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Menard, Mary October 11 2003; New Britain 40 YO
Topic Started: Jun 8 2010, 09:45 PM (793 Views)
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Missing Since: October 04, 2003 from Waterbury, Connecticut
Classification: Missing
Date Of Birth: n/a
Age: 40
Height: 5'4"
Weight: 125 lbs.
Hair Color: Blond/Strawberry
Eye Color: Blue
Race: White
Gender: Female
Distinguishing Characteristics: Scar on back, tattoo of a
rose on her right chest / shoulder
Clothing: Yellow sweater and blue jeans
NCIC Number: M703594872


Mary Jane Menard went out to get cigarettes and has not been seen since.


Investigating Agency
If you have any information concerning this case, please contact:
Waterbury Police Department
(203) 574-6940
Source Information
findthemissing.org
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A Drug Recovery Counselor Disappears
40 year old Mary Menard was last seen in the city of New Britain when she disappeared on October 11, 2003. She went to go get cigarettes and was never seen again. At the time of her disappearance, she wore a yellow sweater and blue jeans. She also had a tattoo of a rose on the right side of her chest. She was an alcoholic years ago who cleaned herself up and became an drug and recovery counselor. She had become romantically involved with a client and started using illegal drugs. It is possible that this client could be responsible for her disappearance. If you have any information about this case please contact the Waterbury Police Department at (203) 574-6941.
http://www.angelfire.com/ct3/unsolvedct/
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https://www.findthemissing.org/cases/3368/95
local case number 2003-94547
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(This thread is for the third unidentified female found in New Britain in August or September 2007. No skull has been found, so unlike the other two women, there is no reconstruction.)

http://www.newstimes.com/news/article/New-...case-638730.php

New Britain police try to warm cold case
The Associated Press
Published: 09:22 a.m., Tuesday, August 31, 2010

NEW BRITAIN -- Police in Connecticut are releasing the likenesses of two of three women found dead in a wooded area of New Britain three years ago, in hopes of getting information on the unsolved cases.

New Britain police are expected to show the three-dimensional renditions of the women's heads at the police department Tuesday morning. The likenesses were prepared by forensic scientists at the FBI, based on two skulls recovered in 2007.

The skeletal remains of three women were discovered in woods off Hartford Road in August 2007, but only two skulls were found.

Authorities believe two of the three women's remains had been there from four to 10 years.
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http://www.newbritainherald.com/articles/2...ff140856886.txt

VIDEO FEATURE: Long lost faces of unsolved deaths
Sunday, August 29, 2010 11:38 PM EDT
By LISA BACKUS
Staff Writer

NEW BRITAIN — They could have been mothers, sisters, women who were loved and missed, but the mystery of their deaths and their identities have gone unsolved for years.

Jane Doe One had excellent dental care. Jane Doe Two likely had a crippling back problem that would require medication. Jane Doe Three was — based on the thickness of her femur — athletic.

The bones of the three women were found three years ago this month in a wooded area behind the plaza near the Route 9 north off-ramp on Hartford Road. (see video)

Until recently, investigators had only two skulls and roughly 50 bones from the three women to provide clues to who they are and how they died.

But now New Britain police detectives are hoping that facial renditions provided by a Federal Bureau of Investigation laboratory will lead to the discovery of their names and why they wound up dumped in a lonely patch of woods and brush behind a Hartford Road plaza.

“We strongly believe identifying these girls is one of the first steps in finding out how they died,” Lt. James Wardwell said. “Someone knew them, most likely from the Northeast or this area, we need to get these images out so people can see them. We’re hoping someone will recognize their features and give us a call.”

Police now have two sculpted heads providing an “approximation” of what Jane Doe One and Jane Doe Two looked like at the time of their death. Jane Doe One is likely African-American, Hispanic or possibly Caribbean, 20 to 30 years old and based on the size of her humerus, ribs and vertebrae, was of light build, between 5 feet to 5 feet 3 inches tall.

