Crime & Safety
Daughter Of Woman Found Buried In Basement Files Notice Of Claim
The daughter of a woman whose skeletal remains were found buried in a Long Island basement has filed a notice of claim against town, police.

SOUTHOLD, NY — The daughter of a woman whose skeletal remains were found buried 7-feet deep in the basement of a Southold home has filed a notice of claim against Southold Town and the Southold Police Department.
According to the notice of claim, filed with the town on March 15, states that Sandra Blampied, of Middletown, NY, who is represented by Rosenberg & Gluck, LLP, of Holtsville, NY, suffered "loss of sepulcher and mental anguish" as well as other damages, as a "result of the negligence, carelessness, gross negligence, and recklessness of the Town of Southold and/or Town of Southold Police Department" . . ."for failure to make a reasonable and diligent inquiry to ascertain the location of the remains" of Louise Pietrewicz, Blampied's mother, for failure to make a reasonable and diligent effort to inform Blampied or Pietrewicz's next of kin about her death or the location of her remains, despite having "actual and/or constructive notice" of them, and for failure to immediately notify the next of kin about her death or to deliver her remains, as well as failure to adequately and/or promptly investigate the location of her remains, despite "specific and ample evidence" of their whereabouts, the notice of claim said.
The notice of claim alleges that the town and police "actively and knowingly" concealed the events surrounding Pietrewicz' death, and aided in the concealment of those events, as well as concealing and aiding in the events surrounding the burial of her remains and "fraudulently concealing" the events around her death, surrounding the burial of her remains, and "intentionally concealing" the events surrounding her death, the burial of her remains and the events surrounding the whereabouts of her remains.
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The notice of claim also alleges that the town and police failed to thoroughly investigate Pietrewicz' disappearance, her death, the "credible evidence" regarding the whereabouts of her remains, as well as "actively impeding" the investigation into her disappearance, death, and the location of her remains . . . and "taking active measures to impede other law enforcement agencies to investigate the death, disappearance and whereabouts" of Pietrewicz and her remains.
The town and police, the claim alleges, "were reckless, careless and negligent and breached both their statutory and common law duty" to Blampied when they failed to immediately notify her of her mother's death and to deliver her body for burial and funeral; they "destroyed and delayed" Blampied's rights of sepulcher, the notice of claim stated.
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According to the notice of claim, on Jan. 28, 2019, Blampied "became aware that respondents had knowledge of the whereabouts of her missing mother's remains for over 50 years and failed to return" her remains to her daughter, who is her next of kin.
On or around October, 1966, Pietrewicz went missing, and her whereabouts remained unknown until her remains were uncovered on or about March 19, 2018, "buried in the basement of the former home of Ms. Judith Boken-Terry and Mr. William Boken" on Lower Rd. in Southold, the notice of claim stated.
On April 14, 2018, the remains were identified as Louise Pietrewicz and made available to Blampied, the notice of claim said.
On Jan. 28, 2019, the Suffolk County Police Department publicly disclosed its file from the investigation that led to Pietrewicz' discovery, the notice of claim said. "According to the police file, Ms. Judith Boken-Terry advised respondents' agent Mr. Joseph Sawicki, Sr. of the whereabouts of decedent's remains. Specifically, she informed Mr. Sawicki, Sr. that in October 1966, her ex-husband William Boken murdered the decedent and buried her remains in the basement of the home, located on Lower Rd.," the notice of claim said.
"On January 29, 2019, Ms. Constance Sawicki, widow of respondents' former police officer Joseph Sawicki Sr., made a public statement regarding Mr. Sawicki, Sr.'s knowledge of the location of the decedent's remains. Specifically, Ms. Constance Sawicki stated that Mr. Joseph Sawicki, Sr., in his capacity as an employee of the respondents, was advised that the decedents remains were buried in the basement of Ms. Judith Boken-Terry's home on Lower Rd," the notice of claim said.
According to the notice of claim, Blampied "sustained severe mental anguish, emotional trauma, psychological injury, and loss of sepulcher when they were deprived of solace and comfort in the ritual of burial of her deceased mother Louise Pietrewicz."
In March, 2018, according to Suffolk County Police, Suffolk County Police Homicide Squad detectives investigated the circumstances surrounding the discovery of the remains.
During an investigation into the 1966 missing person case of Louise Pietrewicz, Southold Police detectives searched the basement of a home located on Lower Rd., police said.
The current homeowner, who has no involvement in the case, consented to the search, police said.
Suffolk County Police Homicide detectives assisted Southold Police by using ground penetrating sonar which led to additional digging in the basement of the home where skeletal remains were discovered.
Pietrewicz's boyfriend at the time of her disappearance, William Boken, the previous owner of the home, died in the early 1980s, police said. The basement had been searched and parts of it were dug up in 2013 with no results. The Suffolk Times first reported that Boken's ex-wife Judith Terry directed police to the basement.
The remains were taken to the Office of the Suffolk County Medical Examiner to determine the identity and cause of death.
At a press conference last year in Yaphank, Acting Suffolk County Police Commissioner Stuart Cameron began by saying that it appeared that a missing person's case dating back to 1966 "has finally been solved."
