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"Kensington Strangler" Suspect Has No Violent Record, Says Prison Official

"Kensington Strangler" Suspect Has No Violent Record, Says Prison Official
Antonio Rodriguez (CBS/Philadelphia Police Dept.)

PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (CBS/KYW/AP) A prison official says Antonio Rodriguez, the man arrested in a series of strangling deaths in the Kensington section of Philadelphia, has no record of violent crime.

Bob Eskind, a spokesman for the Philadelphia prison system, said Tuesday that the 22-year-old was jailed on drug charges June 5 and released on bail Aug. 19. He says Rodriguez pleaded guilty Oct. 21 in that case but was immediately paroled and given one year of probation.

At least three young women were found strangled to death in the Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia after being sexually assaulted in November and December. Others came forward saying they had barely survived similar attacks.

Police say that DNA evidence run through their offender database has helped them zero in on Rodriguez.

Rodriguez was taken into custody on a unrelated bench warrant near the area of the murders after a caller phoned in a tip, reports CBS affiliate KYW. The announcement Monday night came shortly after a news conference in which Philadelphia Police Capt. James Clark said Rodriguez was being sought as a "person of interest" in the case.

Rodriguez had not been charged with any crime in the strangling cases, and police had not even obtained an arrest warrant for him, Clark said. But the link made by state police in their offender database was "a major break in the case," he said.

Clark said state police had contacted Philadelphia police about the match in their offender database.

"Right now, the information we're getting is he's homeless, he's wandering in the area, he's frequenting abandoned houses...so right now we do not believe anyone is helping him out," Clark said.

Two young women, 35-year-old Nicole Piacentini and 21-year-old Elaine Goldberg, were sexually assaulted and strangled in November. Another, 27-year-old Casey Mahoney, was found murdered in December.

Other women came forward, claiming to have barely survived sexual assaults and strangulation attempts. In all, Rodriguez is believed to have sexually assaulted three other women who survived.

Rodriguez has not yet been charged in the case.

The attacks took place in a stretch of Kensington known for open prostitution and drugs, although an influx of artists and young homebuyers have made parts of the neighborhood, a few miles north of downtown, a bit trendier in recent years.

COVERAGE OF THE KENSINGTON STRANGLER ON CRIMESIDER

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