Crime Junkie - MURDERED: Patricia Newsom
Episode Date: October 30, 2023After nearly 50 years as East Haven, Connecticut’s Jane Doe, police have finally identified the murder victim found behind Bradlees Department Store as 18-year-old Patricia Newsom. Now, they need yo...ur help to catch her killer – or killers. If you have any information about Patricia Newsom, call East Haven police at 203-468-3824. Join the FindPatriciaNewsom Facebook group for updates. Source materials for this episode cannot be listed here due to character limitations. For a full list of sources, please visit: https://crimejunkiepodcast.com/murdered-patricia-newsom/For information on how to upload your DNA profile to GEDmatch, please visit the GEDmatch website.Check out the following links for guides and tip sheets on what to do when a loved one goes missing: Missing Persons Primer – The Center for HopeMissing Persons Guide – Missing Persons Advocacy NetworkFinding a Missing Loved One – National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)Missing Persons Checklists 1 & 2 – IHaveVanished.comMissing-Child, Emergency-Response, Quick-Reference Guide for FamiliesMissing Child Clearinghouses (every state)Resources for Families of Missing American Indian and Alaska Native AdultsWhen Your Child Is Missing: A Family Survival GuideCuando su Niño está desaparecido: Una guÃa de supervivencia familiarSocial Media Guidebook for Families of Missing and Runaway Children​What to do if your child is missing – Peas In Their PodsMissing Persons Checklist - Colorado Bureau of InvestigationSomeone I Know is Missing – Kansas Bureau of InvestigationVirginia Missing Person Family Resource GuideMissing people: A guide for family members and service providers (Australia)What to do when someone goes missing (UK)What if the Police Won't Investigate my Case?Other organizations: National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC)DOE NetworkAnti-Predator ProjectPrivate Investigations for the MissingCommunity United Effort (CUE) Center for Missing PersonsFind Me Group Don’t miss out on all things Crime Junkie!Instagram: @crimejunkiepodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @CrimeJunkiePod | @audiochuckTikTok: @crimejunkiepodcastFacebook: /CrimeJunkiePodcast | /audiochuckllcCrime Junkie is hosted by Ashley Flowers and Brit Prawat. Instagram: @ashleyflowers | @britprawatTwitter: @Ash_Flowers | @britprawatTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at +1 (317) 733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, random photos of Chuck, and more!Â
Transcript
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Hi, crime junkies. I'm your host, Ashley Flowers, and I'm Brett.
And the story I have for you today could almost be a work of fiction, because it has a little bit of everything.
Heroes and villains, hope and despair, murder and miracles.
But there's a reason they say that truth is stranger than fiction.
And to solve this mystery, investigators need your help. So listen closely.
This is the story of Patricia Melody Newsom. August 16, 1975 is a rainy, humid, Saturday morning in East Haven, Connecticut, and a truck
driver is making his usual rounds, taking a shortcut on an access road behind Bradley's
discount department store, like he does most days, a few times a day, even.
But around 943, on his second pass through the area, he spots something floating in a drainage
ditch that borders the road.
It looks like a package wrapped in a canvas tarp.
He stops his truck and goes over for a better look.
You see this guy isn't even just a trucker.
He's also a volunteer state trooper, so he's more curious than most. And the closer he gets, the more
he thinks the package looks body-shaped. So he calls East Haven Police and gets an auxiliary
trooper mode to secure the scene until they arrive. Before long, police are there looking at the
Colford, which is about two feet deep. And they're also pretty sure they're looking at a body.
deep. And they're also pretty sure they're looking at a body. The tarp is secured around what looks like the head, waist, and feet with twine and copper
wire wrapped in black rubber. So they're sure it's body because it is very body
shaped. Yeah, there's really no mistaking it, but they don't want to open the
tarp and lose potential evidence. So all they do is they cut this little hole in it
just a peak inside.
And sure enough, they see a human leg.
So they contact the medical examiner
who brings the body still wrapped up back to the lap.
Once they unwrap the twine and the wire,
they peel the tarp off, revealing that the victims' head
and shoulders are covered in a green plastic trash bag.
Beneath that, another trash bag is fastened around the neck with a fabric cord.
Under that is a towel, and finally, they get their first real look at the victim, a badly decomposed young woman bloated from being submerged in water.
All she has on is a pair of earrings.
There's a piece of cloth stuffed in her mouth, and her wrists and ankles are bound behind
her back with twine or some kind of rope.
The MES to make she's been dead for at least a few days, and her cause of death was asphyxia
by smothering.
Now, she doesn't appear to have any other injuries, and even though she's new, there's no evidence
that she was sexually assaulted.
Was there anything wrapped up in the tarp with her, like, personal items that might be
able to give my clue to who she is?
No, nothing wrapped in the tarp with her, nothing even near where her body was found.
Best they can do is put together a description of her and see if it matches
anyone who's been reported missing.
What they know is that she's either white or Latino, she's 125lbs, maybe 5'5 or 5'6
with shoulder-length brown hair and hazel eyes.
The ME estimates that maybe she's probably late teens early to mid-20's tops, and
he can tell that she never gave birth.
But that's not really much to go on.
No, not at all.
But according to East Haven Police Captain Joseph Murgo, everyone's optimistic as the investigation
begins, because they don't think that their mystery woman will be a jane doe for long.
Her fingernails are well-capped, she's had extensive orthodonic work, and even a nose job,
so someone had cared for her, I mean herself at least.
And police have two strong potential identifiers.
Her intact teeth allow them to create a dental chart, and they're able to get clear fingerprints
as well.
So the next thing they do is East Haven delivers all of its evidence to the FBI for analysis,
knowing that the agency has more
tools and resources at its disposal. And during their examination, FBI investigators spot a few vague
clues about the perpetrator. There are white drops of paint on the tarp, which could indicate a
connection to the painting trade. Also, some of the knots used for binding are intricate,
and while that might not mean anything,
police wonder if the killer has maybe military
or a fishing background.
