Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Jeannette DePalma

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Name
  
Jeannette DePalma

Occupation
  
Student

Citizenship
  
United States

Nationality
  
American


Full Name
  
Jeannette Christine DePalma

Born
  
August 3, 1956 (
1956-08-03
)
Jersey City, New Jersey

Died
  
c. August 7, 1972 (1972-08-08) (aged 16) Springfield Township, New Jersey, New Jersey, U.S.

Cause of death
  
Unknown; believed to be homicide by strangulation.

Body discovered
  
September 19, 1972

Satanic Ritual - Jeannette DePalma Documentary


The murder of Jeannette DePalma (August 3, 1956 – c. August 7, 1972) is believed to have occurred sometime on or around August 7, 1972 in Springfield Township, New Jersey.

Contents

The case, currently unsolved, has become a matter of significant controversy due, in part, to coverage in Weird NJ magazine.

Discovery of the body

On the afternoon of Monday, August 7, 1972, 16-year-old Jeannette DePalma left her home on Clearview Road in Springfield Township, New Jersey, telling her mother that she was going to take a train to a friend's house.

When she did not arrive at her friend's home or return later that evening, her parents filed a missing person report with the Springfield Police Department.

Six weeks later, on September 19 her remains were found atop a cliff inside of Springfield's Houdaille Quarry. This occurred after a local dog brought her decomposing right forearm and hand back to its owner.

According to several witnesses at the scene, Jeannette's skeletal remains were surrounded by a series of strange and possibly occult objects. Descriptions vary, but the most commonly agreed upon account states that the remains were found inside a coffin-shaped perimeter of fallen branches and logs, and inside this perimeter were several small makeshift wooden crosses.

Later, some Springfield residents claimed that DePalma's remains were actually found lying on a pentagram, surrounded by mutilated animal remains. Law enforcement authorities have denied that this was true. Further controversy was aroused when it was discovered that the body had been found on a cliff known to locals for several decades as “The Devil’s Teeth”.

Investigation

The Springfield Police Department began an investigation of Jeannette DePalma's death after an autopsy did not reveal a cause of death.

Her remains and clothing showed no evidence of bone fractures, bullet wounds, or knife strikes. No drug paraphernalia was found on or around the body. For undisclosed reasons, the coroner suspected that strangulation was the cause of death, leading the Union County Prosecutor’s Office to treat the case as an unsolved homicide. The coroner also discovered an unusually high amount of lead in the remains, but no explanation was found for this occurrence either.

Early in the investigation, the Springfield Police Department received a tip regarding a homeless man living in the woods near the place where the body was found. This man was known to locals simply as "Red", and it was alleged that he fled his campsite in the woods shortly after DePalma went missing. While this lead initially looked promising, the Union County Prosecutor's Office ultimately decided that "Red" had nothing to do with Jeannette's death.

Investigators continued to attempt to find leads, but due to the DePalma family’s private nature, along with inconsistent stories told by her friends and peers, the case eventually went cold.

Allegations of human sacrifice

Around two weeks after the discovery of DePalma's remains, several newspapers, including the Star-Ledger and the New York Daily News, began reporting that she may have been the victim of an occult sacrifice carried out either by Satanists or by a local coven of witches who operated inside nearby Watchung Reservation.

This coverage was spurred by the fact that the body had been found surrounded by strange objects, and by the theories of the DePalma family's Evangelical pastor, James Tate of the Assemblies of God Evangel Church. Rumors about the case set off a panic in several Union County communities, which were still recovering from the shock of the John List murders, which had occurred only 10 months earlier.

Aftermath

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Weird NJ magazine began to report on the decades-old cold case after receiving several anonymous letters regarding Jeannette's death.

Editor and co-founder Mark Moran began investigating the case and discovered many suspicious details, including the allegation that the Springfield Police Department had lost or destroyed the case file.

The Springfield Police Department maintains that the file was lost due to flooding caused by Hurricane Floyd in 1999. Others allege that a copy of it is still on file.

Moran eventually teamed up with Weird NJ correspondent Jesse P. Pollack to write the book Death on the Devil’s Teeth: The Strange Murder That Shocked Suburban New Jersey. Throughout the course of their research, Pollack and Moran discovered several instances of a possible cover-up, connections to other unsolved murders, and previously unknown suspects.

References

Jeannette DePalma Wikipedia