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Conn. Police Say Possible Ritual in Theft of Body

More news stories on Curious Customs and Beliefs

John Cristoffersen, AP, July 8, 2009

Authorities investigating the theft of a 2-year-old girl’s body from a Connecticut cemetery said Wednesday that evidence at the crime scene points to a possible ritual.

Stamford Capt. Richard Conklin said investigators are looking at the crime “as a ritualistic sort of thing.” He cited beliefs such as Santeria, a Caribbean blend of West African beliefs and Catholicism, or Palo Mayombe, a religion originally from the Congo region of Africa and brought to the Americas by slaves.

“A lot of things point to it,” Conklin said without elaborating.

Two men fishing in the Passaic River on Sunday in Clifton, N.J., found the child’s body in a bag at the shoreline. An investigation led authorities to the grave of a girl who was buried in Stamford in 2007.

Margarite Fernandez Olmos, a professor at Brooklyn College and co-author of the book “Creole Religions of the Caribbean,” said the body theft “doesn’t sound like a Santeria practice.” Some practitioners of Palo Mayombe, which has several names, may use a skull, she said.

{snip}

Donna Loglisci, Stamford’s town clerk who signed disinterment papers permitting authorities to exhume the coffin, identified the girl as Imani Joyner. The girl was called a miracle baby by doctors in a 2006 article in The Advocate of Stamford because she survived more than two years even though she was born with semi-lobar holoprosencephaly, a condition that kept her brain from developing fully.

“We thought the interest in this particular baby might be the background, since it was labeled a miracle baby,” Conklin said. “So that’s why we believe this baby in particular might have been targeted and it might not be a random act. They would seek that mystic power, perceived power of it being a miracle baby.”

Original article

(Posted on July 9, 2009)

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Comments

1 — alex wrote at 7:02 PM on July 9:

I live in Fairfield County, and believe it or not this kind of thing is actually becoming almost common to the area. In June, a drug bust turned up a “sacrificial rituals room” in a basement, complete with human and animal skulls. And then just this past Friday, a family, again in Bridgeport, found two human skulls partially buried in their recently deceased father’s grave, stuffed with bloodstained papers with peoples’ names written on them.

http://tinyurl.com/kwwk7z
http://tinyurl.com/nhstez

I can’t help but feel enriched and energized by these “quaint” and “colorful” customs that our wonderfully “diverse” population has brought to this part of Connecticut. I don’t know how we ever got by without them.

2 — Joe wrote at 8:35 PM on July 9:

NJ has a constant stream of these grave robbing incidents due to our diverse, vibrant friends from Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

3 — Dutchman wrote at 8:55 PM on July 9:

Here is an interesting book on a related subject:
http://www.amazon.com/Human-Sacrifice-Shocking-Killings-Worldwide/dp/1569803463/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247187022&sr=1-2

Includes cases of ritual sacrifice from the Caribbean and Central America. Some odd cases from the USA.

Isn’t diversity wonderful?

4 — flyingtiger wrote at 12:10 AM on July 10:

Isn’t diversity wonderful!

5 — Anonymous wrote at 5:41 AM on July 10:

Come back Burke and Hare, all is forgiven!

6 — Anonymous wrote at 1:54 PM on July 10:

Perhaps she was never buried at all, but kept for a while as an anatomical curiosity, sold by a corrupt funeral home. That might explain why she was found so far from the place of her supposed burial, the plot undisturbed, and her body in a plastic bag.


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