Jane Doe Two is probably a white female of European decent, older, possibly in her 40s, missing several teeth, indicating poor dental care, but she did have a root canal at some point.

Her facial features were asymmetrical, a crooked nose leading to one cheek appearing flatter than the other. Her vertebrae indicate arthritis or some type of back problem that would have made her movements painful, requiring medication.

There is no approximation for Jane Doe Three because her skull was never found. Based on the thickness of her two femurs and her hip, she was likely athletic and probably 30 or younger. Her race is not known.

The bones of the three women were found three years ago this month in a wooded area behind the plaza near the Route 9 north off-ramp on Hartford Road. Police don’t think it was a coincidence that in 1995 a young female with a gunshot wound to the head was found about 50 to 70 feet away, closer to the building. She and an older woman found around the same time in Massachusetts under similar circumstances have also not been identified.

“That case stalled because we had no identification,” said Capt. Matthew Tuttle who was a detective in 1995 when the young girl was found. “We haven’t definitely connected her with the bones of the three women found in 2007 but at the time I thought it was a real good coincidence that they were all found close to each other. It renewed our hope that we could solve them all.”

The area where the bodies were found is quiet and out of the way, making it a good choice to dump something, or someone, where they won’t easily be found. The road behind the building is roughly 25 feet wide leading to a guardrail along a steep embankment.

Even at 3 p.m. on a recent August day, crickets provide a steady hum broken occasionally by the sounds of traffic on the Route 9 off-ramp and Hartford Road.

Although the back door to a Subway shop is open, no one peers out to notice a visitor surveying the area. Thick brush and trees of varying sizes, lush and green, tangle from the top of the embankment into the woods that stretch for acres.

Dumpsters are lined close to each back door of the businesses within the shopping center. The 1995 Jane Doe was found by an officer making a routine sweep through the back of the plaza in the overnight hours of Sept. 28, 1995.

The officer stopped to investigate what appeared to be a rolled up carpet next to a dumpster. “It looked out of place so he checked it out,” Wardwell said.

What he found was actually two rolled up sleeping bags hiding the body of what police believe is a young Hispanic woman who had been shot in the head.

She has been linked by police to a woman found near a garbage area in a campsite in Massachusetts a few days later. That woman also had a gunshot to the head.

Police in both states have been trading information and searching for their identities ever since. Items found with the Massachusetts woman lead investigators to believe both women were from upstate New York.

In August 2007, a man walking through the wooded area along Route 9 in New Britain made a startling discovery — a human skull — and called police.

To the surprise of investigators, the resulting search of the area, which spanned several days and involved several law enforcement agencies, uncovered about 50 human bones including two right hip bones and a full pelvis indicating three separate women had been left there possibly more than a decade ago.

“When we were told we had two right hip bones we knew we had to expand the search,” Wardwell said. “The area was completely overgrown, filled with thorns and brush. We had DOT and city dump trucks lined up for all the brush we cleared. We searched in quadrants, line to line, shoulder to shoulder so we wouldn’t miss anything. It was slow, painstaking work.”

Unlike the 1995 case where the woman’s body was found intact and with an obvious gunshot wound, the bones of the three women offered few clues as to how they died. The skulls and bones from Jane Doe One and Jane Doe Two had no obvious trauma. The skull of Jane Doe three has never been found.

“In 1995, we had a cause of death, but these we can’t because there was no outward sign of injury,” Wardwell said. “Of course, we wouldn’t be able to tell if they were stabbed or strangled because that would involve soft tissue. But they all were found within 50 to 75 feet of each other, we’re considering them connected.”

Their dental records and DNA were entered into national missing persons databases but so far any possible matches have not panned out.

It was Detective Larry Betterini who has been on the 1995 Jane Doe case since the beginning who learned that the FBI Laboratory Special Projects Unit in Quantico, Va. had a process to create sculpted facial reconstructions using the skeletal remains of victims.

