New England serial killer fears: Investigators identify two bodies pulled from rivers in separate states
As fears circulate online regarding a potential serial killer in New England, two more of the bodies found in the region over the past two months have now been identified.
Wednesday evening, police in Glastonbury, Connecticut confirmed the identity of a woman found in the Connecticut River in the town of Rocky Hill on Saturday. She was identified as 72-year-old Glastonbury resident Mary Colasanto, who had been reported missing. The Glastonbury Police Department said that no further details were available at the time of the release.
That news came shortly after the body found in a river in Taunton, Massachusetts on Friday afternoon was identified.
Bristol County District Attorney Thomas M. Quinn III confirmed Wednesday morning that the body was Samuel Stovall, 51, of Taunton. Quinn said that Stovall was homeless, and known to Taunton Police. His body was found in Mill River by walkers, and had obvious signs of decomposition. Quinn's office said the death has not been deemed suspicious, but that an investigation remains open.
New England Serial Killer Fears Merit 'Review And Investigation' After Remains Found Across 3 States: Expert
There have been a total of 11 bodies found in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts since the beginning of March, fueling online speculation that a serial killer might be roaming the area.
Read On The Fox News App
However, police departments in the region have denied those rumors.
Meggan Meredith, 45, of Springfield, Massachusetts, was found dead last Tuesday, and identified earlier this week.
Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X
Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni addressed the serial killer rumors in light of Meredith's death.
New England Serial Killer Fears: 10 Bodies Now Found In Less Than 2 Months
"While online conversations around these incidents continue to grow, we urge the public to be mindful of the role that social media can play in spreading fear or misinformation," he said. "Unverified claims can compromise active investigations and contribute to a sense of chaos that does not reflect the full picture."
The remains of a Rhode Island woman who had been missing since July were recently found in Foster. Her family adamantly denied that her death was related to a serial killer.
SIGN UP TO GET True Crime Newsletter
The body of Paige Fannon, 35, was found in the Norwalk River in Norwalk, Connecticut in early March.
"The State of Connecticut Medical Examiners' Office has not completed its investigation," Connecticut State Police said. "Based on our investigation, there is no indication of foul play or relation to any other death or serial killer."
GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub
But Ted Williams, an attorney and former Washington, D.C. homicide detective, said that so many bodies found in such proximity is an oddity.
"Anytime you find 10 bodies in any geographical location, it is very concerning to law enforcement," Williams told Fox News Digital. "The big question that law enforcement have though, when you find 10 bodies like this, is to try to show some kind of a nexus between these various areas in which these bodies have been found."
He believes that law enforcement entities in New England are likely communicating about the cases.
"I would absolutely have to believe that in the New England corridor, where these bodies have come up, that there is communication between law enforcement agencies at these various venues and these various locations where bodies have been found to try to show if there is an actual nexus between the bodies that have been and a specific, should we say serial killer," he said.Original article source: New England serial killer fears: Investigators identify two bodies pulled from rivers in separate states
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Plow driver testifies he saw no body in snow during crucial hours in Karen Read murder trial
Karen Read's defense team is looking to build on momentum yesterday from a surprise police witness who testified that her taillight was less damaged when he helped seize it with a warrant than it appears in photos taken after it arrived at the Canton Police Department, where authorities first towed it. Read's defense called Brian "Lucky" Loughran, a Department of Public Works employee, to the witness stand Wednesday morning. He testified that he passed by 34 Fairview Road, the home of Brian Albert, where John O'Keefe was found dead in the snow, multiple times between 2:40 a.m. and around 6 a.m. Prosecutors allege Read hit her boyfriend outside and drove off, leaving him to die amid blizzard conditions. Loughran said he had good visibility despite the blizzard conditions due to multiple lights on the plow truck and a high seat. Asked if he saw a body in the snow, he said no -- but he added that he did see a Ford Edge SUV parked outside the address on a later pass around 3:30 a.m. Karen Read's Silence In Murder Trial Raises Stakes For Defense He said it stood out to him because he was from the area and knew the Albert family -- and he had to maneuver around the vehicle as he cleared the road. Read On The Fox News App "For as long as I can remember, they have never parked a vehicle in front of their house," Loughran testified. "They've always had enough ample parking in the driveway." Special prosecutor Hank Brennan asked Loughran during cross-examination about purported threats from an online blogger and inconsistencies in his timeline. Karen Read Judge Blocks Sandra Birchmore Mentions; Expert Says Cases Should Be Wake-up Call For Police Loughran said he never felt threatened by the blogger and denied having a bad memory when Brennan confronted him with multiple statements that offered different times for when the river passed by Fairview Road. Then Brennan played police dashcam video taken outside 34 Fairview that showed the heavy snowfall and the distance between the house there and Cedarcrest Road, where a plow truck