Federal Bureau of Investigation

Person of Interest in Case of 4 Missing Men in Bucks County, Pennsylvania Released on $1 Million Bail

Cosmo DiNardo, 20, posted 10 percent of $1 million bail after he was held in the Bucks County Jail on an unrelated gun charge

Cosmo DiNardo, the person of interest in the disappearance of four young men in Bucks County, was released on bail Tuesday night after his father posted bail. NBC10’s Denise Nakano has the latest on the search for the missing young men.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Cosmo DiNardo confessed Thursday to participating in the killing of the four men, his attorney tells NBC10.

The man named as a person of interest in the disappearance of four young men in Bucks County, Pennsylvania was released from jail Tuesday night.

Cosmo DiNardo, 20, who was being held in the Bucks County Jail on an unrelated gun charge, was released after his father posted 10 percent of $1 million bail.

Prosecutors believe DiNardo may have information about the vanishing of four men whose disappearance has sparked an intense hunt over recent days including an exhaustive inspection of a 90 acre farm in Solebury Township.

SkyForce10/Bucks County DA
Dennis Byrne
Wednesday, July 5nJimi Patrick, from Newtown, Pennsylvania, goes missing. Officials say he was last seen on July 5 at about 6 p.m. He was reported missing the next day after he had no contact with friends and family.
Officials say that on July 5, Patrick drives to the the property owned by family of Cosmo DiNardo to buy $8,000 worth of marijuana. Patrick allegedly did not have enough money for the purchase, and DiNardo took him to a remote part of the property and shot him.
Court documents allege that DiNardo then used a backhoe to dig a hole and bury Patrick in a secluded part of the property.
Bucks County District Attorney's Office
Friday, July 7nMark Sturgis, pictured left, tells his father he is going to meet his friend Thomas Meo, pictured right, of Doylestown in Bucks County. Sturgis leaves his Pennsburg home and was not heard from again.
Bucks County DA
Dean Finocchiaro, 19, of Langhorne, also went missing on Friday, July 7. Police say he was last seen around 6:30 p.m. getting into a vehicle.
Officials revealed that on Friday, July 7, Finocchiaro got into a car with DiNardo and his cousin, Sean Kratz to purchase $700 worth of marijuana. The two decided to rob Finocchiaro. Kratz allegedly shot Finocchiaro in the head, and DiNardo shot him a second time. Officials say the cousins then used a backhoe to place the body in a metal tank.
The same night, officials say DiNardo sets up a drug deal with Meo and Sturgis. When Meo and Sturgis arrived at the Solebury farm, officials say DiNardo shot Meo in the back, and then shot Sturgis as he was running away. He and Kratz allegedly used a backhoe to place the bodies in the tank, where Finocchiaro's body was. DiNardo confesses that he and Kratz poured gasoline in the tank and burned the bodies, before using a backhoe to bury Finocchiaro, Sturgis, and Meo's bodies.
NBC10
Saturday, July 8
nCosmo DiNardo allegedly tries to sell Meo's car to a friend in Bensalem. Meo's mother reports him missing after he fails to show up for work and fails to respond to texts from his girlfriend.
NBC10 - Brian X. McCrone
That same day, DiNardo contacted a man named "KBM" around 5:00 p.m. to try and sell Meo's car for $500.
AP/FILE
Sunday, July 9
At 2:10 a.m., Sturgis' vehicle is found in the area of Peddler's Village in Buckingham Township, about 2 miles away from a DiNardo family home on Aquetong Road.
NBC10 - Brian X. McCrone
Just two hours after Sturgis' car was found Sunday morning, Meo's car was discovered inside a garage on the DiNardo property. Authorities found Meo's diabetic supplies were in the car, and his car keys hanging on a wall in the garage.
Monday, July 10nVarious law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, help in the search, focusing on a vast property. The 90-acre farm in New Hope, Solebury Township belongs to the DiNardo family.
Later that day, Bucks County District Attorney Mark Weintraub says he believes "foul play" is involved in the disappearance of the men as information began to surface that all four men were connected.