Betterini and Sgt. Darren Pearson took the skulls from Jane Doe One and Jane Doe Two to Quantico last year. Months later they retrieved two carefully sculpted busts from the neck up that give the women features and provide a chance that they finally may be identified and mourned by their loved ones.

Their hair is a guess based on their genetic markers, but the renditions provide an image of what these women were — people.

“Everyone talks about them as human remains but they were human beings,” Wardwell said. “These were somebody’s wives, daughters, sisters. They were real people and they deserve for us to find out who they are and what happened to them.”

Anyone with information on the identities of the five women should call the New Britain Police Department Criminal Investigation Division at (860) 826-3065.

-----------

FBI generated "approximation" of Jane Doe One. Based on a forensic examination of her bones she is likely African American, Hispanic or Caribbean with good dental care including fillings. Based on the size of her leg bones, ribs and vertebrea she was likely 20-30 years old with a light build and was 5 feet to 5-feet, 3-inches tall. Coroners estimated that she had been four to 10 years when her remains were found in 2007.

FBI generated "approximation" of Jane Doe Two. Based on a forensic examination of her bones she is in her 40, had poor dental care and a spine condition that would have required medication. She is believed to be white and of Eastern European decent. Her nose is crooked and face asymmetrical with her right cheek slightly flatter than her left. Coroners estimated that she had been dead four to 20 years when her remains were found in 2007.

Jane Doe 1995 weighed about 116 pounds and was 5 feet, 3 inches tall. Police estimate she was 17 to 20 years old and had good dental work. He hair was styled up in bobby pins and an elastic ponytail. She had a pierced navel with a silver belly ring. She was also wearing a gold herringbone necklace and a Gitano brand watch worn with the face on the inside of her wrist, rather than on the outside.

Jane Doe Massachusetts was found outside the entrance to Tolland State Park in Tolland, Mass. near a garbage area about eight days after Jane Doe 1995 was discovered behind a Hartford Road plaza in New Britain. Jane Doe Massachusetts weighed between 120 to 130 pounds and was about 5-feet-2 to 5-feet-5 inches tall. She was estimated to be 30 to 45 years old.
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http://www.wwlp.com/dpp/news/local/hampden...Tolland-killing

Announcement Wed on '95 Tolland killing
Five cold case homicides being investigated
Updated: Tuesday, 18 Jan 2011, 1:15 PM EST
Published : Tuesday, 18 Jan 2011, 1:15 PM EST
Anthony Fay

TOLLAND, Mass. (WWLP) - Massachusetts State Police are prepared to notify the public about what they call “significant developments” regarding five cold case homicides, including the 1995 killing of a woman whose body was found in the Western Hampden County town of Tolland.

A news conference, hosted by the Massachusetts State Police and New Britain, Connecticut Police will be held New Britain Police Headquarters on Wednesday afternoon.

David Procopio of Massachusetts State Police Media Relations told 22News that a woman’s lifeless body was found in Tolland in October 1995, one month after another woman’s body was found behind a New Britain store. Both New Britain Police and Massachusetts State Police have been investigating both deaths.

Skeletal remains of three other women were found in a wooded area of New Britain in 2007, Procopio said.

During the news conference, new information is expected to be given by agencies including the FBI, the Connecticut State Police Forensics Laboratory, and the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
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Investigators still searching for information regarding cold cases


Saturday, August 18, 2012 10:03 PM EDT
By lisa Backus
staff writer
NEW BRITAIN — After years of remaining undiscovered in a patch of woods near a Route 9 off-ramp, and another half-decade waiting for DNA samples to be completed, Diane Cusack will likely come home to her final resting place in the coming weeks.

But she will be properly buried without her family knowing how she died, or if she was killed by an assailant — a fact that weighs heavy on Interim Police Chief James Wardwell, who has been on the case since the beginning.

“Her family and the families of the other two women should feel confident that the New Britain Police Department will never stop looking for the answer,” Wardwell said. “These are human beings. We were able to put a real face to Diane Cusack, we know she was loved and cherished by her family, just like the other two women. We will find justice for them.”