Beyond that, there's nothing.
No footprints that were left at the scene,
no fingerprints on her body or the tarps or whatever.
They don't even know whether she was dumped
in the drainage ditch, or maybe if she was stashed in a nearby drain pipe
and then washed into the ditch by recent heavy rain.
But they can start putting together some things based on what they have.
For instance, wrapping her up like that would take time,
so they don't believe that she was killed behind the store where they found her.
And some even start to speculate that this could be a mafia hit.
Oh, is the mafia even a thing in Connecticut at this time?
Oh yeah. And they're not even far from anyone's minds,
because as this is happening, like just 10 days before,
the body of a convicted bookie was found in a river
and nearby New Haven.
According to the Associated Press, the man had been shot in the head
and bound into a sleeping bag.
And with this young woman, police wonder if the mafia might have been sex trafficking
her or using her maybe as like a drug smuggler.
But mob hit or not, police know that they'll have a better chance of finding Jane Doe's
killer or killers if they learn who she is.
So that's where they direct most of their focus early on.
The FBI creates a composite sketch of the victim and detectives hit the streets, questioning
everyone they can.
I mean, they're talking to sex workers and men known for violence against women.
The interview employs at Bradley's in a nearby grocery store and a canvassing motels to
see if anyone remembers her.
Now, when that doesn't work, they beam her information to police agencies nationwide.
They send her dental chart to orthodontists and details about her nose job to plastic surgeons,
hoping that someone will recognize their own work.
They even compare her fingerprints and her teeth to dozens of missing women, even patty
herst at one point, the publishing areas at the center of one of the most high profile
and bizarre kidnapping cases in FBI history.
Yeah, but every lead is a dead end.
There are no matches to any missing person's reports, no one comes forward to claim her
and nobody seems to know who she is.
Then, in late November, an inmate at a state prison reaches out with a tip.
And just a heads up, I'm going to use fake names for these people.
So this inmate tells police that he recently ran into an old friend of his,
a 28-year-old East Haven man, Jason, who he says was pretty upset.
According to The Heart for Current,
Jason is currently in prison with this inmate because he and another local guy,
19-year-old Clyde, had just been indicted on federal charges for robbing a bank at gunpoint
together with the help from a teenage girl. But those pending charges weren't Jason's
concern. Instead, he tells this inmate that he was worried about being arrested for murder. Because according to what he told this guy, Jason and another guy who he didn't name
killed a girl that they picked up hitchhiking a few months back.
He said that they wrapped her body and left her near a shopping center in East Haven.
Yet, police weren't on to them before, but now with the bank robbery charges looming,
Jason is afraid that this other guy he was with is basically going to rat him out to save This weren't on to them before, but now with the bank robbery charges looming, Jason
is afraid that this other guy he was with is basically going to rat him out to save his
own life.
So this inmate who's hearing all this, he might not have known the alleged accomplices'
name, but detectives are pretty sure they do, because if this conversation actually happened,
Jason must have been referring to Clyde, who he's like
being indicted on this robbery stuff with.
Right, but that's a pretty big if.
I mean, it made Snitch all the time, and it's usually because they want something in return.
And that's true, but here's the thing about Jason.
He has a long rap sheet.
He has been in and out of reformatory schools, jails, and prisons since his early teens.
I mean, arrested from everything from assaulting girlfriends to attempted rape, to gun possession, bank robbery.
By our reporter Nina's count, he escaped from various lockups at least 10 times.
Oh my god.
And that was before he was shot in the back by police during a burglary in the late 1960s.
Here's what's wild.
So that incident where he was shot paralyzed him from the waist down.
But, he still managed to break out of prisoner jails or whatever a couple more times after
that.
Whoa, this dude is paralyzed and still escaping jail.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Okay, so with that timeline, he also would have been paralyzed
when our Jane Doe was killed and dumped in 75, right?
Yes, so hence the need for an accomplice,
if this turns out to be true.
So clearly, I mean, this is interesting enough
that the lead is worth pursuing.
But police don't go straight to Jason.
They first visit his ex-girlfriend who's living in Pennsylvania at the time.
They show her the Jane Doe composite sketch thinking that their unidentified victim might
be another one of Jason's exes, but she doesn't recognize this woman and she doesn't have
any intel on who she might be.
Though she does, however, give them more insight on her relationship with Jason. She tells police that they met earlier that year and quickly moved in together.
He was working at an auto repair shop where his duties included spray painting, interestingly
enough.
But she tells officers that they weren't involved for long because Jason had a terrible
temper.
He even tried to strangle her with a telephone wire.
And so she left him for good on August 4th,
not even two weeks before Jane Doe was found.
I honestly lost count of how many red flags
you packed into those couple of sentences.
There is a ton.
But keep in mind, Jason's name is one lead in a sea of leads,
many of which are coming from jails and prisons,
which like you pointed out can be problematic.
So it kind of just goes on the shelf. Until months later, when a new tip brings it right back into the spotlight.
On March 7th, 1976, a man we're going to call Angelo, contacts East Haven Police Department.
Angelo tells a sergeant that he and Clyde are close friends.
So close, that Clyde had just revealed a secret to him about Jason.
Clyde told him, Jason admitted to killing Jane Doe.
Did investigators ever go talk to Clyde back when they first got the tip about Jason?
Not that we know of, but East Haven's Captain Murgo says it seems like some police reports
were either never completed or were misplaced over the years, so it's not totally clear
what was or wasn't done or what's just missing.
Anyway, Angela has a different narrative than the one police heard from that inmate a
while back.
In this version, Clyde is not in a complice. Jason supposedly told Clyde that he picked
up a girl from New Jersey named either Patty or Gail. And after he killed her,
someone from a local motorcycle gang helped bag her up and dump her. He said he
regretted killing her because she was pretty, but he had to because she was gonna testify against him in court.
Wait, yeah, and you're wondering like which trial.
