If you are worried about what people will think about you, it’s never too late to do the right thing.”
Hinson was shot while traveling toward Valdese, N.C., on I-40 West to the Mineral Springs Mountain Road exit, Hinceman said.
“She was funny, happy,” Judy Hinson told Dateline. “She loved everybody. She never met a stranger.”
Sheriff’s investigators and State Bureau of Investigation agents have spent thousands of hours over the decades investigating Hinson’s death, Hinceman said.
“My prayer is that the Lord will weigh heavily on someone’s heart to come forward with credible information that will bring justice for Rhonda and her family,” he said.
The sheriff’s office has a tip line dedicated solely to Hinson’s case: 828-764-9549.
Related stories from Charlotte Observer
Joe Marusak has been a reporter for The Charlotte Observer since 1989 covering the people, municipalities and major news events of the region, and was a news bureau editor for the paper. He currently reports on breaking news. Support my work with a digital subscription
A Georgia man was arrested in connection with the 23-year cold case murder of UGA law student Tara Louise Baker, state investigators say.
Lydia Bullard
Photo by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation
After 23 years, a suspect has been arrested in the cold case death of a University of Georgia law student, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
Edrick Lamont Faust, 48, of Athens, is charged with murder and other offenses following a decades-long investigation into the death of Tara Louise Baker, the agency said in a May 9 news release. She was 23 at the time.
“Tara Louise Baker was a hardworking student with a bright future ahead of her,”GBI Director Chris Hosey said in the release. “Tara’s life was stolen from her in a horrific act of violence.”
Faust’s arrest comes more than two decades after Baker, a first-year law student at UGA, was found dead in her burning apartment in Athens, according to investigators. Crews responded to the fire on Jan. 19, 2001, and determined it was intentionally set.
State investigators, with help from the Athens-Clarke County Police Department and other agencies, spent more than 20 years examining the circumstances surrounding Baker’s death.
Authorities didn’t disclose how or if Faust and Baker knew each other. It’s also unclear what led to Faust’s arrest.
Faust is charged with:
Murder
Felony murder (two counts)
Aggravated assault
Concealing the death of another person
Arson
Possession of a knife during commission of a felony
Tampering with evidence
Aggravated sodomy
“While this arrest does not bring her back to us, I pray that it helps bring closure to the Baker family as they continue their healing journey,” Hosey said.
Authorities said they plan to hold a news conference in the coming days.
Athens is about a 70-mile drive northeast from downtown Atlanta.
Tanasia is a national Real-Time reporter based in Atlanta covering news across Georgia, Mississippi and the Southeast. Her sub-beat is retail and consumer news. She’s an alumna of Kennesaw State University and joined McClatchy in 2020.
A New Jersey resident was apprehended following a Pennsylvania investigation that linked him to a 2012 homicide through advanced DNA forensic techniques and evidence, including a Styrofoam cup found at the crime scene and a cigarette butt discovered at his mother’s home.
The District Attorney’s Office of Berks County, Pennsylvania, disclosed the arrest of 39-year-old Vallis L. Slaughter. He faces charges of first-degree murder in the death of 34-year-old Julio Torres outside the West Reading Diner in March 2012.
John T. Adams, the Berks County District Attorney, reported in a press briefing on Monday that the initial probe into Torres’ death resulted in the apprehension and conviction of 22-year-old Jomain Case at the time.
The investigation revealed that Torres, Case, and another individual were embroiled in a dispute before Torres was killed. Case’s DNA was matched to that found on a Styrofoam cup at the scene, leading to his arrest.
Despite an initial match, further analysis of the Styrofoam cup’s DNA did not align with any database samples. Investigators later found that Slaughter, who was in Reading, Pennsylvania, on the murder night, became a person of interest. The case went cold after leads dried up and no new information surfaced.
Twelve years post-crime, the investigation was reopened, uncovering a cell phone photo of Slaughter taken on the murder night. Facial recognition technology helped identify him as the alleged shooter.
In December, while residing in Jersey City, New Jersey, with his mother, Slaughter was linked to the murder through DNA evidence from a cigarette butt, matching it to the Styrofoam cup’s DNA. He was arrested at his mother’s residence by Jersey City Police and is currently held at the Hudson County Correctional Facility, awaiting extradition to Berks County.
Slaughter is charged with first- and third-degree murder, criminal conspiracy, aggravated assault, and possession of crime instruments.
A man living in the suburbs of Portland, Oregon, has been found guilty in the 1980 cold case murder of a 19-year-old college student after DNA from a piece of chewing gum linked him to the crime.
Multnomah County Circuit Judge Amy Baggio on Friday found Robert Plympton, 60, guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Barbara Mae Tucker, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office said in a news release on Monday.
Plympton was not convicted of rape or sexual abuse because prosecutors failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that it happened while she was still alive, the judge said. A medical examiner determined Tucker had been sexually assaulted and beaten to death.
Authorities said the break in the case came from DNA technology that was not available over 40 years ago.https://t.co/oi1ounOLfN
In 2021, a genealogist with Parabon Nanolabs using DNA technology identified Plympton as likely linked to the DNA in the case. Detectives with the Gresham Police Department who found Plympton living in Troutdale, began conducting surveillance and collected a piece of chewing gum he had spit onto the ground, according to prosecutors.