Wardwell was a lieutenant in the Criminal Investigation Division in August 2007 when a man walking through the woods behind a shopping plaza on Hartford Road found human bones.

The resulting search of the area revealed it contained the bones of three women — all unidentified — who had been dead for several years.

Wardwell and a team of investigators announced last year Cusack was identified by family members after police sent her remains and DNA information to an FBI unit that creates likenesses of crime victims.

This month, five years after the bones were discovered, the state medical examiner is preparing to release Cusack’s remains to her family. What led to her death and the deaths of the two other women found in the same location remains a mystery

“These cases are near and dear to my heart,” Wardwell said last week. “I came up through the ranks investigating their deaths and I feel as strongly today about giving them justice as I did that day out in the woods five years ago. Our dedication has not diminished.”

Initially, all police had to go on were two skulls and an assortment of bones that indicated three women had been left in the area probably between five-to-15 years before their remains were discovered. The bones revealed no sign of trauma, investigators said.

Although the state forensic lab conducted DNA testing on the bones and plugged the results into state and national databases, they were unable to come up with a match.

By 2009, detectives sought the help of a FBI unit that creates a likeness of what an unidentified deceased individual likely resembled in life.

The results were two computer generated sculpted heads that provided an “approximation” of what Jane Doe One and Jane Doe Two looked like at the time of their deaths.

Jane Doe One is likely African-American, Hispanic or possibly Caribbean, 20-to-30 years old and, based on the size of her humerus, ribs and vertebrae, was of light build, between 5 feet to 5 feet 3 inches tall.

Jane Doe Two, later identified as Cusack, was a white female of European decent, possibly in her 40s, missing several teeth, indicating poor dental care, but she did have a root canal at some point.

There is no approximation for Jane Doe Three because her skull was never found. Police were told initially that based on the thickness of her two femurs and her hip, she was likely athletic and probably 30 or younger. Her race is not known.

But that description will change thanks to further DNA testing recently completed by the state lab. Police are waiting to receive a more updated description from the medical examiner’s office.

Within days of police releasing the approximations to the public in 2010, Wardwell received a phone call from a relative speculating that Jane Doe Two might be Diane Cusack, a city woman who hadn’t been in contact with family for years.

DNA testing confirmed suspicions and provided more leads but none so far have led to police finding how Cusack died or who may have been involved.

Detectives are still trying to find a similar DNA match for Jane Doe One, said acting Lt. Darren Pearson who has also worked on the case since the beginning. “What we’re hoping for is a DNA match with a mother, daughter or aunt,” he said.

The department has reached out to dental and medical publications and tracked down “a lot” of leads, Pearson said. New Britain investigators also sought the help of a forensic odontologist who created a dental profile that could be matched to profiles in missing persons databases. Police are hoping the exposure the case receives will encourage more police departments around the country to provide dental information when listing missing persons.

“If someone would report her missing, we have perfect dental records,” Wardwell said. “We’d have a match, but she has to be in a database for that to happen.”

Anyone who may have information on the three women is asked to call Detective Thomas Gray at (860) 826-3050 or Sgt. David Rohan at (860) 826-3150.
http://www.newbritainherald.com/articles/2...58086395244.txt
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http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/P...-232535381.html

Police Search for Clues About Remains Found in New Britain in 2007
By Ari Mason
Tuesday, Nov 19, 2013 | Updated 5:03 PM EST

New Britain police are searching the woods near Hartford Road where the remains of three women were discovered in 2007.

New Britain police headed back out at 593 Hartford Road canvassing the area in search for more clues as to who killed the three women whose remains were discovered there in 2007 and what happened to them.

The partial remains of three women who had gone missing were discovered behind a Subway restaurant there in a wooded area near the intersection of Route 9 and Hartford Road. It’s not clear what happened to those women, but police have said they’re treating the cases as homicides.