drove by multiple times in the background. Loughran agreed that some of the passes were him in the plow, dubbed "Frankentruck," but said he couldn't be sure at other moments. Follow The Fox True Crime Team On X The taillight fragments were not found at the crime scene until later, too, and her defense's implication is that they could have been planted there. Wednesday marks the 27th day of Read's retrial on murder and other charges in the January 2022 death of O'Keefe, her then-boyfriend, a Boston police officer, and an uncle who had taken in the orphaned children of his late sister and brother-in-law. She denies hitting him with her 2021 Lexus SUV and leaving the scene, where he died with head trauma and signs of hypothermia. The defense says no collision happened and something or someone else caused his injuries. On Tuesday, Dighton Police Sgt. Nicholas Barros testified that when he arrived at Read's parents' house to help state police confiscate the vehicle, fewer pieces of taillight were missing from the cracked taillight. He said that a photo of Read's SUV taken at the Canton Police Department's sallyport – a secure garage – did "absolutely not" show the taillight in the same condition it was in when he saw it in the driveway. Barros surprised the courtroom when he testified for the commonwealth during Read's first trial, which ended with a deadlocked jury last year. This time, he was a defense witness. Karen Read's Suv Reached '74% Throttle' Moments Before John O'keefe's Final Movements, Crash Expert Testifies "He was a devastating witness who has the [district attorney's] case on life support," said Mark Bederow, a New York City-based defense attorney who is closely following the case. He said special prosecutor Hank Brennan conducted an "excellent" cross-examination, showing Barros and the jury images of Read's taillight taken over the course of the day, before police took her SUV, but defense attorney Alan Jackson performed equally well in redirect questioning. Sign Up To Get The True Crime Newsletter "The sum total is that Barros is 100% unequivocal: the taillight he saw on January 29 was not anywhere near as destroyed as when the [Massachusetts State Police] had it," he said. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE True Crime Hub Grace Edwards, a Massachusetts defense attorney who is also following the case, called Barros' testimony a "bombshell" and said the surprise in trial 1 was "a clear Brady violation" – referring to a rule that prosecutors must share exculpatory evidence with the defense. "The fact that a police officer drove to the Omni Hotel to meet with the defense team of a defendant on trial for murder clearly indicates he wanted to tell his story," she told Fox News Digital. Dr. Judson Welcher, an expert for the prosecution, explained to jurors how he found that O'Keefe appeared to have been struck in the arm by the back corner of Read's SUV before he fell to the ground and fractured the back of his skull. Christina Hanley, an analyst with the state police's crime lab, testified that investigators recovered plastic fragments from O'Keefe's clothing that were a match with the broken taillight or something made of the same material. Read could face life in prison if convicted of the top charge, second-degree article source: Plow driver testifies he saw no body in snow during crucial hours in Karen Read murder trial
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
California sheriff warns of cartels amid accusations of overstepping authority in tribal land cannabis raids
A Northern California sheriff is speaking out after a Native American tribe accused him of overstepping his authority when his office conducted raids on cannabis farms on tribal land last year amid his warning that drug cartel organizations had a "toehold" in the area. Mendocino County Sheriff Matthew Kendall told Fox News Digital his office has received pleas from tribal members asking for action to combat illegal cannabis farms as well as crime on the reservation. Kendall said most of his office's raids were not on tribal land. "They're begging me, saying, 'Please, we've got gunshots going on all night, all around us,'" he said. "These people are tribal members as well as people who aren't tribal members. I have to go up and protect these folks. I have to go up and deal with the law. But when I go up there and serve search warrants and whatnot, and next thing you know, I'm getting sued for it." "It's a very depressed economy, and it's kind of ripe for picking for bad things to come in," he said of the cartels. "We've had a lot of shootings up there, a lot of violence up there. It's not OK, the things that are going on." Millions Of Illicit Cannabis Packages Disguised As Children's Candy Seized In California Kendall is named as one of several defendants in a lawsuit that accuses him of conducting raids where he did not have jurisdiction, including one in which an 86-year-old woman's garden was allegedly destroyed. Read On The Fox News App The Round Valley Indian Tribes and three individual plaintiffs, April James, 48, Eunice Swearinger, 86, and Steve Britton, are asking a federal court to impose an injunction to prevent the sheriff's department from carrying out more raids on their land. The lawsuit also names Humboldt County Sheriff William Honsal, a Humboldt deputy, California Highway Patrol Commissioner Sean Duryee and the counties of Mendocino and Humboldt. The lawsuit alleges that multiple sites on the tribe's reservation were targeted in illegal law enforcement operations. Lester Marston, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, told Fox News Digital that Kendall tried to enforce his authority on tribal land with the raids. Ex-cop Turned Legal Pot Farmer Claims He's Bigger Dealer Than 'Anyone Sitting In Prison' "He has had training sessions on what his authority is," Marston said, contending that the sheriff knew he didn't have jurisdiction on the reservation. "And if he didn't know, he's a stupid idiot." Marston also alleged Kendall failed to disclose in his warrant application