Police arrested Plympton after the Oregon State Police Crime Lab determined the DNA profile developed from the gum matched the DNA profile developed from swabs taken from Tucker’s body, which had been preserved.
Tucker was expected at a night class at Mt. Hood Community College in Gresham on Jan. 15, 1980. Witnesses said she had been seen running out of a bushy, wooded area on campus and that a man came out of the area and led her back to campus. A student found Tucker’s body the next day near a campus parking lot.
The business student had been sexually assaulted and beaten to death, CBS affiliate KOIN-TV reported.
Multnomah County Chief Deputy District Attorney Kirsten Snowden said there was no evidence that Tucker and Plympton knew each other, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported.
Robert Plympton
Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office
Plympton said he was innocent and that he didn’t match the description of a man seen pulling her into the bushes.
He is scheduled to be sentenced in June.
Tucker’s family told KOIN-TV in 2021 it was an emotional moment when they received the news that Plympton had been arrested.
“Just not giving up. We always had hope,” said Tucker’s sister, Susan Pater. “At one point we though he was dead. Maybe it would never be solved. I just wished it could have happened when the rest of my family was here, especially my parents.”
Detective Aaron Turnage told them he wouldn’t rest until the case was solved.
“I promised her I was going to solve this case. If that means working around the clock, that’s what happens,” the detective told the station. “There has been lots of hurdles and sitting down and experiencing that with the family last night is something I’ve never experienced in my career. It’s pretty awesome.”
A car pulled from the muddy bottom of a river in northern Illinois may bring authorities closer to solving a decades-old cold case. The 1966 Chevrolet Impala was recovered recently from a portion of the Pecatonica River in Winnebago County, and it’s believed to be linked to the disappearance of two men 10 years later, officials said.
Clarence Owens, 65, and Everette Hawley, 75, went missing in 1976, according to a description of the cold case shared online by the Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office. Owens and Hawley were last seen on Feb. 19, 1976 at a farm auction near the county line separating Winnebago from neighboring Ogle County. Although the sheriff’s office said “an intense multi-agency investigation” followed involving local law enforcement and state police, neither Owens’ nor Hawley’s body was ever found.
Winnebago County Sheriff Gary Caruana said the Impala was recovered after fishermen’s sonar equipment detected what seemed to be a vehicle beneath the surface of the river, CBS affiliate WIFR reported. The fishermen contacted authorities last week and, on Monday, fire officials from multiple agencies joined dive teams at the site and used a crane to help lift the car from the water.
“It’s quite challenging because it’s sitting in the mud, 8 to 10 feet, which is not that deep but deep enough,” Caruana told the station. He said that he was not surprised the recovered car was connected to Owens’ and Hawley’s cold case.
A 1966 Chevrolet Impala linked to a decades-old Illinois cold case was recovered on Monday.
WIFR
“Not too many cars that meet that description is driving in the Pecatonica River,” the sheriff said.
Owens’ son, Tom Owens, told WIFR that his father and Hawley were friends and business partners. As a police officer in Rockford, which is included in Winnebago County, Tom Owens worked the case of the pair’s disappearance and said he believes foul play was involved, according to the news station.
The sheriff did not say whether remains were found with the recovered vehicle, but someone from the county coroner’s office was sent to the scene, WIFR reported.
Owens and Hawley were seen at the farm auction with the 1966 Chevy Impala, which belonged to Owens and which had a new coat of gold paint at the time, according to the Doe Network, a nonprofit organization and database for information about missing and unidentified people. The men had attended a political rally in the area before stopping at the auction, and planned to make a shared appointment in German Valley, about 25 miles west of Winnebago County, after leaving the auction. They never made that appointment.
Emily Mae Czachor is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. She covers breaking news, often focusing on crime and extreme weather. Emily Mae has previously written for outlets including the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.
WENDELL, N.C. (WTVD) — The family of 16-year-old Vebecca Jones is speaking out for the first time in decades after Jones’ body was found in a creek off a dirt road in Wendell back in 1999.
The case has received minimal coverage in the past two-and-a-half decades. Vebecca’s older brother, Lorenzo Jones, spoke to ABC11 about his baby sister the night before the 25th anniversary.
“I miss her, we all miss her,” Lorenzo said. “We called her Ve. She was named after my grandmother, Rebecca, so my mom named her Vebecca.”
Vebecca Jones was 16 when she disappeared in 1999 (File Photo)
Lorenzo said there isn’t a day that goes by that he doesn’t think about Ve. He misses her smile and her big, brown, pretty eyes.
He said he was very similar to his sister: They were both curious, sometimes hot-headed, and very independent.
“That girl was tough, boy I’m telling you,” Lorenzo said. “She wasn’t waiting on nobody to do nothing for her. She was just different.”
He’s six years older than Ve. He remembers her auntie bought her a pair of high heels when she was little, and she wore them until they broke. He reluctantly recalled that his baby sister learned to drive a stick before he did. He remembers that she had dreams of being a cosmetologist.
Enough is enough, let my mom have some peace, let us live a somewhat normal life. Before it’s all said and done, it’s going to come to light, I truly believe it will.
– Lorenzo Jones, brother of victim
He said she was stubborn and fiercely loyal. And he misses her every day.
A family’s worst nightmare
When she was just 16 years old, Ve went missing. Her age was a concern, but something that made this news even more difficult for her family was that she was three months pregnant at the time.
