Teen brothers charged in death of NJ girl found in recycling bin
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CLAYTON, N.J. (AP) - Two teenage brothers were charged Tuesday with murdering a 12-year-old girl who had been missing since the weekend, prompting a frantic search by her small hometown until her body was found stuffed into a home recycling bin.
The boys' mother played a part in cracking the case involving Autumn Pasquale, Gloucester County prosecutor Sean Dalton said at a news conference. She came forward with information about a posting on a son's Facebook account, leading police to the boys, Dalton said.
The girl appeared to have been strangled, he said. She had been riding her bicycle before she disappeared and was lured to the boys' house, where belongings including the bike were found, Dalton said.
Authorities did not discuss a motive. There were no signs of sexual assault, Dalton said.
The boys' names were not released because they are juveniles, but Dalton said his office is considering trying to have it transferred to adult court. The boys will have public defenders, but it wasn't clear yet who they were.
Both brothers were charged with counts including first-degree murder, body disposal and tampering with evidence. The 15-year-old was charged with luring.
Three teenage brothers live at the home where the body was found, said Na'eem Williams and Jodie Robinson, both 16. One of the teens in the home traded BMX bike parts, according to a young man, Corey Hewes, 19, who said he was among those who traded with him.
The house was a place where teens frequently hung out and had parties, some neighbors said.
Autumn's body was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for her safe return.
"The search for Autumn is over," Dalton said Tuesday. He called Clayton a safe community but said parents should continue to keep close watch on their children.
The girl's great-uncle, Paul Spadofora, thanked the community for its help in the search. The victim's parents did not attend.
"There's evil everywhere, even in the small town of Clayton," Spadofora said.
Crime scene investigators arrived shortly before 9 a.m. in the neighborhood where the body was found.
But Tuesday was trash collection day, and many residents had dragged their trash cans and recycling bins to the curb the night before. The covered recycling bins are collected by an automated truck that picks them up and dumps the contents into the back.
Police barricaded the block, and friends and neighbors came by to see. Some mothers said they were keeping their kids out of school for the day. Even before the body was found, students reported that Spirit Week had been canceled because of the sorrow.
One young man rode a bike up, sat on a porch of a home and cried, then biked away.
Clayton Mayor Thomas Bianco walked to the scene, cried, hugged a police officer and gave a brief statement to the gathered reporters.
"You hear about it in other places but never think it would happen in our little town," he said.
Autumn was last seen around 12:30 p.m. Saturday pedaling her bike away from the home where she lives with her father, her two siblings, her father's girlfriend and the girlfriend's children, authorities said.
Relatives said they believed she was heading to see a friend, and they became worried only after she did not return by her 8 p.m. curfew.
Sunday morning, her disappearance became not only a crisis but a town-wide cause in Clayton, a town 25 miles south of Philadelphia. Volunteers by the hundred joined the search, scouring malls, nearby towns and passing out fliers.
By Monday evening, officials were thanking the volunteers for their help but asking them to call it a night.
Hundreds of people returned Monday for the vigil. Spadofora, the great-uncle, said he hoped the town could gather again a week later, with Autumn back, with candles to mark her birthday.
The boys' mother played a part in cracking the case involving Autumn Pasquale, Gloucester County prosecutor Sean Dalton said at a news conference. She came forward with information about a posting on a son's Facebook account, leading police to the boys, Dalton said.
The girl appeared to have been strangled, he said. She had been riding her bicycle before she disappeared and was lured to the boys' house, where belongings including the bike were found, Dalton said.
Authorities did not discuss a motive. There were no signs of sexual assault, Dalton said.
The boys' names were not released because they are juveniles, but Dalton said his office is considering trying to have it transferred to adult court. The boys will have public defenders, but it wasn't clear yet who they were.
Both brothers were charged with counts including first-degree murder, body disposal and tampering with evidence. The 15-year-old was charged with luring.
Three teenage brothers live at the home where the body was found, said Na'eem Williams and Jodie Robinson, both 16. One of the teens in the home traded BMX bike parts, according to a young man, Corey Hewes, 19, who said he was among those who traded with him.
The house was a place where teens frequently hung out and had parties, some neighbors said.
Autumn's body was found around 10 p.m. Monday in the bin just blocks from her house and from Borough Hall, where thousands of people gathered earlier in the evening for a tearful candlelight vigil to pray for her safe return.
"The search for Autumn is over," Dalton said Tuesday. He called Clayton a safe community but said parents should continue to keep close watch on their children.
The girl's great-uncle, Paul Spadofora, thanked the community for its help in the search. The victim's parents did not attend.
"There's evil everywhere, even in the small town of Clayton," Spadofora said.
Crime scene investigators arrived shortly before 9 a.m. in the neighborhood where the body was found.