Yeah.
No clue.
Because it definitely wasn't the bank robbery, like thing he was already in jail for, because we know Jane Doe was dead before that.
Right.
And, you know, good ol' Nina doesn't take, I don't know for an answer.
So, I mean, she literally dug into a mountain of public records and news coverage.
And it appears that everyone who did testify against Jason in previous trials lived to tell about it.
So, maybe what Jason actually told Clyde was a variation of
she knew something that could get me in trouble
and it got twisted up in, you know, this game of telephone because it's being shared through
multiple people, whatever.
So even though it's not totally adding up, hearing these names again gets police wondering
if there is a kernel of truth in their somewhere.
So now they do want to talk to Clyde.
By this time, the whole Bank robbery case is over. Earlier that year,
Clyde pleaded guilty. And according to the Hartford current, he testified against Jason, who was
accused of being the getaway driver. Jason got 25 years in prison, Clyde got a short stint in a
youth center, and he's out now when they go looking for him. So Jason wasn't wrong not to trust Clyde.
I mean, it seemed like he kind of flipped on a dime.
Well, yeah, about the bank robbery, but I mean, this whole time Clyde never went to police
to say a word about any kind of murder.
So anyways, police hope that maybe with Jason still in prison, Clyde will be ready or more
inclined to chat.
Well, yeah, and who knows how long they have before Jason chashings it again?
For sure.
And that might actually be what he's afraid of, because Clyde, when they come to him,
he refuses to talk.
And he's apparently done talking to Angelo too, who was the one that started this whole
thing again by coming forward.
And I'm not sure why, but police don't make a move toward Jason at this point.
There's no record of them trying to interview him in prison.
Do you think maybe they were just wanting a stronger story to confront him with?
Or...
Could be.
But whatever the reason, by the time Jane Doe is laid to rest that May, after nearly
a year at the Medical Examiner's office, police are no closer to learning her identity.
So she's buried in an unmarked grave at the back of an old cemetery a few towns over.
What about those women's names Angelou gave them?
Patty or Gail from New Jersey?
Were they ever able to make any connection with those?
I mean, no, but how do you track that down?
Patty or Gail from New Jersey?
Like, talk about a needle in a haystack.
That's just absolutely not enough.
Now, eventually investigators start to wonder if Jane don't even has a family, at least
in this country.
Because if she doesn't, it would explain why no one matching her description has been
reported missing.
And here's an interesting note, they definitely don't think she's local because someone would
have recognized her or seen her composite sketch on the news by now.
So they think she came from somewhere else, but again, maybe it was really far, or maybe it was
from a family that doesn't even know she's missing. For years, the case is at a standstill.
Although in March of 1983, police do receive two interesting letters.
One of them is from a man who was just released
from federal prison where he served time with,
da da da da da da da da da da da.
None other than Jason.
Yes.
He says while they were locked up,
they spoke about the girl who was found dead behind Brad Lee's
and he tells police he has information
that may help them solve the case.
He thinks he might know her real name,
although he doesn't include it in the letter.
He just says she's from Pennsylvania, but it doesn't appear that police ever follow up with him.
At least Captain Murgo says there's nothing in the case file about any follow-up.
Why not? This isn't something totally out of left field. This letter literally names the guy
they've already been looking into.
I know.
It seems so obvious that this would be your sign
to, I don't know, keep looking into him,
do some follow up.
I don't know why it doesn't happen at that point.
Especially because a second letter comes in
just a couple of weeks later,
this one from a current inmate at a state prison.
So two totally separate people are writing this.
Yes, the difference is, so the first guy gave his name current inmate at a state prison? So two totally separate people are writing this.
Yes, the difference is, so the first guy gave his name
like signed it, but the second guy doesn't.
He says he may be putting himself in danger
by contacting the police.
But I think they're able to at least confirm
that these are two different people,
since that first letter came from someone who
actually did just get out of prison.
The second letter comes from someone in prison.
That's not something you can really fake.
Those letters get stamped.
Right.
It have the telltale correctional facility return address.
But that doesn't necessarily mean they aren't connected, though.
I mean, maybe two people coordinated.
Well, Captain Murgo says, because we asked this question too, he doesn't think that they
are, well, there was no indication that they're connected.
But to be fair, he also says there's no way of proving that they're not connected.
Either way, let me just get into what that second letter said.
So the anonymous inmate mentions a man.
We're going to call this man Lenny, so not Jason.
And he says, if Lenny's name means anything to the case, he might be able to help police.
If they can help him, of course, because he's tired of jail and wants to get out.
And look, as far as detective know, there isn't any evidence that this Lenny guy has anything to do with our Jane Doe's murder.
But Lenny does have a connection to Jason!
Jason.
According to the Connecticut Post, Lenny and Jason were arrested together in the late
1960s after Jason allegedly threatened a woman with a gun during an argument.
Lenny was described as Jason's companion and charged with conspiracy, and he ended up
pleading guilty to aggravate a assault.
But, I don't think police put any stock into this second letter either.
Because it's not until the fall of 1985 that the investigation heats up again thanks to just this routine appointment.
So get this story. This is like every crime junkie always stay vigilant. This is why you do what you do because you never know when you're going to be at the heart of a story.
So the wife of an East Haven lieutenant is at the dentist, just killing time in the waiting room when a story in People magazine by Kristen McMurray catches her eye.
It's about a murder in Hancock, Maine, about 400 miles away.
The victim, a 59-year-old woman named Amelia Cave, was beaten and strangled
to death the year before. Police found her body partially buried under a rock wall days
after she was reported missing. Like East Haven's Jane Doe, Amelia was bound and gagged with
a plastic bag over her head, and her wrists were tied with a nylon cord,
ankles, secured with twine, and her mouth was stuffed with an empty bird seed bag.
And the perpetrator of that crime, who had just been convicted of murder,
happened to have lived in East Haven in the mid-1970s. What? Yes. And that article mentioned the killer's name,
which is Samantha Glenter.