While he waited for Ve to come home, Lorenzo said his life stopped.
“I didn’t do nothing. I didn’t go to family functions, I stayed home for Christmas and Thanksgiving,” Lorenzo said. “I didn’t go nowhere.”
Six months later, right around the time Ve would’ve been due, his family happened to be watching TV.
“They said they found a body between the ages of 15 and 17 years old,” Lorenzo said. He didn’t want to believe it was his sister.
Eventually, dental records confirmed his worst nightmare. The moment he found out is a little fuzzy 25 years later.
“I don’t really remember, I just know my hands went numb,” he said.
Ve’s body was found in a creek bed just off Old Tarboro Road in Wendell, 17 miles from her home.
Ve’s body was found in a creek bed just off Old Tarboro Road in Wendell, 17 miles from her home.
File photo
Men picking up cans in the area found her body and called it in. Lorenzo said he found out who the man was and went to his house, hoping to thank him. He never came to the door, but all these years later, he’s still so grateful for him.
“She could still be laying there, you know?” He said. “He could’ve just said nothing and left her there, so I appreciate him, and my family does, too.”
Scant evidence, few leads
Detective Brian Gay with the Wake County Sheriff’s Office is assigned to Ve’s case now. He grew up in the area and knows it well. He walked the area with ABC11, telling us the old dirt road hasn’t changed much since 1999. The creek bed where she was found is under construction now though, as a new neighborhood is being built.
The creek, and the amount of time she spent there, made some evidence difficult to recover 25 years ago.
“She was in a state of advanced decomposition that some of her clothing was still with her, some of the other items were close by, but she was in partially mummified skeletal state,” Gay said.
Because of the condition her body was found in, the medical examiner could not confirm whether she was pregnant at the time of her death. However, Lorenzo is positive that she was expecting when she disappeared.
Her autopsy report lists her manner of death as homicide and her cause of death as asphyxiation. The cause of death is especially difficult for Lorenzo to process; he’s worried she cried out for help or suffered in her last moments.
A grocery bag was also found with her body. Investigators in 1999 showed pictures of the bag to the media, hoping someone might recognize it and it could help crack the case.
The grocery bag that was recovered at the scene.
File photo
Gay said they eventually discovered that the bag was manufactured for a major grocery chain between 1997 and 1998. It didn’t lead to any big new revelations for investigators.
While the sheriff’s office has never publicly named any suspects, Lorenzo said he’s heard a few names during the past 25 years.
He also remembers that when she was 15, he found her “somewhere she wasn’t supposed to be,” and he remembers getting her out of the situation and driving her home.
“I sat on the steps and I cried. At the time Ve got killed, there were a lot of women in Raleigh popping up dead, and I told her, ‘You see these women popping up every day missing? Dead? This ain’t no place for you.’”
A year later, she vanished.
“I couldn’t think of it in a million years why someone would take her life,” Lorenzo said. “I can’t think of nothing she could have done, she wasn’t a bad person … You could ask a thousand people that knew her, and I bet not one could tell you why somebody would want to do that to her.”
‘Just let me know who did this’
During the last 25 years, it’s hard to put into words what Ve’s murder has done to his family.
“There’s a lot of stuff that goes on that people just don’t know, they don’t know what it did to us. They don’t know what it did to my momma,” Lorenzo said. “I ain’t seen my momma smile in so long.”
At this point, Lorenzo said he isn’t even concerned with justice, he just wants to know what happened.
“I don’t care if they got away with it, just let me find out. I don’t care if they prosecute, Just let me know who did this to my sister,” he said. “That’s it.”
Gay said he believes someone out there knows what happened to Vebecca and has been sitting on the secret all these years. He’s asking anyone with information to come forward to finally give some peace and answers to the Jones family.
He said this case is personal to him now, and it will stick with him until it’s solved.
“Enough is enough, let my mom have some peace, let us live a somewhat normal life,” Lorenzo pleaded. “Before it’s all said and done, it’s going to come to light, I truly believe it will, and I’m talking about real soon.”
If you know anything about this case that could bring answers to the Jones family, you are urged to please contact the Wake County Sheriff’s Office at (919) 856-6800.
