Crime & Safety

Woman Whose Body Parts, Including Head, Were Found On LI ID'd: PD

The identity of the man whose body parts were found is still pending confirmation, police say.

The body parts were found on Long Island, police said.
The body parts were found on Long Island, police said. (Lisa Finn / Patch)

LONG ISLAND, NY — The woman whose body parts were found scattered on Long Island in a grisly discovery has been identified as Donna R. Conneely, 59, police said.

According to Suffok County Police, Conneely's last known address was in Yonkers; her body parts were located on February 29 and March 5, police said.

The identity of the male is still pending confirmation by the Office of the Suffolk County Medical
Examiner, police said. Four people have been arrested in connection with the grisly discovery of human remains in Babylon, West Islip and Bethpage, police said.

Find out what's happening in Babylon Villagefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Last week, Suffolk County Police homicide squad detectives arrested and charged Steven Brown, 44, Jeffrey Mackey, 38, and Amanda Wallace, 40, all of 25 Railroad Ave., in Amityville, and Alexis Nieves, 33, who is without a known residence, with first-degree hindering prosecution, tampering with physical evidence and concealment of a human corpse in relation to the body parts' discovery, police said.

New human remains were found last Tuesday in the ongoing investigation after body parts were found in a Babylon park the week before, police said.

Find out what's happening in Babylon Villagefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

According to an update by Suffolk County Police homicide squad detectives, an investigation into the human remains found in Babylon on February 29 resulted in a search warrant that was executed at a Railroad Ave. address in Amityville last Monday. No human remains were located during the search, police said.

Human remains were, however, located in a wooded area across from 103 Lakeway Drive in West Babylon on Tuesday, police said. The scene was processed by the Suffolk County Police homicide squad and the Office of the Suffolk County Medical Examiner, police said.

In addition, human remains were also located at Bethpage State Park on Tuesday; the scene was processed by New York State Police and the Office of the Suffolk County Medical Examiner, police said.

The remains located in West Babylon and Bethpage are believed to belong to the same victims from the February 29 discovery, police said.

The male was tentatively identified at the time; he was 53 years old at the time of his death, police said.

Their last known address was the same location in Yonkers, however, it’s unclear when they last resided there, police said.

Based on the investigation, the discovery of the remains appears to be an isolated incident with no threat to the public, police said, adding that the investigation is continuing.

Police did not immediately respond to questions about peculation circulating that the murders might have been part of a "love triangle" or could have been gang-related.

The remains were found close to residential homes and the elementary school, police said.

According to Suffolk County police, the human remains found at Southards Pond Park in Babylon belonged to both a woman and a adult male, including a woman's arm, leg and head, and a man's two arms, which had tattoos.

The Suffolk County Medical Examiner determined that a severed head, right arm, left leg from the knee down, and a right upper leg found by a Suffolk County Police cadaver dog at the western side of Southards Pond Park on Thursday were believed to be those of an adult woman, police said.

According to Suffolk County police, on Thursday at about 8:40 a.m. on Feb. 29, a high school student was walking to school and discovered a severed left arm on the west side of Seagal Boulevard at the eastern end of Southards Pond Park, between Park Avenue and Mason Avenue.
The student called her father, who then called 911, police said.

Following an investigation by homicide squad detectives, a cadaver dog from the canine unit discovered a leg in a mound of leaves on the western side of the park near Graham Place; the same dog continued searching the east side of the park and found a right arm about 20 feet away from the original discovery of the left arm, police said. The remains found on the eastern edge of the park appeared to be male, police said.

Educators and parents worked hard to protect children from the gruesome discoveries unfolding close to their schools.

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