Human
remains found in Emmitsburg
By Stephanie Long
Dispatch Staff Writer
EMMITSBURG,
Md. – Skeletal remains were found on a wooded parcel of
land between Route 15 and St. Anthony Road, just outside Emmitsburg.
“We’re
handling this as a homicide until we find out differently,”
said Captain Tim Clarke with the sheriff’s office.
On Feb. 29, realtor
Jack Klingler, who declined to comment on the on-going investigation,
discovered the bones while conducting a property survey and
called 911 at 3:42 p.m. When deputies arrived on the scene,
they determined the remains were possibly human and secured
the area.
“We also
had deputies securing the scene overnight,” Clarke said.
“We knew about the body Friday, but because we were
expecting bad weather, we waited until Saturday to investigate.”
From 9:30 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, about 10 crime scene technicians,
detectives and deputies, worked the scene, sifting through
soil and sweeping the area for potential clues or scattered
bone fragments.
“Anytime
you have a body that’s decomposed, there’s the
possibility that small animals may have moved bones from the
original site. You have to look beyond that location,”
Clarke said.
Vigilant Hose
Company firefighters assisted with the search, including Jim
Click. Click said about 12 members of the company slowly walked
in a straight line through brush, trees and thorn bushes looking
for evidence.
“When someone
found something, they’d yell ‘stop.’ Then
nobody moved until the detective with us checked it out, marked
it and said, ‘go,’” Click explained. “We
weren’t looking for every can or bottle. We were looking
for things like shoes or other bones.” Click said they
didn’t find “a whole lot.”
A bone expert
with the Maryland Medical Examiner’s Office determined
that the bones were human.
An autopsy was
performed on Mar. 3, but the results are pending and no information
was available at press time, according to the medical examiner’s
office.
What is known
is that the “remains appear to have been at the location
for a long period of time,” according to the Cpl. Jennifer
Bailey, spokesperson for the Frederick County Sheriff’s
Office. Bailey said Detective Jeff Norris attended the autopsy
on Monday and was reviewing information, but that the identity
of the victim was still unknown, as the “autopsy did
not conclude that.”
“We’re
way behind the eight ball at this point unless we can get
an identification,” Clark said.
Ricci Frey, who
lives on Hemler Road, often rides his four-wheeler through
the wooded area where the remains were found and said he learned
of the discovery when police came to talk to him.
“I was
like, ‘What are you talking about?’ We just cut
that trail the last time it snowed and they found the body
about a week later,” Frey said, pointing to a trail
that ran beside the site where the remains were found. “For
a while I really thought they had found the body on the trail
and I had been running over it and dug something up.”
Frey said he
couldn’t recollect seeing the remains or anything out
of the ordinary prior to the discovery.
The property
where the remains were found is for sale and according to
the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation, the 4.78
acres is owned by Michael Easton, who could not be reached
for comment.