AP/ October 23, 2012, 3:21 AM

Body in recycling bin is likely missing N.J. girl, 12: Police

Anthony Pasquale, second from left, father of Autumn Pasquale, is comforted during candlelight vigil Moday night

Anthony Pasquale, second from left, father of Autumn Pasquale, is comforted during candlelight vigil Moday night / AP Photo/Joseph Kaczmarek

CLAYTON, N.J. The body of a female was found in a recycling container in Clayton and preliminarily identified as that of a 12-year-old southern New Jersey girl missing since the weekend, officials said early Tuesday.

Bernie Weisenfeld, spokesman for the Gloucester County Prosecutor's Office, said in a statement that the body was found 10 p.m. Monday by investigators with the Gloucester County Prosecutor's Office. Officials did not say exactly where the body was found.

7 Photos

Body of missing NJ girl found

Autumn Pasquale was reported missing from her Clayton home at 9:30 p.m. Saturday, and had been the subject of a large search over the last two days.

Weisenfeld said Pasquale's family has been notified of the discovery, which came a short time after a candlelight vigil was held for the girl.

An autopsy to confirm the body's identity will be conducted Tuesday morning by the Gloucester County Medical Examiner's office, officials said.

"This is a very sad day for the Pasquale family," Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean F. Dalton said in a statement. "Our hearts go out to the family and to all the residents of Clayton who stood together in support of this young girl."

About 200 law enforcement officials and hundreds more volunteers searched Monday for Pasquale.

Dalton had said Monday afternoon, 48 hours after anyone had heard from the girl, that 75 people had been interviewed. But investigators did not have any suspects or a sure sense of whether the quiet BMX biking enthusiast had left on her own or was the victim of foul play.

With the girl's parents flanking him while holding back tears, Dalton announced a $10,000 reward for information that leads authorities to the girl. The parents — Anthony Pasquale and Jennifer Cornwell — did not speak at the news conference. Both wept during the evening vigil.

Authorities said Autumn, whose 13th birthday is Oct. 29, was last seen around 12:30 p.m. Saturday pedaling her white bicycle away from the Clayton home where she lives with her father, her two siblings, her father's girlfriend and the girlfriend's children.

A friend, 11-year-old DeAnna Edwards-McMillen, said Autumn was at her house Friday night and they exchanged text messages on Saturday. She said she received the last one at 1:22 p.m. and didn't believe it was intended for her. She said it read, "don't be like that."

DeAnna said her friend was nice and easy to be around. "She didn't hate people," she said in a tearful interview with The Associated Press, "and people didn't hate her."

DeAnna's mother, Debi McMillen, said that Autumn was often at their house and that she always went home before her 8 p.m. curfew.

The last known communication was in a text message she sent around 2:30 p.m. Dalton would not say who received the message or what it contained. But he said that there was nothing alarming or unusual about it.

It wasn't until about 9:30 p.m. that she was reported missing -- 90 minutes past her 8 p.m. curfew, said Paul Spadofora, a family spokesman, the uncle of Autumn's father and the girl's godfather.

Dalton said 50 county and local law enforcement officers were on the case shortly after she was reported missing.

By Monday, the number grew fourfold as FBI and state police got involved in a search that has employed helicopters, horses, bloodhounds and computer experts. The computer experts were charged with seeing if any information about her whereabouts shows up on Facebook or elsewhere online.

Dalton said investigators accounted for all the registered sex offenders in the area, interviewed them and were searching their properties.

The weary crew of volunteers, meanwhile, was looking in area malls, handing out fliers at intersections in Clayton's tiny downtown and searching wherever they could.

One volunteer, Butch Diggs, took off work to help. He said his daughter is a friend of Autumn's from school and cheerleading. The girl who was at the center of the search was usually the quietest kid in the room, he said. "She's a good kid," he said.

Diggs, who had fliers with Autumn's picture taped to the side of his van, said he wanted to search in the woods that surround Clayton, but volunteers were not being allowed to.

Dalton said that's because adding more scents to the woods might make it harder for dogs to search there.

Early Monday, Weisenfeld said the girl's bike had not been found. By the afternoon, Dalton would not say whether it had been located.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
9 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
MIO42 says:
It's a sad observation on Humanity that as a species we harbour such diabolical Selfish sexual abnormalities within us
That there are no checks and balances in the minds of a few,usually male, that can't absorb the tragedy they inflict on individuals like this young girl and her family. Life long Scars that never go away. Is there a defence mechanism to avert such
Deranged acts? No one has found one yet and probably never will!
Perhaps when humanity has long disappeared from this speck of a planet whatever s left will rejoice that we're gone!
Condolences to this family, the rest of us can never know your HEARTBREAK!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
howbizarre says:
What I find tragic, Barcarr and Wennd, is that you live in such an awful area that you have to keep your children chained up. Yes, this is a tragedy, but the solution is not to keep your children indoors at all time with a leash on them so you know where they are. I played and roamed freely and so do my kids. I live in a very safe area where the only crime in the last 8 years has been stolen CDs out of unlocked cars. Does that mean I am certain no crime will ever be committed against my children? No? But I'll take the risk, knowing that the odds of a tragedy like this are rare and the repercussions of having helicopter parents are long-lasting. Condolences to the family and loved ones of this child. Please know that most of us know you did nothing wrong.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
angelofurnightmare says:
I cannot imagine letting my 12 year old out to do as he pleased for 9 hours....but when I was his age we took our bikes and were always around the neighborhood and nothing happened to us. I don't think the parents did anything criminal by letting her enjoy her weekend but I do believe that in a day and age where these kids have phones that calling in every hour or two isn't to much to ask.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
ZarathustraMike says:
We need to start disposing perpetrators of crimes such as this in Giant 'wood-chippers' on live TV so that other, scum sucking dogs, who are thinking of committing similar types of crimes will give it a second thought............
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Lerianis4 says:
Horrible event but still very uncommon today for a child to disappear and turn up dead.

To Barcar55, no, that is not very uncommon in the real world. Your parents might have kept you chained to them, my parents didn't and neither did most of my friends parents when I was a child.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Jonseen says:
I'm very sorry. Apparently a very sweet and lovely child... it's heartbreaking.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
wennd2834 says:
She left her house at 12:30 and was not reported missing until 9:30 when she didn't show up to her friend's house. I am sorry for their loss but cannot believe they allowed 9 hours to pass without checking on her!
reply
Lerianis4 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Wennd2834, again..... THAT IS NOTHING UNCOMMON. If you think that your child is going to a friend's house and don't get a call from the other child or her parents saying "X didn't show up!" most parents wouldn't think that anything was out of the ordinary.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
barcar55 says:
This is a tragic story. My question is, why would an 11 yr. old have an 8 p.m. curfew to sort of come and go as she pleased? I don't understand how a parent would not know where a child that young is going, with whom, and when would she return. You don't just turn them loose and say be home by 8. Plus, why wait 90 minutes past the curfew? Contact should have been maintained. Maybe these parents need to be investigated to see how they parent the other children in the home.
reply
Scroll Left Scroll Right