Las Vegas Review-Journal

FRIEND: ACCIDENT DROVE SUSPECT OVER EDGE

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Dinardo’s orbit said was close to him, wrote in a Facebook post Saturday that the two were best friends since fourth grade, but grew apart because of Dinardo’s behavior after an ATV accident. Dinardo was briefly hospitaliz­ed for a mental health issue.

“The Cosmo I knew for over 10 years would never be capable of anything like this,” Hellmuth wrote.

During Dinardo’s confession, the prosecutor’s office said, he also claimed that, at 15, he killed two people in Philadelph­ia.

Dinardo grew up in the middle-class suburb of Bensalem, the oldest child of Antonio and Sandra Dinardo. Antonio Dinardo owns a concrete company, Metro Ready Mix and Supply, and inherited a lucrative real estate portfolio after the death of his father, for whom Cosmo Dinardo was named. Sandra Dinardo runs a trucking company, Bella Trucking, and she and her husband built a profitable partnershi­p by selling concrete and delivering it.

A neighbor of the Dinardos in Bensalem said Cosmo Dinardo’s grandfathe­r and father, who goes by Tony, built all of the stucco homes on their cul-de-sac. “He’s a workaholic, Tony,” said the neighbor, a physician, who asked to be identified by only his first name, Abid.

Sabrina Gramiak, 23, who said she attended St. Charles Borromeo School, a private elementary school in Bensalem, at the same time as Cosmo Dinardo, remembers him as “a normal boy who just got into minor trouble.” She said he was once given the “Peacemaker of the Month” award. By eighth grade, he was bench-pressing 220 pounds and orchestrat­ing well-attended pool parties at his home.

But if there was a social side, there was also a scary, dark one, acquaintan­ces said. While he was a teenager, his anger and aggression could not be talked down. At 15, he punched two strangers at a mall when he saw them talking to his girlfriend, according to a friend.

“Cosmo was crazy,” said Amber Peters, 20, whose boyfriend was once close to Dinardo. “He’s been talking about killing people since he was 14.”

She said Cosmo Dinardo made unwanted and obnoxious overtures to young women on social media. “He randomly messages girls, saying, ‘Hey, babe,’ calling them hos and trying to have sex with them.”

After high school, most of his friends went into the workforce and started families. Cosmo Dinardo enrolled in August 2015 as a commuter student at Arcadia University in Glenside, Pa, about 20 miles west of Bensalem, and declared an interest in biology.

At a concert before the semester began, he invited a group of female students to his house to swim. They declined, but Cosmo Dinardo did not leave it at that.

“He texted me every day after that asking me to hang out,” said Sara Dinner, a student from Mechanicsb­urg, Pa. “I eventually blocked his number because if he didn’t get his way, he would get so upset. I think he had anger management issues, honestly.”

Dinardo completed only one semester at Arcadia, but the next fall he began hanging around campus. The campus police received complaints of “verbal incidents” by Dinardo that “unnerved university community members,” said Laura Baldwin, a university spokeswoma­n. The school sent him a certified letter stating that if he returned to campus, he would be treated as a trespasser. The school also notified the local police, Baldwin said.

Last week, a woman posted a series of messages exchanged on Facebook in December and January that show Dinardo aggressive­ly pestering her for a date and more. “Leave me alone please” the woman replied, to which he answered, “why baeb I’m pretty cute and so are you,” and “i wanna make babies asap.”

The woman confirmed that the exchange was authentic, but like several acquaintan­ces of Dinardo’s who spoke of his behavior, asked not to be identified by name.

After he left Arcadia, Dinardo worked for his father’s concrete company, but he wrote on Facebook in November that he had moved on to sell “firewood,” which some friends said was a code for drugs. Friends said he sold guns and marijuana, and one friend said he wanted to move up to selling harder drugs and larger quantities.

Friends and acquaintan­ces said Dinardo changed last year after he crashed a four-wheeler while alone in the woods on the family farm in Solebury Township, about 45 miles north of Philadelph­ia. According to some accounts, he was stranded for hours, suffering from broken bones, until his father and younger brother found him. Some friends said he suffered a serious head injury.

A longtime friend said: “That incident drove him over the edge. He was a more violent individual.” The friend asked not to be named because of a desire to not offend Dinardo’s family and an agreement among his friends to stay silent.

At an arraignmen­t hearing last week, a Bucks County prosecutor said Dinardo was once diagnosed with schizophre­nia. Members of his family and a lawyer representi­ng Dinardo declined requests for more informatio­n about his mental health. One longtime friend said Dinardo twice spent time in a mental institutio­n.

Dinardo, according to the authoritie­s, instigated the killings of four men — Jimi Taro Patrick, 19; Dean Finocchiar­o, 19; Thomas Meo, 21; and Mark Sturgis, 22 — with Kratz as an accomplice to three of them. They were both charged with multiple counts of homicide.

Kratz, who has a history of burglary, theft and other arrests, grew up moving around different Philadelph­ia neighborho­ods and suburbs. He worked from 2014 to 2016 as a dishwasher at a retirement community, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported, but was better known by some people for terrorizin­g his former girlfriend’s neighborho­od.

Residents recalled him as the skinny teenager in a black hoodie accused of breaking into homes and stealing jewelry and landscapin­g tools, the newspaper reported. Now friends are trying to make sense of how catastroph­ically his life went off the rails.

On Sunday evening, around 500 people, including some of the victims’ family members, attended a candleligh­t vigil on the grounds of a memorial for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks near Newtown, Pa. “It’s really about the community coming together and healing,” said Gloria Cugine, one of the organizers, before the 35-minute ceremony.

Hellmuth, a student at Drexel University, according to his Facebook page, wrote that he was not trying to excuse Dinardo’s behavior as he tried to process his own shock and pain about it.

“His parents never in a million years thought their son would ever be involved in something like this nor did they raise him in any way that made him do something like this,” Hellmuth wrote.

 ?? MATT ROURKE / AP ?? Pennsylvan­ia State Police officers walk up a driveway Friday in Solebury, Pa., as part of the investigat­ion of four slain Pennsylvan­ia men. Bucks County, Pa., prosecutor­s say Cosmo Dinardo, has admitted killing the four men who went missing last week and told authoritie­s the location of the bodies. Prosecutor­s agreed to take the death penalty off the table in return for Dinardo’s cooperatio­n.
MATT ROURKE / AP Pennsylvan­ia State Police officers walk up a driveway Friday in Solebury, Pa., as part of the investigat­ion of four slain Pennsylvan­ia men. Bucks County, Pa., prosecutor­s say Cosmo Dinardo, has admitted killing the four men who went missing last week and told authoritie­s the location of the bodies. Prosecutor­s agreed to take the death penalty off the table in return for Dinardo’s cooperatio­n.
 ?? BUCKS COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The four victims are, from left, Dean Finocchiar­o, 18, Tom Meo, 21, Jimi Patrick, 19, and Mark Sturgis, 22.
BUCKS COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES The four victims are, from left, Dean Finocchiar­o, 18, Tom Meo, 21, Jimi Patrick, 19, and Mark Sturgis, 22.

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