The resolution, Suffolk County Chief of Detectives Gerard Gigante said, "highlights our partnership with local law enforcement," including Southold Town Police.
Gigante said a little more than six years ago, Southold Town Police Chief Martin Flatley and Det. Sgt. John Sinning began to once again work on the cold case of Pietrewicz's disappearance.
At the time of her disappearance in 1966, he said, she had an "estranged relationship" with her husband and was involved with Boken, who, at the time, had been a Southold Town police officer for about six years. After she went missing, although there was an investigation, police were "unable to locate her," Gigante said.
At the time, Boken resigned from the Southold Police Department and "essentially disappeared," Gigante said. About a year later, he was arrested and charged with assault after a domestic incident involving his wife, Judith Terry Boken, Gigante said.
"That was the last he was seen," Gigante said, adding that in the 1960s and 70s it was easy to go under the radar and disappear without a footprint. "We believe he was wandering around the New York City area," he said. Later it was learned that Boken had died in 1982 and was buried in Potter's Field; no relatives knew he'd died until 2013.
Suffolk County Police weren't involved in the initial missing persons investigation, Gigante said. When, year later, information emerged that the disappearance might be a murder, Suffolk County Police's homicide bureau conducted a search of the Lower Rd. home.
The home, he said, is old, with a basement that was at one time all dirt and had later been filled in with five inches of cement.
From the first search a few years ago to the 2018 search, "additional information was developed" that led police to a different search area, just a few feet away, in the basement, Gigante said. Sonar equipment designed to indicate disturbances in the soil was used in both searches. During the first search, police were unable to locate the body.
But, Gigante said, "after interviewing people," police were able to determine that they were in the right area but needed to go further; the remains were located almost seven feet underground, just a few feet away from the first area that was searched.
"We discovered a jawbone," he said, adding that later, a full skeleton was found. The Suffolk County Medical Examiner's Office helped to excavate the remains.

(Lisa Finn)
Reflecting on how the remains were found, Gigante said, "In cold cases, sometimes, later in life . . .witnesses do come forward to give us information. At one point, maybe they felt compelled not to release" information "or felt threatened by a person." Or, he said, their conscience motivates them to come forward years later.
When asked if Boken's former wife, "who helped reveal where the body might be" was a person of interest in the investigation, Gigante said police would not release the source of information that had led to the discovery of the remains.
The case turns into a homicide investigation immediately when human remains are found, he said. Moving forward, "we will work that case," he said.
He added that the condition of the skeleton could potentially determine if death had been caused by gunshot or strangulation.
Southold Town Police Chief Martin Flatley confirmed last year that Boken had been questioned early on at the time of Pietrewicz' disappearance by New York State Police but the "investigation ran into a dead end."
Most missing persons, Gigante said, are simply missing.
When asked about speculation that Pietrewicz might have been pregnant. Gigante said the medical examiner would potentially be able to determine that information.
Over the years, Gigante said, the missing woman's disappearance had sparked theories. "There was a lot of talk in town, but in the end unless you have the body, you don't have a murder," he said.
Cameron said the cold case case could never have been solved without the work of Southold Police and Suffolk County Police.
When asked about speculation that the case was not investigated as "intensely as it should have been initially because there was a police officer potentially involved," Flatley said the investigation originally centered on a missing person. The case began on the South Fork and involved New York State Police, but that came to a dead end. Flatley said as far as he knew, the Southold Police Department was not the lead agency, but he did say that'd he'd also heard the speculation.
Gigante reminded that Boken was arrested a year later, was separated from the police department, "and was not looked at differently than anyone else." He then disappeared at a time when there were no cell phones, videos or ATMs to track his whereabouts.
He added that in 2014, Sinning developed information that the missing woman might be buried in the basement of the old house; there were concerns about how much digging could be done without loosening the beams in the basement. Concrete had to be broken to dig; the sonar equipment was used initially. Last year, additional information was garnered — from the "same source" as in 2014, Gigante said.
Once again, the sonar equipment was used and after digging about four feet, they learned it was necessary to go deeper; the body was ultimately found in the hole.
Gigante added that the home changed ownership in the 1970s and the current owners have nothing to do with the case.
As Pietrewicz has a daughter, a living relative, Gigante said it's nice to be able to bring closure to the family.
Flatley agreed in 2018. "It's been a question mark for so many years," he said. "To bring closure to her family. . . it feels good."
The discovery came after an investigative report about the disappearance of the Cutchogue mom, originally from Sagaponack —who was 38 when she went missing — by the Suffolk Times; —according to a post by the Suffolk Times, the remains were found in the home where Boken, her married boyfriend and a former Southold police officer, lived with his wife and children. A burlap bag was found wrapped around the skeletal remains, the Suffolk Times reported.
The search for answers was the subject of a documentary, "Gone," produced by the Suffolk Times.
Southold Town Attorney Bill Duffy confirmed that a notice of claim had been served. Southold Town Supervisor Scott Russell said he could not comment on pending litigation. Southold Town Police Chief Martin Flatley also said he was unable to comment on pending litigation.
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