It’s the fourth time police have conducted a search since the remains were discovered. Officers, detectives and the department’s entire Police Academy recruit class will have spent the day doing line searches in the woods. They headed out around 8 a.m. and stayed on scene until 3 or 3:30 p.m., according to Police Chief Jim Wardwell.

No additional remains or evidence was recovered during today's search, said Police Captain Thomas Steck.

Last month, one of the victims was identified as Joyvaline “Joy” Martinez, who had been previously referred to as Jane Doe Number One. Martinez went missing from East Hartford in October 2003. She was 24 at the time.

Jane Doe Number Two was identified in 2011 as Diane Cusack of New Britain. Jane Doe Number Three is now the only victim yet to be identified. In 2010, police said they couldn’t find the woman’s skull but could tell form her leg bones that she was between 20 and 30 years old when she died and was probably athletic.

Police are asking for the public's help in solving the cold case.

Anyone with information about the case is asked to contact the New Britain Police Dept. Criminal Investigation Division at 860-826-3120.
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http://www.newbritainherald.com/articles/2...29292959535.txt

Without a trace: New Britain woman went missing 10 years ago
Sunday, March 2, 2014 11:16 PM EST
By Lisa Backus
Staff Writer

NEW BRITAIN — Anna Santiago and her older sister, Mary Jane Menard, were as close as siblings could be, the younger woman said last week.

They went out to dinner every other night. They talked on the phone several times a day right up until the day Santiago got the call 10 years ago that her sister had gone out for a pack of cigarettes and never returned. Police and her family are still looking for information on her disappearance.

“She could walk into a place and light up the room,” the 46-year-old Santiago said. “We were so close there was nothing I didn’t know about her and visa versa.”

Santiago and Mary Jane’s children, Tiffany Menard, 29 and Brian McKinney, 32, have spent the past decade turning over in their minds what could have happened and why police still have found no trace of generous, fun-loving woman who is missed and loved.

Tiffany was 19 and serving in the military in Iraq when her mother, a well-known New Britain substance abuse counselor, disappeared. The younger Menard can remember going to the library with her mother as a kid.

“She was the one nobody wanted to get in trouble in front of,” the 29-year-old recalled. “She kept us all in line. I have good memories of her. She’s the kind of person I want to be. She was a role model. Everyone loved her.”

The resemblance between Tiffany and Mary Jane is uncanny, and now haunting, Santiago admitted. “I see her every single day in my niece,” Santiago said.

McKinney now has three children, two of whom, have never met their grandmother. She was generous, fun and hardworking, he said. “She would give to someone in need even if it meant going without herself. She instilled a lot of morals and values and responsibility in us.”

Mary Jane Menard, for the most part, lived the last 20 years before she disappeared in New Britain. She battled alcohol abuse but had been sober for 15 years. She went back to school to become a substance abuse counselor, helping others overcome the same struggles she faced, her family said. She was well-known within the New Britain recovery community. Her name still comes up at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings from time to time, members said.

Life was going well for her sister, Santiago said, until she had three consecutive back surgeries in 2002. The family surmises that the pain medication she was given reactivated her addiction. Within a year, she had dramatically lost weight while using illegal drugs and went missing on Oct. 4, 2003. She was 40 years old at the time.

“It was so quick,” Santiago said. “One day everything is fine and then was in chaos.” Her sister had moved to Waterbury a few months before after living in New Britain for about 20 years. She still had connections to New Britain and would still attend recovery meetings there, Santiago said. About two days before her sister went missing, Santiago’s daughter saw Mary Jane get into a van with someone else to go to a meeting. Santiago presumes the meeting was related to recovery. She doesn’t know if the unknown person in the van could be connected to the disappearance of her sister.

About two days later Mary Jane Menard went out to get a pack of cigarettes in Waterbury and never returned.

Waterbury police, who have been investigating Mary Jane Menard’s disappearance for 10 years, declined to comment for this story.

The family has never stopped searching for answers. Santiago has a file of phone records and other items that she saved for police. Tiffany Menard has listed her mother on missing persons websites. They have remained in contact with Waterbury police every few months for a decade.