But Tuesday was trash collection day, and many residents had dragged their trash cans and recycling bins to the curb the night before. The covered recycling bins are collected by an automated truck that picks them up and dumps the contents into the back.
Police barricaded the block, and friends and neighbors came by to see. Some mothers said they were keeping their kids out of school for the day. Even before the body was found, students reported that Spirit Week had been canceled because of the sorrow.
One young man rode a bike up, sat on a porch of a home and cried, then biked away.
Clayton Mayor Thomas Bianco walked to the scene, cried, hugged a police officer and gave a brief statement to the gathered reporters.
"You hear about it in other places but never think it would happen in our little town," he said.
Autumn was last seen around 12:30 p.m. Saturday pedaling her bike away from the home where she lives with her father, her two siblings, her father's girlfriend and the girlfriend's children, authorities said.
Relatives said they believed she was heading to see a friend, and they became worried only after she did not return by her 8 p.m. curfew.
Sunday morning, her disappearance became not only a crisis but a town-wide cause in Clayton, a town 25 miles south of Philadelphia. Volunteers by the hundred joined the search, scouring malls, nearby towns and passing out fliers.
By Monday evening, officials were thanking the volunteers for their help but asking them to call it a night.
Hundreds of people returned Monday for the vigil. Spadofora, the great-uncle, said he hoped the town could gather again a week later, with Autumn back, with candles to mark her birthday.
Maximum punishment, for these two scabs, but even more than that, this is an example of why it is absolutely everyone's business how kids are raised because the rest of the community has to deal with it and I would like to know if these two were using the open ocean of the internet to fuel their despicable idea of killing a girl. We need to grow up as a society and put people's safety first.Â
 @Citizen#3457899654 Interesting concept. In some ways I'd take it further and say that it is in society's best interests to make sure that any children born will be to parents who have proven they are fit enough to raise them properly, with respect for society and society's customs and laws.Â
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That would, of course, entail instituting a mandatory parental licensing system in order for citizens to procreate.
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It seems that the current evidence may be leaning towards the reality that the policies of the past 40-some years has now produced an "anti-eugenic" outcome, that is, favoring the breeding of the bad and less-socially-fit over those who tend to be good and law-abiding citizens.... and we are experiencing this now on a daily, gut-wrenching basis....
This is so sad. I also read elsewhere that these two killers attended the candlelight vigil Monday night. I hope these suckers get tried as adults and get the proper punishment. May justice be served. RIP Autumn. Sorry you had such a short life on earth but you are in a better place now where you cannot be hurt.
What is going on with today's children??? *sigh*
From the daily evidence of the rising numbers of these kinds of crimes, it seems that over the past twenty-some years, the modes of operant-conditioning have changed. Obviously, not for the better.
Seems like there is a rising number of teenagers who have no conscience and no respect for human life.
@Willow It starts with parenting.
This is too awful. It just makes me cry. What a beautiful little girl.
I wish peace and light and hope and everything that made her beautiful to her parents, family and friends.
I hope the two dirtbags get what they deserve. I don't care anymore. I don't care how old they are, I don't care. Take them away forever.Â
Just for a bike? Does human life have no value for them?
lack of supervision, lack of teaching feelings for humanity all over the place, schools and parents stop blaming each other and start teaching caring asking talking tell these kids. it matters
 @maggie112 Conscience and empathy can't be taught; they are developed through the nurturing infants get during the first 3 years of life. Either it happens or it doesn't. If you have to leave your kid in a daycare, make sure they are getting nurtured by a responsible, caring person there! Parents who do drugs and neglect or abuse their infants are another source of trouble.
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I am thankful this mom at least did the right thing and turned her sons in. I highly doubt this is the first time they've been in trouble.
The poor mom who turned in the boys, she must have spent hours on thinking about what to do. I am so glad she did the right thing. I pray for the little girls family and I hope they find peace once again.
Quite a bit more information about this latest vile outrage here:
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http://www.nj.com/gloucester-county/index.ssf/2012/10/autumn_pasquales_murder_-_out.html
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When will it stop?
 @TheTruncheon I was wondering why neither one "looked right"..I don't mean skin color, they just look wrong. Then I read where one went to school.Â
How hard is it to know your kid is just WRONG? I arrested one, numerous times. The kid had obvious signs of brain damage and the mother who I took him from just couldn't figure out why he couldn't complete full sentences. She was a piece of dirt. My first thought was something happened to this kid, like he was hit on the head, or mom drank. Then when I was trying to speak to him I thought "Did anyone ever TALK to this child?" It literally seemed like he had had not communication skills due to whatever was wrong with him but also no social interaction. I don't know what happened to him in the long run.
Sad.
These two I want gone. Just gone.