A Missouri woman was killed in 1989. Three men are now charged in the crime
Updated: 1:26 AM EST Feb 23, 2024
DAUGHTER ABOUT THIS NEWS 100% OUT OF THE BLUE. I DIDN’T EVEN KNOW WHAT TO SAY. I MEAN, MY JAW DROPPED 40 YEARS AFTER HER MOTHER WAS LAST SEEN IN MASSACHUSETTS. MEGAN SMITH GOT A CALL FROM FLORIDA. SHE COULD HAVE NEVER IMAGINED. WE KNEW IT WAS HER 100%. THE WOMAN ONLY KNOWN AS BROWARD COUNTY, JANE DOE, 1984, WAS HER MOTHER, LORI KASI IDENTIF SIDE. ALL THESE YEARS LATER, USING DNA, I GUESS IT’S CLOSURE THAT I NEVER REALLY KNEW THAT I NEEDED. UM, YOU KNOW, WHEN I HEARD IT, IT REALLY, LIKE, OPENED SOMETHING UP AND I DIDN’T EVEN KNOW IT WAS THERE. MEGAN WAS JUST FIVE WHEN HER MOTHER VANISHED IN 1983. HER PARENTS WERE DIVORCED, AND SHE LAST SAW HER MOM WHEN SHE DROPPED HER OFF AT HER DAD’S HOUSE JUST MONTHS LATER. A WOMAN’S BODY WAS FOUND FLOATING IN A SOUTH FLORIDA CANAL. THE VICTIM OF A HOMICIDE, BUT SHE COULD NOT BE IDENTIFIED. WE KNEW THAT SHE WAS MARRIED TO A PRETTY INFAMOUS CRIME FAMILY AND WE THOUGHT, YOU KNOW, IT WAS THE EARLY 80S. WE THOUGHT THERE MIGHT HAVE BEEN A LITTLE BIT OF TROUBLE THERE. IT’S NOT CLEAR WHAT TOOK HER 23 YEAR OLD MOTHER TO FLORIDA, BUT MEGAN SUSPECTS SHE MAY NOW GET MORE ANSWERS AS THE DECADES OLD MYSTERY BEGINS TO UNRAVEL. I FEEL A SENSE OF PEACE. OF COURSE, I WOULD WANT JUSTICE, BUT I’M OKAY WHERE I’M AT. THE FACT THAT I KNOW NOW IS REALLY BE ENOUGH FOR ME. AND AT THIS POINT, NO ONE HAS BEEN ARRESTED IN THIS CASE, BUT POLICE IN DAVIE, FLORIDA, JUST OUTSIDE FORT LAUDERDALE, ARE LOOKING FO
A Missouri woman was killed in 1989. Three men are now charged in the crime
Updated: 1:26 AM EST Feb 23, 2024
Authorities in Missouri say a 35-year cold case killing has been solved, thanks to someone who came forward with information about the crime.Douglas County authorities announced Wednesday that three men have been arrested and indicted on first-degree murder, forcible rape and first-degree kidnapping charges in the 1989 killing of 24-year-old Kelle Ann Workman. Court records show that the men do not yet have listed attorneys. All three are jailed on $250,000 cash-only bond.Video above: Massachusetts woman identified as victim in 40-year-old cold caseWorkman was last seen cutting the grass at a rural cemetery in southwestern Missouri on June 30, 1989. Her body was found submerged in a creek more than 10 miles (16 kilometers) away a week later.“I think we’re able to give Kelle some justice and hopefully give the family some closure, knowing that these guys are not here running around and simply getting away with it,” Douglas County Sheriff Chris Degase said at a news conference.Douglas County Prosecuting Attorney Matthew Weatherman said the information from the person who came forward is “rock-solid.”Asked if he was confident in the case, Weatherman said, “It’s as good as a 1989 case can ever be.”Workman was last seen at the Dogwood Cemetery near a Baptist church in a rural area of Douglas County. Several people joined police in searching for her. Her body was found on July 7, 1989, in a creek near Oldfield, Missouri.
AVA, Mo. —
Authorities in Missouri say a 35-year cold case killing has been solved, thanks to someone who came forward with information about the crime.
Douglas County authorities announced Wednesday that three men have been arrested and indicted on first-degree murder, forcible rape and first-degree kidnapping charges in the 1989 killing of 24-year-old Kelle Ann Workman. Court records show that the men do not yet have listed attorneys. All three are jailed on $250,000 cash-only bond.
Video above: Massachusetts woman identified as victim in 40-year-old cold case
Workman was last seen cutting the grass at a rural cemetery in southwestern Missouri on June 30, 1989. Her body was found submerged in a creek more than 10 miles (16 kilometers) away a week later.
“I think we’re able to give Kelle some justice and hopefully give the family some closure, knowing that these guys are not here running around and simply getting away with it,” Douglas County Sheriff Chris Degase said at a news conference.
Douglas County Prosecuting Attorney Matthew Weatherman said the information from the person who came forward is “rock-solid.”
Asked if he was confident in the case, Weatherman said, “It’s as good as a 1989 case can ever be.”
Workman was last seen at the Dogwood Cemetery near a Baptist church in a rural area of Douglas County. Several people joined police in searching for her. Her body was found on July 7, 1989, in a creek near Oldfield, Missouri.
Human remains discovered 33 years ago in a remote mountain pass in Colorado have been identified thanks to modern forensic tests, authorities said.
Those remains belonged to Steven Kenneth Risku, who was in his mid-30s and lived in Indiana at the time of his death, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation announced in a news release. The remains were initially found on Wolf Creek Pass in the San Juan Mountains of southern Colorado in 1991.
The Colorado investigative bureau partnered with the Mineral County Sheriff’s Office, whose jurisdiction includes Wolf Creek Pass, to work the cold case. They eventually were able to identify Risku’s remains using genetic genealogy and dental records along with “other investigative tools,” according to the bureau.
Steven Risku’s remains were discovered on a remote mountain pass in Colorado in 1991.
Mineral County Sheriff’s Office
Whether foul play contributed to Risku’s death was still unclear. Wolf Creek Pass is a notorious roadway known for dangerous and sometimes deadly vehicle crashes, at least in more recent years, according to the Colorado Department of Transportation.
Citing Risku’s family, authorities said he did occasionally travel west to California from Indiana during his life. How and why he ended up in the Colorado mountains was not known, authorities said, although the family previously told investigators that Risku was an adventurous person who loved being outdoors.
