Crime & Safety
Cosmo DiNardo's Links To Other Missing Persons Cases Investigated, But No Connections So Far: Authorities
Following DiNardo's admission that he killed four people on his family's Solebury farm, some are wondering: Could there be more victims?

The shock waves that reverberated through the Bucks County community last week during a frantic search for four missing young men, followed by a confession from the suspect and subsequent homicide charges, continue to linger.
As the community continues to process the heinous chain of events that investigators say happened on a 90-acre Solebury Farm, some are wondering: Could there be more victims?
Cosmo DiNardo, 20, has been charged with homicide in connection with the deaths of Jimi Taro Patrick, 19, of Newtown; Dean Finocchiaro, 19, of Middletown Township; Thomas Meo, 21, of Plumstead Township; and Mark Sturgis, 22. His cousin, 20-year-old Sean Kratz, faces homicide charges in the deaths of Meo, Finocchiaro and Sturgis.
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Authorities say the cousins lured their acquaintances to a rural Bucks County property with the promise of selling them marijuana then fatally shot them and buried their bodies.
The Bucks County District Attorney's Office has said if allegations of other crimes connected to DiNardo are brought to their attention, they will be investigated.
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A report published Monday by the New York Times said when DiNardo confessed to the four Solebury murders, he told investigators that he had killed two people in Philadelphia when he was 15.
Larry King, a spokesman with the Bucks County District Attorney's office, said the agency has made no public comments about the contents of DiNardo’s statement beyond what appears in the probable cause affidavit released on Friday.
"Anything he may have said beyond that would be investigative material that we would not discuss publicly," King said.
Philadelphia Police Lt. Dennis Rosenbaum said his agency is investigating links to DiNardo but so far have found nothing concrete.
Specifically, Rosenbaum has investigated if there is a connection between DiNardo and the disappearance of 22-year-old Timothy Ceasar from Bristol Township last month. Ceasar was last seen at the 7-Eleven on Bristol and Neshaminy roads on June 1, authorities say.
His mother, a Northeast Philadelphia resident, told the Philadelphia Inquirer her son had asked her to drive him north on Route 13, but while they were in the car together, he told his mother he wanted to get out and walk home. She pulled into the 7-Eleven parking lot to let him out around 11:20 a.m., the report said.
She told the publication she saw her son get into a white car driven by someone with jet-black hair.
Rosenbaum said there is no surveillance video available to verify that account. He said his agency has been in connection with Bucks County authorities and have looked into the matter but have determined there's no link.
None of Ceasar's phone numbers or social media accounts are linked to DiNardo, he said. Further, Ceasar had no connection to Bucks County. He was living with his mother in Northeast Philadelphia at the time of his disappearance and had previously lived with a relative in Delaware County, Rosenbaum said.
Ceasar is described as being 5 feet 10 inches, 130 pound, thin build, hazel eyes, light complexion with short, straight, shoulder-length blonde hair. He was last seen wearing a black sweatshirt and faded dark blue jeans.
Here is his photo:

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