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Tuesday, October 20, 2015
US: US Police: US Milwaukee Police Department failed to sniff a murder for 33 yrs
It’s every journalist’s dream to answer the phone and get the tip that breaks a big story.
But not like this.
On Oct. 11, a reporter at WISN 12 News in Milwaukee picked up the phone to hear a man confess to a 33-year-old murder. The caller, 50-year-old, told the television station that he was responsible for the 1982 death of 13-year-old Carrie Ann Jopek. Ferreira hadn’t just killed her, he told the reporter. He had raped her as well.
“His story was very detailed — disturbingly so,” WISN news director Chris Gegg told the Associated Press.
On Saturday, a week after his phone call, Ferreira was officially charged with killing Jopek. His arrest has brought closure to Jopek’s mother, who long blamed herself for her daughter’s death. He has not yet filed a plea and his lawyer did not respond to requests for comment from the Associated Press.
“It’s been 33 years since she’s been gone,” Carolyn Tousignant said, according to the AP. “I’ve been praying for this day.”
Although bizarre, the telephoned confession was a fitting end to a vexing crime that also began with a call.
On March 16, 1982, Tousignant received a call from Kosciuszko Middle School to say that Jopek had been suspended from school. The principal asked if Tousignant wanted to come get her daughter, but Tousignant decided to let the 13-year-old walk the one block home from school.
“I figured she’ll be home, Tousignant told WISN, “but she never showed up.”
Carrie Anne Jopek went missing in 1982. He said she'd been haunting him since that day. >>http://t.co/ny1BLgog7Apic.twitter.com/rJSgSIMUh2
— WMC Action News 5 (@WMCActionNews5) October 16, 2015
For 17 months, there wasn’t a sign of Jopek. Her mother “waited and waited” for her daughter, but the investigation into the disappearance went nowhere, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Then, in August of 1983, a contractor was working on the back porch of a neighboring house when he struck something hard: human bone.
“She spent two of her birthdays underneath that porch,” Tousignant told the AP. “I didn’t want to know [she was dead], yet somehow I knew it would be best if the whole thing would just end,” she told the Journal Sentinel at the time.
Although the mystery of Carrie Ann’s location was sadly solved, the mystery over her murder was just beginning. It would take more than three decades for it to unravel.
© AP Photo Jose Ferreira who has been charged with murder of Carrie Ann Jopek. Jopek was found wearing the same clothes in which she had disappeared, leading Tousignant to think that she had died the very day she went missing. But by the time her body was unearthed, it was difficult for investigators to determine how she died, according to the Journal Sentinel.
Ferreira, who was 17 at the time and lived nearby, was apparently questioned about his neighbor’s disappearance but never arrested. Even when Jopek’s body was found, there wasn’t enough evidence to charge him.
But Tousignant had her suspicions.
According to Tousignant, Junior, as Ferreira was known, once told her that he and some friends were with Jopek when she hit her head and died, but he refused to tell police, according to this week’s WISN report. It’s unclear whether she went to police at that time to report that crucial conversation.
In that same conversations, she said Ferreira had told her: “They were drinking, they were all drinking Yukon Jack and smoking weed,” Tousignant told the TV station. ”They got scared, so they grabbed a dry cleaning bag, wrapped her up in that and dug a hole under the porch and buried her.”
If Ferreira somehow managed to escape investigators, he ultimately couldn’t hide from his own conscience, it seems.
On the morning of Oct. 11, he called the WISN news room and confessed to killing Jopek. The phone call raised “several red flags” and the news station contacted police before going public with the confession, according to the AP.
http://www.msn.com/en-in/news/world/%e2%80%98haunting%e2%80%99-mystery-apparently-solved-after-33-years-when-man-calls-tv-station-to-confess/ar-AAfDuOJ?li=AAaeRVN
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