“The identification of Mr. Risku is a tremendous first step in helping provide his family with answers,” said Mineral County Sheriff Terry Wetherill in a statement. “If anyone has information as to why or how Steven Risku was at a remote location on Wolf Creek Pass or if anyone has any additional questions, please contact the Mineral County Sheriff’s Office.”
People with knowledge of what may have happened to Risku should call the sheriff’s office at 719-658-2600.
Emily Mae Czachor is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. She covers breaking news, often focusing on crime and extreme weather. Emily Mae has previously written for outlets including the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.
Thanks for reading CBS NEWS.
Create your free account or log in for more features.
HAYWARD — The cold cases of two East Bay women who were murdered and sexually assaulted seven years apart in the 1970s in eerily similar circumstances — home intrusions committed while other family members were asleep — now have a suspect: A man who died in 2007 after DNA genealogy analysis linked him to the victims.
Hayward and Newark police announced Thursday that Fred Farnham, who died at the age of 73, was responsible for the slayings of Nellie Ann Hicks in 1972 in Newark and Theresa Pica in Hayward in 1979. Both women were found by family members who woke up in the morning to discover their loved ones’ bodies bludgeoned and raped; an intruder had quietly entered their homes and attacked them as they slept in their living rooms.
DNA evidence retrieved from Pica’s body had been analyzed multiple times in the past two decades, and several people who were investigated as possible assailants were excluded from suspicion. One potential suspect was exhumed two years ago and was also later excluded.
But this past December, Hayward and Newark investigators consulted with the FBI to analyze the DNA; the results led Farnham being identified as the killer. Officials say Farnham is likely to be suspected in other unsolved murders.
Pica, 48, was discovered slumped over her couch, face down, by one of her twin 10-year-old daughters on May 15, 1979 at their home on Edloe Drive in Hayward. Her nightgown had been pulled up, exposing her legs, her hands were bound behind her back with rope, and a blood-stained rock was found next to her. A shirt had been used to gag her, police found.
She was last seen alive the night before by her three children. A front room window had been pried open, and the only witness account of an intruder came from a neighbor who heard rustling near the home in the middle of the night.
Pica’s purse was missing, and her wallet and other contents were later discovered in a neighbor’s yard and in a garbage can down the street. Several people were investigated in the ensuing decades, but no suspects emerged until now.
Hicks, a 59-year-old fourth-grade teacher at Ashland School in San Lorenzo, was found dead May 10, 1972 in her Newark home. Her body was partially naked, and police determined that she had been raped and bludgeoned with a brick wrapped in pantyhose. The brutality was immediately apparent, with her head split open by the force of the blows.
Evidence at the scene indicated that her killer entered the home through an unlocked sliding glass door and used manicure scissors to cut her dress and bra. The only forensic evidence that police recovered were fingerprints that for decades were never tied to a specific person.
What made the killing even more notorious is the fact that her adult son and his wife as well as her longtime friend all lived in the home, and were asleep as the slaying unfolded. That led police to suspect that the intruder knocked her unconscious before sexually assaulting her.
A motive for the killing eluded everyone who knew Hicks, who was remembered as a well-liked, respected teacher. She left an abusive husband a decade prior, but that thread and interrogations of other men she dated proved fruitless in finding a possible suspect.
Hicks’ housemate, a fellow teacher, briefly spoke with her around 1 a.m. the morning of the killing, dozing off on a living room sofa. It was the last time she was seen alive.
About four hours later, Hicks’ son discovered her lifeless body in the same room. Hicks’ wallet was missing, though it was later found a few blocks away next to a pair of blood-stained panties.
Staff writers Nate Gartrell and Sandra Gonzales contributed to this report.
A man has been sentenced to 140 years in prison in California for brutally raping a 9-year-old girl and a 32-year-old jogger more than two decades ago, officials announced this week. Proescutors say Kevin Konther tried to accuse his identical twin brother of committing the crimes – along with the molestation of a former girlfriend’s daughter.
Konther, 58, was sentenced on Friday in Orange County Superior Court, where a judge imposed the maximum penalty, the Orange County District Attorney said in a news release. A jury convicted Konther in February 2023 of multiple felony charges linked to the sexual assaults, including two counts of forcible rape and one count of a lewd and lascivious act with a minor, according to the district attorney.
“The relentless pursuit of justice by the Orange County Sheriff’s Department and the Orange County District Attorney’s Office has ensured that another monster who preys on young girls and young women will never be free to jump out of the bushes again,” said District Attorney Todd Spitzer in a statement.
Konther and his twin brother were arrested in 2019 after a breakthrough in DNA testing led investigators at the Orange County Sheriff’s Office to both men, CBS Los Angeles reported at the time. Authorities took the twins into custody together, but detectives said they determined quickly that Konther was their suspect. He was booked on charges of rape, oral copulation with a child younger than 14, lewd and lascivious acts with a child younger than 14, and aggravated sexual assault, and held on $1 million bail ahead of his arraignment.
Kevin Konther was arrested Jan. 10, 2019, on rape charges in connection with two rapes which occurred in the 1990s in Orange County.
Orange County Sheriff’s Department
Two of the crimes happened almost three decades ago, although there were no substantial developments in either of those cases until advances in genetic genealogy finally allowed detectives to push their investigation forward in 2019. The first assault happened on Oct. 21, 1995, when authorities say Konther raped a 9-year-old girl in Lake Forest as she walked home alone from a shopping trip to buy school supplies. Authorities say he grabbed the girl and covered her mouth while pulling her down an embankment that led to a secluded park. The girl ran home without her clothes and reported the rape to her mother.