Now, if you pull the records for this case,
you may notice Samantha is referred to by a different name,
but we're going to refer to her as Glenter
throughout the rest of this episode.
Now, this People Magazine article about Amelia's murder
shows a pretty open and shut case.
So, again, this is still what she's like reading in the dentist's office.
Basically, in the early 1980s, Glentor moved to Maine where their parents lived, and Amelia
was friends with Glentor's parents, which is how they met.
Amelia's body was found under a rock wall, like I said, but that rock wall was one that
Glentor had built on the shoreline of their family's property.
Plus, Glenner tried to cash a $2,700 check drawn from Amelia's account with her signature
forged on it after she went missing. So when the Lieutenant's wife reads this,
like she is putting all of the pieces together. She knows she has to show this to her husband.
And when she does, he sees the connections too.
Did Glenner's name ever show up on East Haven PD's radar for our Jane Doe's murder?
Girl, not at all.
Oh my god.
But now they look into Glenner, and not only did they live in East Haven.
Investigators learn that in August of 1975, Glenner was living in an apartment on Main Street
that was just five minutes away
from where Jane Doe's body was found.
And police can't believe how similar the cases are
and how the circumstances are just lining up for them.
So at this point, they're probably all like,
Jason, who?
But according to Alan Dury's reporting for the New Haven register when investigators try to speak with Glenner
They refuse to talk
So I'm sure you can guess by now where this goes. No, no, no, no, no
There's no way this dice yard. There's gotta be something anything to link these cases
Nothing nothing
happens and so that's how it stays for nine years.
But in all of those years, no one forgot about Glenner. And this is a great example of letting
fresh eyes and time play in your favor because in 1994, a new police chief has investigators reach out again just to see if now Glentor will talk.
And this time, for some reason, they finally agree.
So in April, detectives head to a prison in Maine hoping to get some answers.
But unfortunately, the interview doesn't go well.
Glentor denies any involvement in Jane Doe's murder, but is also evasive, and not very
lucid, either.
In fact, Glenter is given a psychiatric evaluation after the interview to determine if their mental
state makes them too unreliable for police to even speak with.
But even though Glenter is eventually found competent, detectives don't see a point
in going back for a second interview.
And so for nearly three more decades, that's it.
There are a few leads to follow up on here and there.
Police kick around the idea of exhuming her to see if they could maybe get viable DNA,
but it doesn't actually happen.
And as the case cycles through generations of detectives, Jane Doe's composite sketch hangs
on their bulletin board.
She is the only unidentified homicide victim in East Haven.
And according to Megan Friedman's reporting for the New Haven Register, older investigators
pass on stories about her case down to rookies.
One of those rookies is Joseph Mergo. He joins the force in 2003,
and as he rises through the ranks, Jando's story just sticks with him. He can't stand the
thought of her case going unsolved much less never giving her her name back.
So, when he and a colleague are promoted to captains in July of 2020, they decide maybe it's time to give the case a fresh look.
But there's a big problem when they try.
At some point in the early to mid 1990s, all of the evidence stored at the East Haven
Police Department was thrown away.
I do not understand how this always seems to happen.
It's not like they threw it away for no reason.
Like we hear about in, I mean, all their cases that does happen.
Captain Murgo says that the department's holding cells apparently flooded, something to do
with the toilets.
And I guess those cells were directly above the evidence room.
So that flooded, and this is like a note to everyone, like don't have water above your
evidence room.
I feel like this is like a note to everyone like don't have water above your evidence room I feel like this is like a new rule
So everything was moldy you're corroded and they had to just dump it all. I'm sorry
There were no other options. I mean did they at least take pictures? I don't know. I don't know
No clue. Okay, I feel like this is where crime junkies are just way under utilized Like get the NDAs out and ask for volunteers.
I can almost personally guarantee you'd have people lined up
to help with stuff like this.
I was just going to say, I was like,
my name's Ashley Flowers, here's my contact information.
I would love to go through your evidence.
Yeah, I don't know if they tried to save or restore any of it,
but regardless, the end result is the same.
So in 2020, now they've got to work with what they have now.
And Captain Murgo knows they still have something.
You see, the Emmy had removed Jane Doe's pubic bone,
which is often used to estimate age,
and the bone, along with swabs taken during a sexual assault
forensic exam, were stored at the lab
and not the department's evidence room.
But don't get too excited yet, because nothing in this case
goes smoothly.
Basically, when forensic scientists try to extract DNA,
they learn that everything is contaminated with bacteria
and the pubic bone that they do have
isn't good for extraction anyway.
But they're not totally giving up.
Investigators decide to consult with identifying
those international, which I'm sure, if you're not, every crime junkie needs to be familiar with by now. There are companies
that conduct forensic genetic genealogy. But even identifiers says the same thing, it is
a no-go with what you've got. And that's when police realize if they're gonna solve this
case, they have no other choice. They are to have to exume Jane Doe.
Investigators have their work cut out for them.
For one thing, all they know is she was buried in the southeast corner of the State Street Cemetery in the nearby town called Hamden.
They don't know exactly where, though.
And tracking her down is going to be difficult because the cemetery had been closed for a decade.
So it's abandoned, overgrown,
and full of unclaimed bodies and unmarked graves,
some dating back to the 1700s.
Oh my God.
According to NBC Connecticut reporter Angela Fortuna,
the association that ran it came under fire
for improper and inaccurate burial records.
They just can't catch a break, can they?
Well, it feels like it, no, I mean, this could have gone a lot easier.
But this is where they finally see things starting to go right.
They managed to locate a former groundskeeper with help from a retired cop who had this long
standing interest in the case, and the groundskeeper remembers that she was buried along a chainling fence next to other people
in unmarked graves from that time period.
Now he tells him that half of the row was reserved for children, so they focus on the other
half, they're narrowing it down, where all the adults are, and they're supposed to be
in chronological order.
