
Man arraigned on murder charge in Oregon for death of his then-girlfriend in 1980s cold case
Mark Sanfratello, 72, was arraigned Wednesday in Josephine County Circuit Court in southern Oregon after a grand jury indicted him for second-degree murder in the death of Teresa Peroni, the Oregon attorney general's office said in a statement.
Sanfratello is being held without bail, according to online court records. His defense attorney, Elizabeth Baker, said he is 'claiming all the rights afforded him under the law.'
Peroni disappeared in 1983 at age 27 after attending a party in a rural area near the small town of Selma. Authorities say she was last seen walking into the woods with Sanfratello, her boyfriend at the time. Authorities investigated, but there was not enough evidence to move forward with charges.
In 1997 a human skull was found on a nearby property, which was then searched with the use of a cadaver dog, according to the Josephine County Sheriff's Office. The skull was sent to the University of North Texas for examination.
The sheriff's office reopened the case in 2024, with investigators collecting new DNA evidence and using modern forensic testing. With the additional DNA, experts at the university were able to confirm that the skull was Peroni's.
Sanfratello was taken into custody last month in Chico, California.
Investigators are still seeking information from anyone who attended the party.
'What happened to Teresa Peroni left her family with decades of uncertainty and grief,' Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield said. 'While the legal process is now underway and it's important not to prejudge its outcome, this arrest reflects the progress that's possible when law enforcement agencies persist and evolve with new tools. It's a powerful reminder that time doesn't erase the need for answers.'
It is the second recent Oregon cold case that has been linked to someone in California. State police said in May that a man who was found dead along Interstate 5 in Oregon had been identified after nearly 45 years and that notorious California serial killer Randy Kraft was the only person under investigation for the 1980 killing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Fired US prosecutor who put Epstein behind bars strikes back at 'tyrant' Trump
A career prosecutor who helped put both Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell behind bars has fired a parting shot at the Trump administration after she was dismissed from her job without warning. Maurene Comey, the daughter of former FBI chief James Comey, received a letter on Wednesday informing her of her sudden termination - weeks after she was involved in the botched case against Sean 'Diddy' Combs. On her way out, she sent one final staff-wide email to her colleagues in the Manhattan US Attorney's Office, urging them to stay strong in the face of a 'tyrant.' 'If a career prosecutor can be fired without reason, fear may seep into the decisions of those who remain,' she wrote. 'Do not let that happen. 'Fear is the tool of a tyrant, wielded to suppress independent thought. 'Instead of fear, let this moment fuel the fire that already burns in the heart of this place. A fire of righteous indignation at abuses of power. Of commitment to seek justice for victims.' Maurene Comey worked on the cases against both Epstein and Maxwell, helping to send Maxwell to prison for 20 years after the billionaire financier killed himself in his cell while awaiting trial. However, more recently, she suffered a catastrophic loss in the trial of the sex-crazed music mogul. Comey said in her email to staff that she was not given a reason for her termination. It is understood in the letter she received on Wednesday, she was told she was being fired under Article II of the Constitution, which cites powers granted to the president. Trump has been desperate to shift attention away from the Epstein fiasco as MAGA loyalists demand Attorney General Pam Bondi's resignation a fter she failed to deliver on a campaign promise to reveal the billionaire financier's client list and true cause of death inside a jail cell awaiting trial on child sex trafficking charges. MAGA loyalists have theorized that Epstein was murdered, rather than killed himself, and that a purported client list would unravel a web of crime at the very top of high society. Bondi, after initially claiming the client list was 'on her desk for review,' now insists there is no list, and maintains that he did kill himself. Trump on Wednesday lashed out at his own supporters and accused them of being duped by Democrats over the Epstein saga as he looks to shield himself and Bondi from backlash. 'Their new SCAM is what we will forever call the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax, and my PAST supporters have bought into this 'bulls**t,' hook, line, and sinker,' Trump wrote Wednesday. 'They haven't learned their lesson, and probably never will, even after being conned by the Lunatic Left for 8 long years.' 'Let these weaklings continue forward and do the Democrats work, don't even think about talking of our incredible and unprecedented success, because I don't want their support anymore!' There is no evidence former Democratic officials tampered with the documents or played any role in promoting conspiracies about the files, which members of Trump's administration stoked for years. But it is unclear why Maurene Comey was axed after nearly a decade of service. The has reached out to the Department of Justice for comment. She had been leading the violent and organized crime unit in the US Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York (SDNY), the same position her father once held. Comey's name was referenced in every US attorney pronouncement about the Combs's trial. She delivered the closing arguments on the final day of Diddy 's trial, and faced criticism when the mogul was ultimately cleared of the three most serious offenses. Legal experts questioned whether he was 'overcharged' and how the case went so wrong for Comey and her team. Trump has long disliked Comey's father James, but tensions reached a fever pitch in May when he shared a picture to Instagram of seashells spelling out 86 47. Donald Trump Jr. claimed was the former FBI director 'casually calling for my dad to be murdered.' James Comey said they were just seashells. Many other Trump administration officials soon also asserted that James Comey was advocating for the 47th president's assassination. James Comey has since denied that he ever intended to harm Trump, and even told Secret Service officials that when they questioned him over the phone that night. The Secret Service had James followed by law enforcement authorities in unmarked cars and street clothes as he and his wife traveled from North Carolina, through Virginia and to their home in the Washington DC area James has been the subject of Trump's ire since he began the FBI's probe into claims that the president's 2016 campaign colluded with Russian authorities to influence.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
