The Mercury News

Search for fugitive man stretches to Maryland

- By Pat Eaton-Robb

HARTFORD, CONN. >> A lawyer for the family of a fugitive college student said Wednesday the 23-yearold suspect in two Connecticu­t slayings has no outdoor survival training and his parents are begging him to bring a peaceful end to the search that has stretched to Maryland.

Since the first homicide on Friday, investigat­ors have followed the trail of Peter Manfredoni­a through New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia, where police on Wednesday said someone matching his descriptio­n took a ride-hailing service to the Hagerstown, Maryland, area.

An attorney for Manfredoni­a’s family, Michael Dolan, told The Associated Press they are worried for the well-being of the University of Connecticu­t senior.

“That’s why they are extending this message. They’re there for you. They are going to support you through this with their resources, their love and support,” said Dolan, who declined to say whether Manfredoni­a has been in contact with his family. “They are begging him to put a peaceful end to this.”

Manfredoni­a is wanted by Connecticu­t state police in the machete killing of 62-year-old Ted DeMers and wounding of another man in Willington on Friday. Manfredoni­a went to another man’s home, held him hostage, stole his guns and truck, then drove on Sunday about 70 miles southwest to Derby, Connecticu­t, state police said.

Police say Manfredoni­a went to the home of a high school classmate, Nicholas Eisele, shot him to death, forced Eisele’s girlfriend into her car and fled the state. The girlfriend was found unharmed with her car at a rest stop on Interstate 80 in Columbia, New Jersey, police said.

Manfredoni­a then took an Uber to a Walmart in East Stroudsbur­g, Pennsylvan­ia, not far from the New Jersey border, Pennsylvan­ia State Police said, where he was seen walking in a wooded area on some railroad tracks.

“He’s an intelligen­t young man, but he’s had no specific training to survive out in the woods,” Dolansaid.

Police in Duryea, Pennsylvan­ia, about 50 miles away, said a firefighte­r spotted a man matching Manfredoni­a’s descriptio­n and carrying a large backpack on Tuesday night.

A car that police said might have been stolen there by Manfredoni­a was recovered in Chambersbu­rg, Pennsylvan­ia, on Wednesday at a convenienc­e store where the ride-hailing service picked up someone matching his descriptio­n and drove to Maryland, police said.

Police released pictures from the convenienc­e store that show a man matching Manfredoni­a’s general descriptio­n at the cash register. Police said he was wearing red sneakers.

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