So Captain Murgo and a colleague meticulously examined burial records and death certificates,
and even a hand-drawn cemetery map.
They also know that she was buried in a specific type of metal casket, and the groundskeeper says
that most of the others in her area are wooden, so they literally head out to the cemetery, take a rod.
I thought they'd have a metal detector. No, no, no, no, this is like the most like budget friendly.
They take a rod and they're like poking it into the ground until they hear a distinctive
clink. And so they figure this must be it. They get their search warrants. And on Wednesday,
June 8, 2022, everyone holds their breath
as the casket is lifted out of the ground and sawed open.
But when they look inside, they get a terrible shock.
Because the body is that of a young boy.
Now, there is not even a burial record for this kid, so they have no idea who he is.
All they can do is transfer him into a new casket, hold the vigil, and bury him again,
which is a devastating development, but they have come too far to give up. They know they're
in the right vicinity. They just need a better tool to pinpoint the exact spot.
So later that month, investigators return with a US Department of Agriculture employee and a ground penetrating radar device.
What Captain Murgo describes as basically an X-ray machine on wheels to scan for unmarked graves.
But that's when they get another awful surprise.
There are five times more caskets than they expected to be there. Yeah, they
are packed in. They are stacked on top of each other. And to make matters worse, most of them
are metal, not wood. What is even happening at this point? I mean, every time I think, wow,
I guess I can pick my job off the floor now. won't get shocked or surprised again. You hit me with something like this? That's what they're thinking too.
But the New Haven register published a photo of the gravesite location years ago. So comparing that with everything else,
they do manage to find the casket they think is hers. And it's about 10 or 11 feet away from the original spot.
Now on Friday, July 1st, they exume the second body, and
investigators are just biting their nails, terrified of unearthing another stranger.
But when they open the casket, the medical examiner can tell, this is their Jane Doe, because
she was buried naked, wrapped in an autopsy sheet, and she has no pubic bone. So they take her femur and her tooth for testing,
and forensic scientists try the tooth first,
but they can't pull any DNA from it.
So they go ahead and send the femur and wait nervously for news.
And that news finally came this very year on Monday, April 10, 2023.
That's when Identifyender's tells Captain Mirgo that Jando has been identified at last.
She is 18-year-old Patricia Melody Newsom.
And what is wild is that while police were knee- deep in their investigation, Patricia's sister, Mary Ann,
had been doing everything she could to find her sister.
So, Patricia had been reported missing?
No.
I'm not 100% sure why,
but understanding the family dynamic does help explain it.
So Nina spoke with Mary Ann,
who told her that overall the nuisums were happy until the late 1960s.
There were four siblings, so two girls, two boys.
Marianne was the baby, nearly eight years younger than Patricia, who she calls Trisha.
Now their father's military career had moved them around a lot,
but they eventually settled in Philadelphia, and everything was going well
until their mother was diagnosed with cancer.
So she died in December of 1968, and a year later, her father Herbert, who everyone calls
Dawn, married another woman.
And their stepmother, whose nickname is Mimi, turned their lives upside down.
Mary Ann says every trace of their mom was erased from their home.
They were no longer allowed to even mention their mother,
and they couldn't contact her side of the family either.
She sounds like the stereotypical evil stepmother straight from her.
Yeah, and unfortunately their dad didn't intervene.
He pretty much let her take the reins.
So it was all downhill from there.
After Mimi gave birth to their
little brother in 1971, the family relocated to New Jersey. Everyone except the oldest
brother who was already an adult by that time. And that move really solidified Mimi's
authority. After that there was rampant physical abuse. Mary-Anne says Mimi would sick their
father on them, and she didn't mind't let out punishments herself. Everyone was walking on egg
shells, but maybe because she was older, therefore, harder to manipulate,
Trisha seemed to get the worst of Mimi's rage. And to be fair, Marianne's
memory of her childhood is hazy, but what she recalls is that at some point, her older sister was just gone.
The kids were told that Trisha and a friend ran away from their boarding school to Maine
where the friends family lived.
And that was the only thing they were told, like that was the end of it.
Just like their mother's, Trisha's existence was wiped from the house and Mary Ann knew
better than to ask questions.
Uh-oh, wait.
What boarding school was she supposed to be at?
So the details of that are super foggy, but Trisha was apparently sent to a boarding
school after they moved, so that would have been around 1972, and she supposedly ran
off with that friend in either 73 or 74.
Now, if we fast forward a couple years, in 1979, Don and Mimi divorced, and for
some inexplicable reason Mimi got custody of Marianne. Marianne only saw her father a
couple of times after that and then he died of cancer in December of 1980. As soon as Marianne
could, like the moment she could, she left home, and she was estranged from her brothers and wanted, I mean, nothing to do with Mimi, but she never could stop thinking about Trisha.
And for some reason, even though she was told this story of her running away, she always assumed
that Trisha was dead, because she was so protective of her little sister,
Maryann didn't think that she would just leave her behind in that house.
So desperate for answers, Mary-Anne turned to the internet
when it became accessible.
She searched through composite sketches on Jando websites,
she took an ancestry DNA test
in case Trisha ever had any children,
but there was no one out there.
And then, in 2020, Mary-Anne saw a show
about an unidentified homicide victim known as Lady of the Dunes.
Now this is a pretty like infamous story, but for those who don't know, Lady of the Dunes
was discovered in July of 74.
She was naked on a Massachusetts beach with half of her skull crushed and her hands missing.
Now her estimated age range was pretty wide, like 20 to 40, but the composite sketchmate
of her took Maryanne's breath away.
The lady of the dunes had their mother's eyes, just like Trisha did.
And even though this was promising, Maryanne had been hesitant to launch a full-on extensive
search for her sister, because she knew that it was going to uncover family secrets.
It was going to dredge up painful memories.
Is she talking about the abuse or she thought Mimi was maybe involved in some way?
Well, I mean, I think she knew that they would be airing all of the family's dirty laundry
so to speak.
