Two Pennsylvania men due in court in
quadruple murder case
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[May 16, 2018]
By David DeKok
HARRISBURG, Pa. (Reuters) - Two
Pennsylvania men accused of luring four young men to a farm with the
promise of marijuana, shooting them dead and then burning their bodies
in a pig roaster were due in court in the murder case on Wednesday.
Cosmo DiNardo and his cousin Sean Kratz, both 21, were set to appear at
a hearing in Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown,
Pennsylvania.
DiNardo, of Bensalam, and Kratz, of Philadelphia, were both charged with
the murders of three of the men - Dean Finocchiaro, 19, of
Middletownship, Mark Sturgis, 22, of Pennsburg and Thomas Meo, 21, of
Plumstead Township. DiNardo alone is charged with the murder of the
fourth man, Jimi Patrick, 19, of Newtown.
DiNardo confessed to the murders to avoid the death penalty, according
to Bucks County District Attorney Matthew Weintraub. He then entered a
not-guilty plea at his arraignment in December. Kratz has no deal with
prosecutors.
The bodies of three victims were found in a common grave at DiNardo's
family's farm in Solebury Township in July 2017. After authorities found
those bodies, which had been loaded into a pig roaster and set on fire,
DiNardo led authorities to Patrick's body buried nearby.
All four victims were lured to the farm with the belief that Dinardo
would sell them marijuana, then were shot dead, according to criminal
court documents.
Patrick was killed when he visited the farm on July 5, while the other
three victims were killed when they went there together two days later.
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Bucks County District Attorney's Office photo of Cosmo DiNardo after
his arrest on Monday in Bucks County, about 40 miles north of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. in this image released on July 11,
2017. Courtesy Bucks County District Attorney's Office/Handout via
REUTERS/File photo
Families of the victims later filed wrongful death suits against
DiNardo's parents and their construction company, saying he should
not have had access to guns due to previous mental health issues.
Dinardo was charged with four counts each of criminal homicide,
conspiracy to commit homicide, three counts of robbery and abuse of
a corpse. Kratz was charged with three counts of criminal homicide,
conspiracy to commit criminal homicide, abuse of a corpse and
robbery.
(Writing by Barbara Goldberg; editing by Bill Berkrot)
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