GUILTY NY - Thomas Mulcahy, 57, & Thomas Marrero, 44, found dismembered, NYC, 1992 & 1993

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Evidence linking a former nurse charged with killing and dismembering two men to similar slayings in Pennsylvania, New York and Florida should be admitted at his trial, prosecutors say.

Ocean County authorities want to introduce testimony and evidence about the out-of-state killings in the trial next month of Richard W. Rogers. He is charged with murdering two men whose body parts were found wrapped in plastic bags and discarded at highway rest stops in Ocean and Burlington counties.
http://www.wnbc.com/news/5005819/detail.html
 
The lawyer for a former nurse charged with killing and dismembering two gay men told a jury police may have arrested the wrong man, and suggesting that his client's fingerprints prove he did nothing more than carry bags in which mutilated body parts were found.

In opening statements Wednesday in state Superior Court, David Ruhnke, the lawyer for Richard W. Rogers, said other fingerprints were found on the bags as well.

Rogers, 55, of Staten Island, N.Y., is charged with two counts of murder, but prosecutors are not seeking the death penalty because the dismemberments were carried out after the victims were already dead. He was arrested in May 2001 after forensic scientists matched his fingerprints to those found on plastic bags containing two victims' body parts.

Prosecutors also plan to introduce evidence about the killings and mutilation of two other men. Although Rogers is not charged in those killings, Judge James N. Citta ruled that the jury should be allowed to hear about them to weigh whether the similarities in the killings amount to a "signature" that could only have been done by Rogers.
http://www.nynewsday.com/news/local...27,0,6623907.story?coll=ny-region-apnewjersey
 
The big break in the case came on May 28, 2001, when Maine authorities, who had recently gone online with an automated fingerprint identification system, matched Rogers' prints to those on the bags that contained Mulcahy and Marrero's dismembered remains.

His fingerprints were on file in Maine because he had been tried in November 1973 for the slaying of his graduate school roommate at the University of Maine, Frederick Spencer. Claiming self defense, Rogers was acquitted in the hammer beating death.

Rogers was also tried _ and acquitted _ in a 1990 abduction and assault in New York. In that case, the victim met Rogers in a gay bar and returned to Rogers' home, where he said he was drugged with spiked orange juice and stripped, then woke up bound at the wrists and legs.
...........................
I wonder how many this scum has murdered and they have never found.:(
 
What got me is the number of times that he has been suspected but has gotten off.
It is like where he goes, people die. But he is innocent.
 
As Killer Faces Sentencing, His Motive Remains Elusive

One of the green plastic trash bags dumped 14 years ago off Route 72 in South Jersey contained the head of a man. Another bag held his torso and severed arms, while his legs were found in a third.
Ten months later, more bags surfaced. The police in Manchester Township, an hour and a half east of Philadelphia, found six bags near a dirt road, filled with the body parts of another man. Richard Rogers Jr., a Staten Island nurse, was convicted in November of murdering the two men, Thomas Mulcahy, 57, identified by prosecutors as a bisexual computer salesman, and Anthony Marrero, 44, identified as a male prostitute. Mr. Mulcahy, prosecutors said, was visiting Manhattan on business in July 1992.

Judge James Citta of New Jersey Superior Court will decide today whether Mr. Rogers should be sentenced to the maximum punishment of two life sentences. Mr. Rogers is suspected of at least two other murders, but prosecutors have said they do not have enough evidence.

Yet Mr. Rogers might never have been caught if not for the bags and the faint fingerprints they held. His crimes were meticulous, unobserved affairs hatched in the boozy haze of New York's upscale gay bars. Even now, after more than a decade of work, investigators say Mr. Rogers's motives remain a mystery.

"The big unanswered question in this case is why," said William Heisler, the Ocean County prosecutor who presented the case at a two-week trial in Toms River, N.J. "For whatever reason, he was targeting gay men in New York. All we know is they were drunk when they went missing."


More: http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/27/nyregion/27murder.html&OQ=_rQ3D1&OP=71144e94Q2FQ25PsYQ25Q5D8Xpe88ilQ25lQ3DQ3D,Q25Q3DQ23Q25lrQ25.3esku8.Q25lr_Q5BeQ5DseQ7CQ26i_Q5C

Username: registernow5
password: registernow
 
From April 2015:

http://www.lohud.com/story/news/crime/2015/04/28/crime-scene-last-call-killer/26513739/

Rogers was ultimately not charged in connection with the murders of Sakara or Anderson. Prosecutors in Rockland County declined to charge Rogers in the Sakara murder, citing a lack of evidence. He still is considered the prime suspect.

In 2006, Rogers was sentenced to two life terms plus 10 years in prison for Mulcahy and Marrero's killings. Now 64, he remains at Trenton's New Jersey State Prison, the toughest maximum-security facility in the state.
 
2021
''As the bodies pile up in author Elon Green's gripping true-crime book Last Call, there is growing alarm not just in their numbers but in the similar state in which they are found: dismembered, in layers of plastic trash bags knotted at least twice, their body parts often severed with precision.


But there is another commonality among the bodies found between 1991 and 1993 in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania: All four victims were all older gay men during a time of homophobia supercharged by the AIDS epidemic. New York City's gay piano bars seemed to offer a safe harbor — until a serial killer began frequenting them.


The first, Peter Anderson, 54, was a largely closeted banker, separated but still married, who was visiting Manhattan from Philadelphia on May 3, 1991. Two days later, a maintenance worker on the Pennsylvania Turnpike found his remains in a 55-gallon rest area trash barrel''
 
In July 1992, police announced the identity of a dismembered body found in seven plastic garbage bags in two locations in New Jersey. Parts of Thomas R. Mulcahy, 57, a father of four from Massachusetts, had been found at the Bustler Place rest area along Route 72 in Woodland Township, Burlington County, and at the Stafford Forge Picnic Area along the Garden State Parkway in Stafford Township, Ocean County, The Inquirer reported in 1992.

Police initially identified Mulcahy through a wallet found with his body parts, and later confirmed his ID through dental records, The Inquirer reported.

Mulcahy had last been seen alive in Manhattan, where he made a sales presentation at the World Trade Center, a few days before his murder. He, too, was last seen alive at the Townhouse.

A July 14, 1992, edition of The Inquirer details the murder of Thomas R. Mulcahy.

Murders tied to Rogers continued in 1993 with Anthony E. Marrero, 44, who lived in New York after leaving the Philadelphia area, according to an Inquirer report. Described in Inquirer reporting as a gay sex worker, Marrero was last seen at the New York Port Authority bus terminal in early May.

His dismembered remains were found days later in six plastic bags on Crow Hill Road in Manchester Township, Ocean County. He had died of multiple stab wounds, and like Mulcahy, his body had been cut into pieces.
Anthony E. Marrero, one of Rogers' victims, is shown in a May 31, 2001, edition of The Inquirer.

 

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