US House passes Trump plan to cut $9bn from foreign aid, public broadcasting
The US's Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed president Donald Trump's $9bn funding cut to public media and foreign aid early on Friday, sending it to the White House to be signed into law. The chamber voted 216 to 213 in favor of the funding cut package, altered by the Senate this week to exclude cuts of about $400m in funds for the global PEPFAR HIV/Aids prevention program. Only two House Republicans voted against the cut – representatives Brian Fitzpatrick from Pennsylvania and Mike Turner from Ohio – along with Democrats. 'We are taking one small step to cut wasteful spending, but one giant leap towards fiscal sanity,' said representative Aaron Bean, a Florida Republican. House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries countered that the funding cut 'undermines our ability to keep our people safe here and to project America's soft power all over the globe', and argued rural Americans' access to emergency information on public radio will be diminished. The funding vote was delayed for hours amid Republican disagreements about other legislation, and calls from some members of the party for more government transparency about the deceased convicted sex offender and disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. To satisfy the Epstein-related concerns without holding up the funding cut bill any longer, Republicans on the House rules committee introduced a resolution that calls for the release of Epstein documents by the US attorney general within 30 days. 'It's a sound, good-faith resolution that ensures protections for victims and innocent witnesses,' said representative Virginia Foxx from North Carolina, the Republican leader of the rules committee. But the top Democrat on the rules panel, representative Jim McGovern from Massachusetts, blasted the resolution as a 'glorified press release' because it lacks an enforcement mechanism to make the Justice Department comply. When the chamber finally voted on the funding cut, it was the second close House vote on Trump's request to claw back the funds previously approved by Democrats and his fellow Republicans in Congress. In June, four Republicans joined Democrats to vote against an earlier version of the rescissions package, which passed 214-212. House Republicans felt extra pressure to pass the Senate version as Trump's administration would have been forced to spend the money if Congress did not approve the cuts by Friday. The $9bn cut is a small fraction of the country's $6.8tn federal budget. Republicans say the foreign aid funds previously went to programs they deem wasteful, and they say the $1bn in public media funding supports radio stations and PBS television, which they claim are biased against conservative viewpoints. Prior to the vote in the House, the legislation, known as a rescissions package, was approved by a narrow margin of 51 votes to 48 in the Senate. All Democrats opposed the bill. This week's funding clawback represents only a tiny portion of all the funds approved by Congress that the Trump administration has held up while it has pursued sweeping cuts. Democratic lawmakers say the administration has blocked more than $425bn of spending approved by Congress since Trump's second term began in January.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Slender Man case: woman who stabbed classmate to be released from psychiatric hospital
A 22-year-old woman who stabbed a classmate a decade ago believing that the act would earn her the right to be servant of Slender Man, a fictional supernatural character, is set to be released from a Wisconsin psychiatric hospital. Waukesha county circuit Judge Scott Wagner agreed on Thursday to the conditional release of Morgan Geyser from Winnebago mental health institute, a psychiatric hospital where she has spent the last seven years. In 2014, Geyser and Anissa Weier lured their friend Payton Leutner to join a game of hide-and-seek in heavily wooded Davids Park near Waukesha, Wisconsin. Geyser stabbed Leutner 19 times, nearly killing her, while Weier egged her on. All three girls were 12 years old at the time. Geyser and Weier later told investigators they had committed the crime to appease Slender Man, a thin, unnaturally tall humanoid character that originated as a creepypasta internet meme created by a Something Awful forum user, Eric Knudsen, in 2009. Five hours after the attack, Weier and Geyser were arrested in a nearby furniture store, still in possession of the knife used in the stabbing, and told police they were going to meet Slender Man at Slender Mansion in a forest 200 miles away. Geyser later disclosed lifelong visual and auditory hallucinations that included figures she interpreted as ghosts, colors melting down walls, and imaginary friends. Her mother described her as being 'floridly psychotic' and she was later diagnosed with early onset childhood schizophrenia. Geyser ultimately pleaded guilty to being a party to attempted first-degree intentional homicide in 2017 but claimed she wasn't responsible because she was mentally ill. She was later committed to a psychiatric hospital for 40 years. Weier pleaded guilty to being a party to attempted second-degree intentional homicide with a dangerous weapon. Like Geyser, she claimed she was mentally ill and not responsible for her actions. She was committed to 25 years in a mental hospital but was granted release in 2021. The case drew widespread attention, in part because the character Slender Man had been photo-edited into everyday images of children at play, creating a disturbing juxtaposition of childhood innocence and the transition to a more complex, adult understanding of reality. Subsequent efforts to secure Geyer's release from the psychiatric home have taken several turns. Earlier this year, a judge ruled she could be released after three experts testified she has made progress and argued that she did not present a future risk. But in March, Payton Leutner, the mother of the victim, said the group home that Geyser was to be released to was eight miles away from where she lives. Wisconsin health officials were ordered to come up with a new plan. State health officials also argued that she didn't volunteer to her therapy team that she had read Rent Boy, a novel about murder and selling organs on the black market, and alleged she had communicated with a man who collects murder memorabilia. 'The state has real concerns these things are, frankly, just red flags at this point,' said Abbey Nickolie, the Waukesha county prosecutor, at the hearing. But Geyser's attorney Tony Cotton described the state's request to keep her in hospital as a 'hit job' and said his client was 'not more dangerous today'. But Thursday, the plan to release Geyser, which has not been made public, was approved. Geyser's attorney, who did not respond to requests for comment, told the court that his client needs to be involved in the community and needs to 'move on with her life', reported TMJ-TV Milwaukee.