Three years later, on June 2, 1998, authorities say Konther raped a 32-year-old woman who was out on a jog in Mission Viejo. Naked except for his shoes, Konther jumped out at her from bushes along her jogging trail and dragged her down an embankment before attacking her and running away.
Detectives learned of the third crime after they started to use investigative genetic genealogy in 2018, in hopes of finding the suspect in those first two rapes. Allegations emerged during that phase of their investigation that accused Konther of molesting the daughter of an ex-girlfriend.
Once Konther and his twin were arrested, “conversations that were covertly recorded” between them allowed authorities to pinpoint him, and not his brother, as the suspect, the district attorney said, noting that Konther had made incriminating statements while his twin “was shocked by the arrest.”
Emily Mae Czachor is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. She covers breaking news, often focusing on crime and extreme weather. Emily Mae has previously written for outlets including the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.
Loved ones of Joy Hibbs were face to face in a courtroom with Robert Atkins, the 57-year-old Fairless Hills man accused of murdering Hibbs in 1991.
Atkins was arrested and charged in May 2022.
Cold case solved. After more than 30 years Bristol Township police and Bucks County investigators arrest the man they say murdered a wife & mother before setting the house on fire to hide the crime. @BucksDa offering more info this afternoon @NBCPhiladelphiapic.twitter.com/cP5K7EtnPQ
The cold case murder made national headlines over the years before the breakthrough announcement from Bucks County officials.
The investigation of Joy Hibbs’ murder
On Friday, April 19, 1991, Hibbs’ 12-year-old son David Hibbs was dismissed early from elementary school and arrived at their home along the 1200 block of Spencer Drive in the Croydon section of Bristol Township around 1:05 p.m. to find the kitchen on fire.
Hibbs’ son couldn’t get past the kitchen due to the flames and smoke. He then ran to neighbors for help.
After the fire was extinguished, Joy Hibbs was found dead on a bed in her son’s bedroom. She was 35-years-old.
Investigators initially believed Hibbs died in an accidental fire. During his testimony on Monday, David Hibbs said he initially felt responsible for his mother’s death, believing his toys or his fish tank may have caused the deadly fire.
An autopsy the next day however revealed his mother had been repeatedly stabbed. Her ribs were also fractured and she was likely asphyxiated. The autopsy also determined there was no smoke in her lungs and she likely died prior to the fire.
The Fire Marshal then determined fires were intentionally set in the kitchen, Hibbs’ son’s bedroom and in the hallway.
Investigators later learned Hibbs had cashed her paycheck hours before her death and her wallet was found stuffed in the living room couch. Her purse was also found with items emptied and strewn out in the kitchen while cash was never located.
Police said Hibbs was likely murdered between 11:50 a.m. and 12:50 p.m. that day. During that one-hour window, witnesses spotted a blue Chevrolet Monte Carlo parked outside Hibbs’ home. At the time, investigators named several suspects, including Atkins who had a blue Chevy Monte Carlo and also at one point lived two doors away from Hibbs.
Police also said Atkins occasionally sold marijuana to Hibbs and her husband.
Atkins remained a person of interest in the murder for the next three decades. During that time, he was interviewed by police at least twice but maintained his innocence.
During one interview, Atkins told investigators that he had been a “Confidential Informant” for the Bristol Township Police Department at the time of the murder, and had a “good relationship” with Bristol Township narcotics detectives, according to the criminal complaint. Former Bristol Township Police Chief Thomas Mills later confirmed that in 1991, Atkins had been working for them as an informant purchasing meth and marijuana.
Atkins also told investigators about a fight he had with Hibbs and her husband over their claims of low-quality marijuana, but denied threatening her or her family. During his testimony on Monday however, David Hibbs said he remembered hearing Atkins tell his mother, “I will f—— kill you and blow up your house.”
A break in the cold case
In January 2022, the case was submitted to the Bucks County Investigating Grand Jury. Atkins’ ex-wife, April Atkins, was one of the people who testified.
April Atkins told the Grand Jury that in the afternoon of April 19, 1991, Robert Akins came home, covered in blood. She said her then-husband told her he had stabbed someone and lit their house on fire. He then told her to call out of work and get their children because they were taking a trip to the Poconos, according to the criminal complaint.
April Atkins said she then put his bloody clothes in the wash and showered.
April and Robert Atkins then arrived in the Poconos shortly before 5 p.m. that day and stayed for two more days before returning to their home on Sunday, April 21, 1991, according to records. April Atkins said she then discovered that day that it was Joy Hibbs who had been killed.
April Atkins told investigators she feared for her own safety if she spoke the truth about her then-husband’s role in the murder.
While April Atkins initially gave an alibi for her then-husband to investigators, she later recanted that alibi, officials said.
“The immense grief and suffering our family has endured over the last three decades will never disappear,” Hibbs’ family wrote in a statement after Atkins’ arrest in 2022. “For thirty-one years, our family has been haunted by this tragic loss, knowing, without a doubt, that Robert Atkins was the perpetrator. Our family has waited thirty-one years for justice to prevail.”
Joy Hibbs and her children.
The trial is expected to last through the week. Neither prosecutors nor the defense are commenting on the case publicly.