Police also search another property belonging to the DiNardo family Monday, in Bensalem where Cosmo DiNardo lives.
DiNardo, 20, is arrested Monday his home is searched. He is arrested on an unrelated gun charge and held on $1 million bond.
Bensalem Police, Bucks County District Attorney's Office
Tuesday, July 11nAs the search continues, Weintraub reveals for the first time that DiNardo, whose family owns real estate in the area, is a "person of interest" in the disappearances. Prosecutors also confirm that all four of the young men seem to have a connection to each other and DiNardo.
SkyForce10
Throughout the day on Tuesday, a massive police force searches the DiNardo property in Solebury Township, digging and sifting through dirt. Officials report more than 50 people, including FBI agents and police recruits, are searching for clues.
AP Photo/Matt Rourke
That day, DiNardo's father, Antonio DiNardo, posts $100,000 (10 percent of $1 million) bail.
SkyForce10
Wednesday, July 12
nWeintraub says they have found "several pieces of evidence" on the DiNardo property.
Weintraub says, "The search at the scene right up the road is really intensifying." He says he's confident they will find something: "We have been utilizing resources, resources I didn't even know existed."
NBC10
On Wednesday, DiNardo is arrested again for trying to sell Meo's car. Bail is set at $5 million. Weintraub considers DiNardo "to be even more of a flight risk."
Weintraub announces later that day that Meo's diabetic kit, "which he never went anywhere without," was found in his vehicle. The DA says that without the kit, Meo could go into "diabetic shock."
SkyForce10
Thursday, July 13
nIn a midnight news conference, Weintraub announces remains have been found in a 12-1/2 foot hole, a "common grave," on the DiNardo property.
NBC10
In that press conference, authorities identify 19-year-old Dean Finocchiaro's remains. They are still working to identify the other remains. "This is a homicide, make no mistake about it," Weintraub said.
NBC10
Thursday, July 13 About 5:45 p.m., Cosmo DiNardo's attorney Paul Lang announced his client admitted in a "full confession" to participation in the murders of four men who disappeared in early July. The confession is part of a deal to avoid the death penalty, Lang said.
Matt Rourke/AP
"I'm sorry," a shackled Cosmo DiNardo said as he left the courthouse in an orange prison uniform.
Katy Zachary
Friday, July 14
nInformation is released around 12:30 p.m. that Sean Kratz, 20, is in custody and charged with allegedly killing the four young men. Kratz was taken into custody from this house on Magee Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia on July 13.
Bucks County District Attorney's Office via AP
Bucks County DA Matthew Weintraub announces charges against DiNardo and Kratz. DiNardo faces four counts each of criminal homicide, abuse of a corpse, and robbery inflicted injury, as well as a possession of weapon charge. Kratz faces three counts each of criminal homicide, abuse of a corpse, and robbery inflicted injury, as well as possession of weapon. Both were denied bail. DiNardo is being held in the Bucks County Jail, Kratz in another county's facility. Both have preliminary hearings scheduled for September 7.
Tuesday, July 18
nPhiladelphia Police Commissioner Richard Ross said his department hoped to interview DiNardo after sources said DiNardo claimed he killed other people in the past in Philly.
NBC10
Sources inform NBC10 later that day that DiNardo told Bucks County detectives that he killed a woman in the basement of a Philadelphia home. Sources say DiNardo also claimed to kill another man, but only offered a nickname for the individual. Authorities say that the dates, times, and locations surrounding DiNardo's haven’t been corroborated.
SkyForce10
Thursday, July 20
nPhiladelphia police joined the search for clues. Bucks County DA Weintraub said various agencies wanted to comb the farm before turning it back over to the DiNardo family.

Mark Sturgis, 22, of Pennsburg, Montgomery County; 21-year-old Tom Meo, of Plumstead Township; 19-year-old Dean Finocchiaro, of Middletown Township; and 19-year-old Jimi Tar Patrick, of Newtown Township are missing.

