{"id":1838,"date":"2025-04-29T23:14:35","date_gmt":"2025-04-29T23:14:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.phithuongbatphu.com\/?p=1838"},"modified":"2025-04-30T01:49:05","modified_gmt":"2025-04-30T01:49:05","slug":"ct-police-quash-new-england-serial-killer-rumors-arrest-man-after-woman-found-dismembered-in-suitcase","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.phithuongbatphu.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/29\/ct-police-quash-new-england-serial-killer-rumors-arrest-man-after-woman-found-dismembered-in-suitcase\/","title":{"rendered":"CT police quash New England serial killer rumors, arrest man after woman found dismembered in suitcase"},"content":{"rendered":"
Officials in Groton, Connecticut, on Monday announced the arrest of a man in connection with the murder of Suzanne Wormser, <\/a>58, whose body was found dismembered and stuffed into a suitcase near a cemetery on March 19.<\/p>\n Donald Coffel, Wormser’s 68-year-old roommate, is charged with murder, tampering with physical evidence and disposing of a dead body in Connecticut Superior Court<\/a> after police found Wormser’s body on March 19, though they believe her remains were left in the cemetery sometime in mid-March.<\/p>\n “Both the victim and the suspect knew each other. This was a targeted event,” Groton Police Department Chief David Burton said during a Monday press conference announcing Coffel’s arrest.<\/p>\n Burton added that police searched another crime scene at the Groton residence Coffel and Wormser shared on April 17 and interviewed Coffel, a person of interest at the time who later became the primary suspect.<\/p>\n NEW ENGLAND SERIAL KILLER FEARS MERIT \u2018REVIEW AND INVESTIGATION\u2019 AFTER REMAINS FOUND ACROSS 3 STATES: EXPERT<\/u><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n Coffel allegedly confessed to the murder during his third interview with police, saying he beat Wormser with a baseball bat during an argument over crack-cocaine, according to an arrest warrant obtained by FOX 61.<\/a> Authorities found a bat with blood and hair on it, as well as a hand saw and a woman’s clothing covered in a blood-like substance inside the residence Coffel shared with Wormser, according to the warrant.<\/p>\n Coffel is being held on $1 million bond. He had a hearing from a hospital on Monday, where he is being treated for cancer, FOX 61 reported.<\/p>\n The arrest warrant states that a passerby noticed a luggage bag placed by trash cans near the cemetery for several weeks. Inside the luggage, authorities discovered a human torso.<\/p>\n Coffel’s arrest is the first in a series of discoveries of 11 human remains across Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts between March and April that have prompted rumors of a serial killer online.<\/a><\/p>\n “During the course of the police department’s investigation, there have been many rumors and unsubstantiated fear-mongering taking place on social media, making this city and surrounding communities seem like unsafe places to live. I’m here to assure you that the City of Groton is among the safest communities in the Northeast,” Groton Mayor Keith Hedrick said during a Monday press conference. “Approximately six weeks after the discovery of human remains at Colonel Ledyard Cemetery, I am pleased to announce that an arrest has been made, and a person of interest is in custody.”<\/p>\n SIGN UP TO GET <\/strong>TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTER<\/u><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n The Connecticut State Police told Fox News Digital earlier this month that “there is no information at this time suggesting any connection to similar remains discoveries, and there is also no known threat to the public at this time,” regarding the deaths in Connecticut.\u00a0<\/p>\n Other remains have been located in New Haven, Norwalk, Groton, Killingly and now Rocky Hill, Connecticut; Foster, Rhode Island; and Framingham,\u00a0Plymouth, Springfield, and now Taunton, Massachusetts<\/u><\/a>.<\/p>\n The New Haven Police Department recently identified a victim whose body was discovered on March 25 on Rock Creek Road as Denise Leary, 59. She had been missing since September of last year.<\/p>\n FOLLOW THE FOX TRUE CRIME TEAM ON X<\/u><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n “At the time, we had no indication that there was any criminal aspect to her case,” New Haven PD Public Information Officer Christian Bruckhart told Fox News Digital in a Tuesday interview. “This was not necessarily unusual behavior for her to leave. She had some mental health diagnoses that she was suffering with, and \u2026 we’ve tried to be cognizant of her family’s feelings in this time because there was a time when she was missing, they wanted her to come back, then there were remains found a short distance from their house. So I’m sure they were hoping it wasn’t her, and now they have to kind of go through all this again with sort of people online speculating about her.”<\/p>\n Bruckhart wants to remind the public that victims are not “just the face on the screen”<\/p>\n