FBI investigators are planning to exhume the body of a young woman whose unsolved 1969 killing has been a source of widespread speculation, especially since Netflix’s documentary series “The Keepers” examined the slaying of a Baltimore nun that unfolded days earlier under eerily similar circumstances.
Joyce Malecki went Christmas shopping in November 1969 at a suburban mall outside Baltimore and never came home. Her body was found on a nearby military base days later and an autopsy determined she had been strangled. Malecki is buried at Loudon Park Cemetery in Baltimore.
An advocate for the Malecki family confirmed Tuesday that the exhumation was tentatively planned for Thursday.
The case received renewed attention after “The Keepers” was released in 2017, raising questions about whether Malecki’s disappearance was linked to that of Sister Cathy Cesnik, who was found dead from blunt force trauma after she went shopping and never returned.
Also in 2017, investigators exhumed the body of a Catholic priest, Father Joseph Maskell, to see if his DNA matched evidence from the scene of Cesnik’s death. The documentary questioned whether Cesnik was killed because she knew Maskell was sexually abusing students at the Catholic high school where they both worked. A CBS Baltimore investigation revealed many of those victims confided in Sister Cesnik just before her murder.
But the DNA testing didn’t reveal a match and the case remains unsolved.
The latest source of speculation came earlier this year, when federal and local authorities announced they had solved the case of yet another young woman’s homicide: 16-year-old Pamela Conyers, who went missing in 1970 from the same shopping mall as Malecki and similarly died from strangulation.
Investigators used relatively new DNA technology and genealogy research to identify a suspect in Conyers’ death: Forrest Clyde Williams III, who died in 2018 of natural causes after spending most of his adult life in Virginia. He incurred nothing more than a couple minor criminal charges over the subsequent decades.
When they pinned Conyers’ killing on Williams, officials said they didn’t have evidence connecting him to either of the other unsolved homicides. They also said they didn’t believe Conyers knew Williams.
“They want justice”
Kurt Wolfgang, executive director of the Maryland Crime Victims Resource Center, said it appears investigators are now looking to extract DNA from Malecki’s body, although it’s unclear what they’re seeking to determine. He said the FBI has shared little information with the family about recent developments in the case, but the timing could suggest a link to Williams.
Wolfgang said relatives will be allowed to attend the exhumation, which will otherwise be closed to the public.
“They want justice out of this thing,” said Wolfgang, whose nonprofit has been working with the Malecki family. “Even though it was 54 years ago, it would certainly help them to know what happened.”
A spokesperson for the FBI’s Baltimore Field Office declined to comment, citing “respect for the ongoing investigation.” Federal investigators are in charge of the case because Malecki’s body was found on military property.
Sister Cathy Cesnik and Father Joseph Maskell
When Malecki was growing up, her family attended a Catholic church outside Baltimore where Maskell served as priest. They lived down the road while Maskell was living in the St. Clement Catholic Church rectory. He was later assigned to Archbishop Keough High School, where he was accused of abusing numerous girls.
Wolfgang said Malecki told her relatives “she did not like him one bit and told people to stay away from him.” But Wolfgang said the family doesn’t have any direct evidence suggesting she was one of Maskell’s abuse victims and they’re hesitant to jump to conclusions about linking the various cases.
A woman interviewed in “The Keepers” claimed Maskell showed her Cesnik’s body in the days after the nun disappeared. Cesnik was a teacher at Archbishop Keough High School when she was killed.
Earlier this year, the Maryland Attorney General’s Office released a report detailing decades of child sexual abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore that identified Maskell as one of its most prolific abusers, saying he targeted at least 39 victims. According to the report, Maskell was transferred to St. Clement after being accused of abuse at his prior assignment – one of several times the archdiocese turned a blind eye to his misconduct.
He denied the allegations before his death in 2001 and was never criminally charged.
CBS Baltimore has been investigating the cases for decades. So has freelance journalist Tom Nugent, who was featured prominently in “The Keepers.”
“I think that something is still happening in the case and that they are in possession of some information,” Nugent told CBS Baltimore recently.
He’s hoping this will lead to a revelation that will bring peace to Malecki’s family.
“They never did stop trying to solve this,” Nugent said. “The idea that they might find out what happened is wonderful for them.”
On June 22, 2021, two weeks after Alex Murdaugh, scion of the Murdaugh legal dynasty, reported finding the bodies of his son Paul and wife Maggie fatally shot at the dog kennels of the family’s sprawling Moselle property, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, known as SLED, released a simple statement to media: “SLED has opened an investigation into the death of Stephen Smith based upon information gathered during the course of the double murder investigation of Paul and Maggie Murdaugh.”
That single sentence was the turning point for Sandy Smith, who’d been fighting to keep her son’s case from fading into obscurity, even writing letters to high-level politicians and the FBI. “That was the happiest day of my life,” she tells “48 Hours” contributor and CBS News correspondent Nikki Battiste in “Stephen Smith: A Death in Murdaugh Country,” an all-new “48 Hours” airing Saturday, Nov. 25 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
Stephen Smith
Sandy Smith
For nearly a decade, Sandy Smith has refused to let her son’s case grow cold. In the early morning hours of July 8, 2015, Stephen Smith’s body was discovered on a rural road in South Carolina’s Lowcountry. This is where three generations of the Murdaugh family had occupied the top solicitor’s office and enjoyed a century of power and influence, particularly among local law enforcement. Stephen’s death was quickly ruled a hit-and-run by the medical examiner, a conclusion that neither Sandy Smith nor the investigators with the South Carolina Highway Patrol believed at the time.