And at the time, she didn't know if Mimi was involved or not.
By this point, she and her younger brother had finally reconnected and she worried that,
you know, again, if she's going to dredge all this up, this new relationship she just formed
with her younger brother might fall apart as well, because he's Mimi's biological son.
But after discussing it with her loved ones and dealing with some medical issues for a minute
that forced her to stop working, Mary Ann eventually knew was time to ramp up her efforts.
And she did that in November of 2021.
That's when she started a Facebook page called
Find Patricia Newsom.
And she contacted Massachusetts State Police
about Lady of the Dooms, which helped get a name
as profile up for Trisha, even though she had never
been reported missing.
Now, at this point, I told you, Marianne had done Ancestry DNA looking for, you know,
potential nieces or whatever, nephews. Like relatives. Yeah.
This is when she takes that DNA, whatever the match is, and uploads it to Jed match.
And this is really important for anyone who wants to support cold cases in law enforcement
and family in this way.
A lot of the companies, when you'll do these DNA testing, they'll give you your results,
but that does not mean that they're available for law enforcement to access in cases like
this where they're looking for family members.
You have to actually take your results, put them in Jedmatch, and that's still not the
only thing you have to do. You have to actually opt in, because it them in Jedmatch, and that's still not the only thing you have to do.
You have to actually opt in,
because it's automatically set to opt out for privacy.
So you have to opt in in Jedmatch for law enforcement
to have access to try and solve these cul-cates.
Should do contestants, yeah.
So that's what she does at this point.
Now, meanwhile, her local sheriff's department,
in Tennessee, collected another sample of DNA
to compare directly
against Lady of the Dooms, but unfortunately, it wasn't a match.
As much as she thought, she had her mother's eyes.
So Mary Ann at that point realized there was no way around it.
She was going to have to get her family talking, even if it meant unearthing old skeletons, maybe figuratively and literally.
Marianne learned that her oldest brother remembered getting a letter from Trisha at some point,
presumably while she was in that boarding school. Now he didn't work all many details, but he thought that the letter came from Vermont,
and when he tried to write back,
the letter was returned as undeliverable.
Undeliverable because she wasn't there
or because the return address wasn't real.
They don't know.
So, Marianne reaches out to Mimi directly next,
and she does this via text.
Mimi tells her that the boarding school wasn't in Vermont, it was actually in New York.
Somewhere near Monticello, which is a village in the Cat Skills region.
She said it was a regular boarding school, like it wasn't like a reform school or anything,
but she claimed that she didn't remember the name of it.
Which is like, you know, this is decades ago fine, you don't remember the name, but Trisha
I'm still a side eye.
Yeah, sit, we're all a little side eye, but you know, it's been decades ago, whatever we
can get the name that would have been helpful, but the real thing that Mary-Anne wants to know
is why Trisha was sent there in the first place.
Like truly that's something you remember, sending off your kid. But Mimi said it was because Trisha
was causing problems with the other siblings.
And here is the example that she gave.
She says one time when their younger brother,
which is again Mimi's biological son,
one time when he was a toddler,
Trisha took him outside to play in the snow
and they were on the lawn by the road
and they were running around some trees and he fell.
And did what happened? No, that's it. That's that's the story.
He fell? That's it. He fell. That's it.
Have you ever met a toddler before? Joe can't stay on her toofy. Like, I was like, you have one,
I had one. Falling is part for the course and with May honestly sometimes it was even intentional on her part. I'm confused is this story supposed to be like some devious thing that
happened? I guess the implication is that Trisha let him too close to the road? Maybe but this
wasn't a traffic-filled neighborhood with cars zooming by every second. Everyone is pretty spread
out but still Mimi said Dawn happened to see this whole thing happen and he took
Trisha, quote, down to the cellar and nearly killed her.
End quote.
Jesus Christ, I don't understand this at all.
I don't either.
So that's really the only explanation she gets from Mimi, the only information she gets
from Mimi, the only information she gets from Mimi. Fast
forward to a year later, which would have been just this past April. This is when Maryanne
is knee deep in doing anything she can to find her sister. So again, completely investigating
on her own. All of a sudden, she gets this knuck on her door, and it is the local sheriff's office.
And when she first sees him, she figures that, oh, he must need another DNA sample.
He's the one that came and took it to compare to Lady of the Dooms.
But instead, he tells her that someone wants to speak with her.
And before Maryann can figure out what is even happening, Captain Murgo is on the phone.
And he tells her,
Ma'am, your weight is over.
We've found your sister.
I just got chills.
Everyone is in tears, and Captain Murgo fills her in
about everything that had happened.
The murder, the investigation, since,
and it's difficult to hear the details,
but Mary Ann is just relieved to know something.
I mean, there were times when she felt like no one else even remembered her sister existed. So,
to find out not only that like, they remembered, but they cared so much that this whole group of
people have been working toward this moment. She said it was this miraculous feeling for her.
she said it was this miraculous feeling for her. By Monday, April 17th, Marianne is in East Haven.
She spends some time with her sister at the cemetery,
and that afternoon she joins police for a press conference.
Now, when the news breaks, the story is that in 1972,
Trisha attended a boarding school near about Monicello, New York.
And then sometime around 1974, she ran away with a friend to Maine, and they might have been
hitchhiking.
But the more investigators dig after this press conference, the more they start to wonder
if this entire narrative, the friend going to Maine, maybe even the boarding school itself,
is all bullsh**t.
I mean, same, but does Mary Ann actually remember a traditional, like, packing up and maybe even the boarding school itself is all bulls**t.
I mean, same, but does Mary Ann actually remember
Trisha like packing up and leaving for boarding school?
I'm like, this is so long ago, she's not sure.
She has flashes of memory that could be related to it,
like Trisha unpacking after being away
and feeling sad on a car ride home
after dropping her off somewhere.
So maybe she was in boarding
school at some point, but Mary really doesn't think she ran away from there. She thinks
that Trisha ran away from home.