The loss and the wondering what happened are always on their minds, McKinney said. “We just want answers,” he said. “It’s a lot worse not knowing. I’m not even looking for justice, I want to know so I can have closure.”

Anna and Mary Jane’s mother died in 2009, never knowing what happened to her daughter. “She gave DNA samples (for the state’s missing persons database) before she died,” Santiago said.

The family contacted Waterbury detectives again in September after they learned that police had identified a second woman whose remains were found with those of two other women behind a Hartford Road plaza in 2007.

The deaths of Diane Cusack and Joyvaline Martinez, previously called Jane Doe 2 and Jane Doe 1, are still under investigation by New Britain police. Officials from the state crime lab agreed in December to work on generating a DNA profile for Jane Doe 3 in the hope of identifying her and furthering the investigation into how the women died.

After 10 years, the family still has no idea if their mother could possibly be Jane Doe 3 or where she might be. “There is always a hope that she could be alive,” Santiago said. “Maybe she has amnesia, but other than that we pretty much know she’s not alive. She was the type of person that no matter what jam she got in, she would have called. She would have contacted us no matter what.”

Santiago said the family isn’t going give up until they know what happened. “We miss her and love her,” Tiffany Menard said. “And we hope that someone who knows something about where she is will come forward.”


Anyone who may have information on the disappearance of Mary Jane Menard is asked to call the New Britain Police Department’s Community TipLine at (860) 826-3199 or the Waterbury Police Detective Division at (860) 574-6941. Tips can also be left on the New Britain Police website at www.newbritainpolice.org.
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NEW BRITAIN, CT (WFSB) - The New Britain Police Department said it's hunting for a serial killer after it identified the third and final set of remains found in New Britain in 2007. A $150,000 reward, the largest in state history, was also being offered for information leading to arrests.
The final victim was 40-year-old Mary Jane Menard. Police said she went missing in 2003 in the area of Hartford Road, where her remains, and those of two other women, were found.

Last year, police identified one of the women as Joyvaline "Joy" Martinez of East Hartford. She was identified through dental records and DNA taken from her mother in 2007, according to police.

"My sister was a good person," said Sandra Martinez, Joyvaline Martinez's sister. "I don't want people to see a bad side, because she was a good person."

The victims' families have been looking for answers since their disappearances.

"We're gonna catch that monster that did this to my sister," Sandra Martinez said.

In 2010, the second set of remains was identified as Diane Cusack of New Britain. Police said a facial approximation helped them in that case.

"I want to emphasize that although these women may have been struggling with substance abuse issues at the time of their murders, they were mothers, daughters, sisters and neighbors," said Chief James Wardwell, New Britain Police Department. "To this day, they are loved and missed by the families and friends they have left behind and that is why we are here today, committed to bringing the individual responsible for these killings to justice."

The remains of all three were found behind a plaza in a wooded area on Hartford Road. They were ruled homicides.

The Greater New Britain Serial Murder Task Force is investigating. It confirmed that all three women frequented Main, Lafayette and Washington streets in the city. It doesn't believe the knew each other. They disappeared at different times in 2003.




Additional Links





Search at site where remains were found in New Britain












"Our investigation has revealed that these murders were committed by the same offender at different times," Wardwell said.

Over the years, investigators returned to the scene, which is less than a mile away from the Westfarms Mall in West Hartford. Forensics investigations eventually helped determine the identities of the three women.

"I know he's not out there having a good time," Sandra Martinez said. "I know it's hurting him in the brain and his heart and his mind and he should give himself up."

Police released the new information during an 11 a.m. news conference at their department on Chestnut Street.

Anyone with any information about this case is asked to call anonymous tip line at 860-826-3199, visit the anonymous tip website, text a tip to 860-801-1004 or email, Crimetips@NewBritainCT.gov.
http://www.wfsb.com/story/26635351/new-det...-in-new-britain
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