“I wanted a second opinion,” Sandy Smith tells Battiste.
With a new high-profile legal team now in her corner, she’s finally getting it. A few days after Eric Bland and Ronnie Richter announced they were representing Smith pro bono, SLED chief Mark Keel publicly acknowledged SLED was treating Stephen Smith’s death as a homicide. And thanks to more than $130,000 in GoFundMe donations from Sandy Smith’s supporters, Bland and Richter were able to arrange an exhumation of Stephen Smith’s body in order to conduct an independent autopsy.
When Battiste asks Sandy Smith, “What do you think it took for Stephen’s case to finally get the attention it deserves, that you wanted?” Smith doesn’t mince words. “Somebody else had to die,” she says, referring to Paul and Maggie Murdaugh.
Alex Murdaugh was found guilty of the double murders of his wife and son after a sensational six-week trial watched around the world. Bland and Richter, who were already representing several of Murdaugh’s victims of alleged multimillion-dollar financial scams, offered to represent Sandy Smith pro bono. “This is a woman that has fought this battle alone since 2015 … screaming as loud as she could … with not a lot of people listening,” says Bland.
Almost immediately after Stephen Smith’s death, rumors of Murdaugh involvement swarmed the Lowcountry like locusts. Hampton County Guardian editor Michael DeWitt Jr., who is also the author of the book “The Fall of the House of Murdaugh,”says he heard the same rumors in far-flung corners: “that at least one Murdaugh child was in a vehicle with other boys and allegedly, somebody in the vehicle … struck the young man with a baseball bat and killed him.” A similar story was repeated to Highway Patrol investigators in recorded interviews, and the Murdaugh name, particularly Buster Murdaugh, comes up dozens of times in the original case file, obtained by “48 Hours” through public records requests.
Buster Murdaugh, Alex Murdaugh’s oldest son, who according to the case file, had not spoken with Highway Patrol investigators nor publicly addressed the allegations, broke his silence two weeks after his father’s conviction. In a statement released by his father’s attorney, Jim Griffin, Buster Murdaugh denied the rumors, calling them “baseless” and said in part, “I unequivocally deny any involvement [in Stephen Smith’s] death.” Buster Murdaugh issued a second denial several months later during a televised interview on Fox Nation. And for the first time, he also offered an alibi, stating he was with his mother and brother at their beach house at the time Stephen Smith was killed.
“We are aware of no evidence today that would suggest that any Murdaugh played any role in Stephen Smith’s death or played any role in trying to cover up the investigation into his death,” says Richter.
But the Murdaughs and Smith’s case remain inextricably linked by SLED’s findings. Richter tells “48 Hours,” “Somehow, some way in the Murdaugh murder investigation, a new thread was opened up into Stephen Smith.”
While SLED has kept its investigation close to the vest, what evidence investigators found while looking into the Murdaugh murders that led them back to Stephen Smith has been the subject of intense speculation. “Whatever it was, it’s major enough for … the highest police organization in the state to open up its own investigation,” says DeWitt.
Given the pivotal role cellphone evidence played in Alex Murdaugh’s trial, Bland and Richter say it’s possible evidence from Stephen’s tablet or phone, which was found in his front pocket, may play a key role in this case, as well. But Sandy Smith says she had asked the FBI to crack Stephen’s phone back in 2016.
“Do you know if … anyone actually was able to read Stephen’s text messages or see where he might’ve been based on cellphone evidence?” asks Battiste.
“What I heard from the FBI agent,” says Sandy Smith, is “there was a lot of interesting information in the phone that needed to be looked at.” But she says neither local nor state authorities pursued the case further, and Stephen’s case went cold. “There’s something in that phone that nobody wants out there,” she tells Battiste.
Sandy Smith has been fighting to keep her son’s case from fading into obscurity, even writing letters to high-level politicians and the FBI.
AP
According to Sandy Smith’s attorneys, SLED now has all of the evidence in the Stephen Smith case, including his phone and tablet, and an investigative grand jury is zeroing in on potential suspects. Meanwhile, Sandy Smith is keeping hope alive that she will get answers and justice soon. She announced a scholarship fund in Stephen’s name, and she’s offering a $30,000 reward for information that leads to an arrest and conviction.
During an independent investigation by Sandy Smith’s team led by Dr. Kenny Kinsey, who recently retired as chief deputy of the Orangeburg County Sheriff’s Office and was an expert witness in Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial, the baseball bat theory was ruled out. Kinsey and Dr. Michelle DuPre, a retired investigator and forensic pathologist who oversaw Stephen’s new autopsy, theorized that Stephen had died from a single fatal blow to the head and died on the road where he was found.
“The injuries can tell us so much about what happened,” says DuPre. And in this case, she says they did.
“Whatever hit him was fast and it was large,” Kinsey tells Battiste.
These and other startling findings, shared exclusively with Battiste, are part of the latest “48 Hours” report.
“How confident are you that you know what happened to Stephen Smith that night?” Battiste asks Kinsey. “I’m as close to a degree of scientific certainty as I’ve ever felt,” he says.