Police even try reaching out to boarding schools not just in and around Monticello, but throughout
New England, and they cannot find any record of her. Although keep in mind, plenty of schools have closed or changed names, or who knows what
happens to records since the 1970s.
Now, when Captain Murgo gets Mimi on the phone, she maintains that Trisha did attend boarding
school.
But, she tells him that Don selected it and that he was the school's only point of contact.
Mimi also shares with him that whole story about her son falling in the snow,
but she says that Trisha was already enrolled in boarding school by then.
So, if both things are true, she must have been home, maybe on Christmas break 74?
No, no, both of them here just went off.
That couldn't have happened after Trisha was sent to boarding school.
If it was also the reason she was sent to boarding school,
both things can't be true Mimi.
It doesn't make sense.
And Mimi isn't sure if that incident marked the last time Trisha came home.
She just remembers getting the house ready for her return.
And then she says Dawn told her Trisha just wasn't coming home
because she was going to go to Maine with a friend.
So she's now saying the story came from Dawn.
But then she tells Captain Murgo that, you know, as she's thinking about it now, she doesn't
believe Trisha did go to Maine.
She thinks her former husband might have just told her that for some reason.
This is all so sketchy.
It is.
But Don and Mimi are not considered suspects.
Based on the circumstances,
like how Trisha's body was found,
police just don't think it adds up.
But Maryann does believe that the abuse Trisha experience
is what drove her out of the house,
which was the catalyst for everything that followed.
So armed with all of this new knowledge about Trisha, her background, her family, Captain
Murgo and investigators start going back through the case file again, checking out old leads.
And can you guess what jumps out at them?
There was a patty from New Jersey. Patty from freaking New Jersey.
Plus, the former inmate who wrote them about Jason
said that the dead girl was from Pennsylvania.
And what is so interesting, it might seem like it contradicts,
but Trisha actually lived in both states.
And had Jason also spent time in New Jersey?
Definitely.
In fact, the police shooting that left him paralyzed happened in New Jersey in a town about 35 minutes away from Trish's
News coverage shows that he was in the area at least once during the summer of 1974 when he settled a lawsuit with the police department that shot him
So I don't know. Maybe he picked up hitchhiking, something happened later, who knows?
But at this point, he is now back to being the main suspect.
But the thing is, as much as this fits and it's great circumstantial stuff, I least still
can't forget about the similarities between Trisha's and Amelia Cave's murders either.
And so they start to wonder, maybe they're not both wrong, maybe it's all connected.
But what if all their theories have been right, just not by themselves?
Each was a little piece of the puzzle. Maybe Glenner helped bind and gag Trisha.
Because of Jason's paralysis, investigators don't think he would have been able to do that
alone.
He needed some kind of accomplice at some point.
Now Captain Murgo doesn't know of any direct connection between Glenner and Jason, but
East Haven's not that big so they might have known each other.
And at times, what they know from looking back at their histories is that they lived relatively close to one another. And interestingly enough, through
records and a courier news article, Nina found out that the two were actually paroled from separate
federal prisons for bank robbery convictions on the same exact day in 1974, which like,
why are they odds? But it doesn't mean that they would cross paths, right?
Like when you're sprung from prison, you just go like walk out the gates, grab a bus, or
ride with friends or family, and you go your own way.
They don't take everyone to one central place, and then let you all go at the same time.
No.
That's true, but you do generally have to check in with a probation or parole officer within
a certain amount of time.
So again, the same day is just a weird-tracking coincidence, but maybe they met somewhere along the way through that,
because they were both kind of like on the same journey at the same time.
It's a lot of questions that would be great to ask Jason and Glenner, right?
But unfortunately, it's too late for police to interview either of them.
Jason spent pretty much the rest of his life in and out of jail and prison, and he died in the early 90s.
And Glenter was released from prison in 2009.
Then, in 2021, they were indicted in Texas for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
It's not clear what happened with the charge, but then Glender died just last year.
Jason's old buddy Clyde is still alive, but he still hasn't been willing to speak with
police.
Honestly, it just sounds like everything kinda leads back to Jason.
It's just a matter of sorting out who helped him.
I mean, circumstantially, yes, but nothing is for sure.
Very well could have been someone else.
I mean, for instance, investigators learned that there was this local guy named William
Schroff, who's serving 120 years in prison for whole host of charges, including the murders
of two young women.
And they find out that he mentioned an unidentified body behind Bradleys during an interview with
state police in 1983.
But I don't think that, or at least it doesn't appear, that the state police ever told East
Haven about that statement or whatever, because investigators there literally just learned
about this guy in April when they saw old articles
about the interview by Hartford Current Reporter Virginia Cedaris. Once they learn about it, obviously,
like they go and try and interview this guy, but he refused to speak with them. Now, for what it's
worth, in this scenario, I don't know that it's one of those where all the pieces come together
and they're all working together because there's no indication he hung out with any of the other potential suspects.
So, this past summer, Trisha's body was exhumed one last time. She was then cremated, and eventually,
Mary Ann will spread her ashes on their mom's grave. But first, she wants some time with her sister.
They've been apart for too long.
Mary Ann told us that finding Trisha wasn't the only miraculous part of this journey she's been on.
Miracles came from the search itself.
She found a caring community.
She adores the investigators working the case.
She reunited with her mom's side of the family and reconnected with other loved ones.
And she says that she wants to be a symbol of hope to other families in her situation,
to not give up and to keep pushing even if it feels like no one else cares,
because there might be a whole town out there that does, and you just don't know about it yet.
And she also wants her sister's story, her own story,
to highlight the pivotal role of genetic genealogy.
And she wants to encourage people to upload DNA profiles
to JetMatch and to opt in so they can be compared
to kits submitted by police.
Now, you guys, if you want some more details
about how to do that, we are going to have all of that
in the blog post for this episode.
It's linked right out in the show notes.