Investigators began looking at DiNardo after they received tips indicating he was seen with them shortly before they went missing.

Bucks County District Attorney Matthew Weintraub stressed at a news conference Tuesday that DiNardo is not being called a suspect and has not been charged with any crime connected to the search.

Bucks County District Attorney's Office
Cosmo DiNardo

"I want to make it very, very clear that Mr. DiNardo has been arrested on charges that do not relate or pertain to this case," Weintraub said.

"Sometimes the chasm between a person of interest, and being a person that is actually accused or arrested, and certainly convicted of a crime, is so wide that we never cross it."

According to an affidavit obtained by NBC10, DiNardo, of Bensalem, was accused of possessing a 20-gauge shotgun and ammunition in February despite being barred from owning a firearm due to a history of mental illness that included an involuntary commitment. A district judge dismissed the charge in May, but the district attorney authorized for it to be refiled on Monday.

Newtown Township Police, Middletown Township Police
(L to R), Jimi Patrick, Dean Finocchiaro

Police used cadaver dogs, a backhoe and other construction equipment Tuesday to help search the Bucks County farm owned by DiNardo's family.

Officials said they were chasing "incredibly hot" leads as they spent much of Monday and again Tuesday scouring the large swath of farmland along Lower York Road in Solebury Township, about 30 miles north of Philadelphia. SkyForce10 captured crime scene experts digging with shovels and sifting through the dirt with their hands. Law enforcement sources said there are six sites on the ground investigators are digging up first.

"We are still gradually sifting through the property," Weintraub said. "It’s 90-something acres, and we are going through it with the equivalent of a fine-toothed comb. It’s going to take us a very long time to get through it."

Bucks County District Attorney's Office
(L-R): Mark Sturgis & Tom Meo

Some 50 people are actively searching for clues, Weintraub said. Montgomery County lent police cadets to aid in the investigation.

Sources said pieces of forensic evidence uncovered in one of the buildings the DiNardo family owns is of particular interest to investigators, but did not reveal why. Detectives also searched one of the family's properties in Bensalem. Tuesday's search ended around 8:30 p.m. Officials will resume the search Wednesday around 8 a.m.

Weintraub on Monday called the search an "all hands on deck" situation as the FBI, state police and five local law enforcement agencies have joined the case. He also said that based on information that he "can't share," foul play was likely involved in the disappearance of the young men.

Weintraub said Tuesday that any tips from the public could help in their investigation

The missing men and DiNardo all appear to know one another, prosecutors said. According to Sturgis' father, Mark Potash, Sturgis and Meo are longtime friends who work in construction for him. Finocchiaro is a mutual friend of theirs, Potash said.

Patrick went missing on Wednesday, July 5. He has not contacted family or friends or shown up for work, police said.

Finocchiaro was last seen Friday around 6:30 p.m. getting into a vehicle on Hampton Drive.

Sturgis was last seen leaving his home on Walt Road in Pennsburg, around 6 p.m. Friday to visit his friend, Meo, in Doylestown, Sturgis' father told NBC10. 

Patrick stands 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs around 150 pounds. He was last seen wearing gray shorts and a polo shirt with a multi-colored design.

Finocchiaro has brown hair and hazel eyes, standing 5 feet 9 inches tall and weighing 150 pounds. 

Sturgis stands 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs 240 pounds with black hair and a black beard.

Meo stands 5 feet 5 inches tall and weighs 140 pounds with blond hair and blue eyes. His 2004 Nissan Altima turned up at Peddler's Village Saturday, his father told NBC10.

"How can the public help? What we're looking for is information that connects these four men together, that may connect them to the property we're searching, connect them to Cosmo DiNardo perhaps," Weintraub said. "I can't say if there is in fact that type of information but if there is, I beg of you to please give it to us and let us run it down."

Family members kept vigil Tuesday at the search site, prosecutors said. Asked if the four missing men could still be alive, Weintraub said, "I think it's very important to hang on to hope."

Police ask anyone with information to call 215-297-8201 or submit a tip online

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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