FILE PHOTO: Gregg Shore, First Assistant District Attorney for Bucks County, Pa., walks down a driveway, Wednesday, July 12, 2017, in Solebury, Pa., as the search continues for four missing young Pennsylvania men feared to be the victims of foul play.
Laura Benshoff covers the suburbs for WHYY, 91 FM. Originally from Raleigh, N.C., Laura hasn't had a southern accent in years. She moved to Montreal for college before landing in Philadelphia in 2012.
Matt Rourke / AP Photo
FILE PHOTO: Gregg Shore, First Assistant District Attorney for Bucks County, Pa., walks down a driveway, Wednesday, July 12, 2017, in Solebury, Pa., as the search continues for four missing young Pennsylvania men feared to be the victims of foul play.
(Doylestown) — In mid-July 2017, investigators were closing in.
Faced with the prospect of the death penalty, then-20-year-old Cosmo DiNardo led detectives to where he had disposed of the bodies of Jimi Patrick, 19; Dean Finocchiaro, 19; Tom Meo, 21; and Mark Sturgis, 22, on his family’s 90-acre farm in Solebury Township, Bucks County.
He also pointed the finger at his cousin and alleged accomplice, Sean Kratz.
Two years later, DiNardo is serving four consecutive life sentences in prison. Kratz, now 22, is standing trial for homicide.
The crime
Prosecutors charged Kratz with three counts of first-degree murder, as well as with taking part in efforts to destroy and hide the bodies afterward.
His cousin, DiNardo, confessed to killing the first victim, Jimi Patrick, by himself. In tapes leaked to NBC10, DiNardo described proposing to sell Patrick $8,000 worth of marijuana on July 5, 2017. When Patrick showed up with only $800, DiNardo offered to sell him a gun, then shot him. He dug a hole and buried Patrick on the Lower York Road property.
Two days later, DiNardo returned to his family’s land, this time with Kratz. According to Kratz’s leaked confession, the plan was to rob and shoot two other men after arranging a drug deal with them.
He said when the time came, he closed his eyes and shot his gun, wounding Finocchiaro. DiNardo grabbed the gun and shot Finocchiaro dead.
The men put Finocchiaro’s body in a drum DiNardo referred to as a “pig roaster.”
Later on July 7, Tom Meo and Mark Sturgis arrived at the DiNardo property, ostensibly for another drug deal. Both were shot, and Meo was run over with a backhoe before their bodies were dumped in the same drum and lit on fire.
Kratz and DiNardo destroyed many of the victims’ possessions — but traces remained. Cellphone records for Finocchiaro pointed to the farm, as did Meo’s 1996 Nissan Maxima, discovered less than a mile away.
Almost immediately, national and local law enforcement converged on the farm, scouring for the four men’s graves.
In exchange for not facing the death penalty, DiNardo revealed where he had buried Patrick’s body to investigators.
After Sean Kratz told packed court room he was rejecting plea deal- man from victims family side of court room stood and shouted “man up” prompting deputies to silence court and dismiss court @NBCPhiladelphiapic.twitter.com/F5Qci8Tyfo
After the wall-to-wall media coverage, it was difficult to find jurors who hadn’t already made up their minds. So the court scheduled jury selection weeks ahead of the trial, in September.
That hurdle cleared, the trial is slated to start at 9 a.m. Wednesday.
During a pretrial hearing on Monday, defense attorney Charles Peruto said Kratz will testify in his own defense.
DiNardo could testify, too.
The prosecution and defense attorneys are under a gag order and barred from speaking to the press during the trial.
Separately, three of the victims’ families have filed a civil lawsuit against the DiNardo family, for failing to anticipate and stop their son’s murderous rampage.
WHYY is the leading public media station serving the Philadelphia region, including Delaware, South Jersey and Pennsylvania. This story originally appeared on WHYY.org.
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