Good link thanks. So sad :>(
I have a couple extra bike sprockets I'm not using, and all of a sudden, opportunity presents me a couple of teenage orifices to shove them in.........sideways. Any teenager, (or anyone else for that matter) who would kill a little girl over BIKE PARTS, needs THEIR PARTS removed.....slowly....one at a time. Damn our society is starting to disgust me. R.I.P. Little One. :{
Murder from a teen should result in being tried as an adult 100% of the time. If these rabid dogs are tried as minors, and released at 18 or 21, the next evil teens have been given a recipe to do the same. No breaks or second chances for murderers.
For once a parent with a heart. I pray for this precious child lost too young and for her family that they will heal. For the two boys may justice prevail and no excuses. Adult court is what they deserve and life in prison.
I have complete respect for the mother who turned her boys in. That must have been a difficult decision to make but she made the right choice. Who knows if those boys would have been caught if she hadn't. I hope those boys are tried as adults as I think that any kid who murders someone should be.
MSN is reporting that she was killed for bike parts. Â I usually don't advocate for trying teens as adults, but strangulation is a very personal way to murder someone and to do it over bike parts indicates some seriously messed up brains.
I hope these kids get transferred to adult court, and I hope they suffer in prison for what they did to her
Bad seed(s)..... :(
 @Funky-Munky working parents?
 @maggie112  @Funky-Munky divorced parents. ignored kids. the family failed those two kids, and the society suffers.
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and the boys parents were where?
 @mstipton At 15 & 17 they are more than likely able to go unsupervised on a Sat. Afternoon, no??
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The Mom is the one who called the Cops, so I don't think she in anyway trying to minimize or deduce what her sons have done. She did the RIGHT thing...as hard as I am sure that was.
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 @_Monte_ You go girl.... good assessment.
We need to hang those killers in public,I'd bet you it will never happen again !
 @scychan I'll take that bet! Hanging didn't work 100 years ago and it doesn't work now. What it does do though, is stop the criminal from continuing on and on and on. That's enough for me. That two teen boys could do this for bike parts just stuns me. I'm the mother of 3 grown sons, I can only imagine what their mother is going through right now. Doing the right thing can hurt too!
Public hangings have occurred for a lot of various crimes through out history and you know what those crimes keep happening.
 @Justaguy Not by the same people, though!
@scychan , and if it does happen again, hang them too
My friends and I did stupid things in our teenage years, but we never ever lost respect for life, neither in humans nor in animals. I wonder whether something has changed and whether there is a growing disconnect. My daughter is almost her age and I am concerned.
 @Komo Dragon Well, if you listen to the news, it could be any number of things. Bullying at school, pesticides in our food, environmental pollution, baby shots, lead in baby food, lead in children's toys, lack of discipline, parental abuse, mental issues, drugs.........the list is endless. It's overwhelming to try and target any one thing any more. How do you avoid horrors like this in the future if you don't understand why they happen? I'm betting those boys' mom didn't see this coming!
 @Joy Johnson  @Komo Dragon think about what schools teach    and a working family's time spent on a child.   i wont go into the drug using factors
 @Joy Johnson Like you, I have a few theories myself. For my part, I am trying to spend as much time with the kids as possible. Trying to steer them away from "instant gratification" activities to investing effort for long-term gratification. Play with the cats instead of video console... Being 10+ they are still young, and this might get more and more difficult as they grow into teens. Keeping the communication channels open is another critical element. The only chance to get advanced notice...
 @Joy Johnson  @Komo Dragon If she didn't see this coming it was probably because she was keeping herself willfully ignorant.  You'd be surprised how many parents can turn a blind eye to what their kids are becoming. You could ask them and they might say something like: "Oh, he's hasn't been making good choices lately, but he would never..." But if you turn around and talk to anyone else who knows him they say something like "Yeah, I'm not too surprised. He's been doing things like x for a while now, figured it was a matter of time...."  I deeply sympathize with the parents. They look at the kid and they don't see a dangerous person who's almost the size and power of an adult, they see the smiling five year old they sent off to kindergarten. I sympathize....but I don't excuse.  At least she turned them in.
JV or not... they are not right in the head to kill such a young girl...i hope they both fry!
 @Freespeech agreed fully! it'd be much more appropriately if they killed an older girl
Good God. Â What a thing for a mother to discover. Â So many lives destroyed, it defies understanding.
 @belsnickles who's the teacher hear? children r not born knowing right and wrong , kids learn what they live and they live in school, kids r with the parents 4hours 5 days a week, what r the schools accomplishing?
Our children go to school for an education not moral upbringing. Parents are the moral teachers. Public school is not meant to be a free daycare. Kids cannot possibly learn everything they need to know from a school teacher that has 30-35 kids in each class.
 @maggie112 "What r the schools accomplishing?"
Ironic that you should ask that question...
 @belsnickles Agreed. Unfathomable!