to a judge that at least one particular raid would be conducted on tribal land. Kendall said the valley has around 1 million marijuana plants and that drug cartels have spent a lot of money to establish marijuana-growing operations there. Google Maps satellite images he showed Fox News Digital show what he said are marijuana-growing structures all over the area. Round Valley, which is surrounded by mountains, is now rife with illicit cannabis and cartel activity as well as murders, Kendall said. "Right now, I believe drug trafficking organizations have a toehold into that area and other places in my county," Kendall said. "Illegal marijuana cultivations are really dropping because the price is so low. Round Valley is really just ramping up." The lawsuit centers around the enforcement of Public Law 280, a decades-old statute that gives California and a handful of other states – Alaska, Minnesota, Nebraska, Oregon and Wisconsin – the authority to enforce criminal laws on tribal land. However, attorneys for the plaintiffs argue that the law doesn't apply to regulatory matters like cannabis, an industry that is regulated in California. They also contend that Round Valley has the right to set and enforce its own laws. The result of the statute is that federal criminal jurisdiction became extremely limited in most reservations in the six states where it applied, while state jurisdiction was greatly expanded. Federal Judge Green-lights New York Marijuana Licensing Despite 'Disaster' Legal Cannabis Market Rollout "He has a duty to enforce criminal law on the reservation," David Dehnert, another attorney for the plaintiffs, told Fox News Digital. "He has no authority to enforce California regulatory law on the reservation, which is what they were doing." Dehnert said the tribe has its own marijuana law and that Kendall was aware of it before conducting the raids. He said he sent Kendall a cease-and-desist letter after the raids. Marston said Kendall was out of his jurisdiction and that what his office did was the same as enforcing California laws in Nevada. "He knew that the tribe had enacted a tribal law prohibiting the possession, sale and cultivation of cannabis, except for medical purposes," Marston said. The raids were conducted in July 2024, with the plaintiffs accusing deputies of leaving homes and gardens in shambles. James, a grandmother who suffers from arthritis and a degenerative disc disorder, makes her own medicinal cream with the cannabis she cultivates to ease the daily pain due to her disorder, the lawsuit said. She had two structures on her trust allotment where she grew cannabis plants, which were destroyed by a tractor by pushing the soil and all the plants and improvements into a pile of dirt and rubbish, the suit alleged. At Swearinger's home, sheriff's deputies showed up and destroyed her vegetable garden and tore out her plants, her attorneys said. Her grandchildren were present and watched as heavily armed officers stood guard, the lawsuit said. Swearinger had a license to grow 10 plants on her property, Marston said. Britton, a rancher, alleged that deputies destroyed cannabis plants, cultivation structures and equipment, fencing and an electric gate on his property. In all three raids, authorities failed to produce a valid search warrant, the lawsuit said. The Round Valley Indian Tribes did not return a Fox News Digital request for comment. Kendall said he has a duty to drive protection in the county and pushed back on the notion that the raids had a racial component. "That is a load of bull----," he said. "I'm not putting up with that. That is a flat-out lie." He noted that he grew up in the Round Valley area of Mendocino County and did not personally decide which properties were raided, only that they targeted the "biggest and the baddest" grow article source: California sheriff warns of cartels amid accusations of overstepping authority in tribal land cannabis raids
Yahoo
17 hours ago
- Yahoo
Woman declared dead by coroner, moved to coffin, turns out to be alive
A woman declared dead by the coroner after her husband found her unresponsive in bed was being placed in a coffin when morticians made a startling discovery — she was very much alive. The horrifying tale from the Czech Republic unfolded when an 88-year-old woman, who was thought to be dead, showed signs of life in her coffin. According to the husband of the woman thought to be deceased called the Pilsen emergency services to potentially help his wife. The husband told the emergency dispatch that "she didn't move, she didn't breathe," according to the report. Man In India Regains Consciousness Before His Cremation On Funeral Pyre: Reports When paramedics arrived, they confirmed the woman's death and the coroners were dispatched to the apartment. Read On The Fox News App The coroner also confirmed the woman's death and undertakers were called to move the body into the coffin. The husband also told Blesk that "the workers transferred her to the coffin, and when they were right here in the apartment in the hallway by the door, they found out she was alive." God Can Resurrect And Restore What You Think Is Lost And Dead An ambulance arrived shortly after, and the woman was transported to the hospital. While this may seem like something out of a horror story, this rare medical occurrence has happened before. According to the Cleveland Clinic, it's known as the Lazarus Effect. Named after the biblical story of Jesus raising Lazarus back from the dead, this usually occurs after CPR ends. Typically, this happens after a cardiac arrest occurs and CPR is administered to the patient. This medical phenomenon occurs after the patient is clinically pronounced dead. Some time later, the patient will begin to show signs of life and must continue to show these signs for more than a few seconds. According to the National Institutes of Health, there have been 74 confirmed cases in the U.S. from 1982-2022. It is still unknown how or why the Lazarus Effect article source: Woman declared dead by coroner, moved to coffin, turns out to be alive