Police know that an arrest and conviction in this case is probably not likely.
What they're after now are just answers.
And Captain Murgo reached out to us because they're hoping all of our crime junkies can help. They want to speak to anyone out there
who has information about Trisha.
Specifically, they really want to find this friend
that she supposedly ran off with to Maine
if this friend exists.
And they want to find the boarding school itself
if that exists.
One thing to note is that if the school had a religious And they want to find the boarding school itself if that exists.
One thing to note is that if the school had a religious affiliation, it would have likely
been Catholic.
Trisha could have been just about anywhere in the northeast.
She was white, about 5'4", 130 pounds with hazel eyes and reddish brown hair that
can just past her shoulders.
She had reconstructive surgery on her nose after an injury.
Trisha's family says that she always wore a class ring
that her aunt gave her from Sicilian Academy,
a shuttered Catholic school in Philadelphia.
And the thing is, police never found that ring
and the killer may have taken it as a memento.
You can find a picture of a similar ring on our blog post.
Maybe you were her classmate or know someone who was. This is the perfect episode to share
with your parents or your grandparents. Maybe you or they called her patty or pat.
Maybe you saw her hitchhiking or picked her up or knew one of the suspects.
Whatever the circumstances, if you know anything about Patricia Newsom, please call East Haven You can find all of the source material for this episode on our website, crimejunkiepodcast.com.
And you can follow us on Instagram at crimejunkiepodcast.
We'll be back next week with a brand new episode,
but if you need a little pick me up,
stick around because we have some the end of the month, and I know I need some good
in my life.
I'm so ready for this.
I kind of forget like, absolutely record episode, after episode every week, like when I finally get to the good I'm like oh I know yes I needed
this and of course don't forget if you want to send your story to us you can
submit it on the GoodSegmit page on crimejunkipadcast.com or by following the
link in our show notes Ashley let her rip. All right you're gonna love this one
I love this one and I love this one.
And I think it's particularly poignant for this month because we're closing out October,
which is domestic violence awareness month.
And I mean, we like to bring attention to these cases year round, but it's especially
important to talk about this month.
And this letter that we received just reaffirmed, at least for me, my motivation of like telling
these stories.
So let me just dive into it. Hello, Ashley and Brit. just reaffirmed, at least for me, my motivation of like telling these stories.
So let me just dive into it.
Hello, Ashley and Brit.
I just wanted to let you know what an impact you and your podcasts have had on our family,
and let you know you are not just honoring the memories of the victims, but you are in
fact helping new, would-be victims to not become victims.
Let me explain.
Been listening to your podcast for over a year. Mostly in the car back and forth to work,
this last summer, June 2022, we were heading on vacation two hours away, and my 24-year-old
step-daughter Kay was with me in the car. I came into her life when she was 14, and she's
super close to her real mom, so long-ride. Awkward silences were to be expected.
So I just started playing a random crime-dunkey episode in the car.
The one about the Powell family murders is where the scroll and pick stopped.
I've literally heard every episode, so at this point I just scroll and random stop for relicings.
It dropped in October or so of 2018.
Anyway, after that story, you guys posted a domestic violence professional who just explained
domestic violence.
I'm sure you remember.
Long story short, we listened to those podcasts, The Power of Family, The Q&A with the Professional,
and Mac got K and I talking about domestic violence, of which I have absolutely no experience,
and I felt we really connected.
Some point during our discussion, I said something to the effect, You can always come home, like never stay in a place that's dangerous, or with someone
who hurts you because you feel trapped, you can always come home.
Which, unless you had just listened to a horrifying story, when would that ever come up naturally
in conversation?
Never.
But I just felt like she needed to know, even though I'm just stepmom, I'm still your
home, you can always come home."
This conversation felt weird to me after the fact because Kay was on year 2 with a wonderful
guy, and from an outward appearance, they just seemed to be in love and peaching.
Her dad and I even talked numerous times that this might be the one guy that she marries,
totally a part of our family at this point.
Crime junky rule alert.
You never really know anyone."
Two weeks ago, I get a call from Kay.
She says,
Hey, I need to ask you, do you mean what you said about I can come home?
I was like, huh?
Because you know, three months have passed since that long, slightly awkward ride.
But as she kept talking, she began to explain to me she didn't want to be a statistic.
She doesn't want her story on crime junkie.
I was so confused at first, but as she began to cry, she says her boyfriend, who we all
thought was this amazing guy, had some serious anger issues, and the screaming at her had escalated
to punching holes in the wall, tearing down the door when she was hiding from him, and even shoving her. Scary stuff. She was making the very hard decision to
uproot her life and get away from her abuser, and how did she know to look for the signs to reach out?
Because of you and your words on that episode. Kay has moved home, and the boyfriend is still trying
to win her back, but because she has a knowledge now of how things can go from zero to murder,
I feel she will stay away from him.
Not to mention, he knows we now know what he is capable of and are no longer buying the sweetheart line.
Thank you again for everything you do, Amanda.
Oh my god.
I know. Amanda, thank you so much for sending this. K, I am so thankful
you are safe. Ashley, I'm crying. I love it. And we got, we actually get a lot of emails like this
where, where the episode is like spurring conversation. And what I want to say is I hope that that's
true. Like have the conversation after the episode. but also don't wait for the episode to have
a conversation.
You guys have heard hundreds of episodes now.
No, you will never think it's going to happen to you or your loved ones you think you know
people.
It's worth saying the words, even if someone seems so happy, it's worth saying no matter
what, you can come to me.
No matter what, you can come home.
Like, this is a safe space.
There is no shame.
There is no judgment.
We just want you to be safe and happy and healthy.
I think even just those words to your kids,
to your loved ones are good words to say
because I think they apply to a lot of situations.
So if you guys take one thing away,
go talk to the loved ones
in your life, let them know that they can always come to you, you are a safe space, and
they can always come home.
Crime Junkie is an audio check production. So what do you think, Chuck? Do you approve?
You've...