04-12-2011, 09:08 AM
police say some may have been dismembered.
NYPOST
Cops scouring a Long Island beach-turned-graveyard found another set of grisly remains yesterday -- a human skull and torso that were at least a mile apart and might belong to the same body.
"It could be number nine, or it could be number 10, we don't know yet," a source told The Post, in regard to the increasing body count, which could be the work of a serial killer.
A State Police officer with a cadaver dog found the torso at 11:30 a.m. in Nassau County, five to six miles west of where eight other decomposed bodies have been found in Suffolk County since December, said State Police Capt. James Dewar.
GRIM TASK: A State Police officer yesterday examines an object found near Jones Beach during the painstaking search for bodies.
Four hours later, a Nassau cop found bones in the JFK Bird and Wildlife Sanctuary at least a mile east of the torso.
"It appears to be a skull," Nassau Detective Lt. Kevin Smith said of the second find. "It's all been very startling. We have a lot of work to do."
The bones were taken to the Nassau County Medical Examiner's Office.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/th_bo...z1JJYoNcBm
NYPOST
Cops scouring a Long Island beach-turned-graveyard found another set of grisly remains yesterday -- a human skull and torso that were at least a mile apart and might belong to the same body.
"It could be number nine, or it could be number 10, we don't know yet," a source told The Post, in regard to the increasing body count, which could be the work of a serial killer.
A State Police officer with a cadaver dog found the torso at 11:30 a.m. in Nassau County, five to six miles west of where eight other decomposed bodies have been found in Suffolk County since December, said State Police Capt. James Dewar.
GRIM TASK: A State Police officer yesterday examines an object found near Jones Beach during the painstaking search for bodies.
Four hours later, a Nassau cop found bones in the JFK Bird and Wildlife Sanctuary at least a mile east of the torso.
"It appears to be a skull," Nassau Detective Lt. Kevin Smith said of the second find. "It's all been very startling. We have a lot of work to do."
The bones were taken to the Nassau County Medical Examiner's Office.
Read more: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/th_bo...z1JJYoNcBm