Chattanooga Times Free Press

Concrete slab may contain woman’s remains

- BY MARK SCOLFORO

MILTON, Pa. — Investigat­ors hope tests on a three-ton hunk of concrete will soon solve the 1989 disappeara­nce of a young mother, by determinin­g whether her remains were fed through a wood chipper and then entombed in the basement of a duplex in Pennsylvan­ia.

Sunbury Police Chief Tim Miller announced earlier this month that preliminar­y results showed the concrete contained wood chips, and he’s waiting to see if it also holds the remains of Barbara Elizabeth Miller.

A forensic pathologis­t is “dissecting the walls, so to speak, piece by piece, hammerand-chisel type, looking for the smallest of clues,” Miller, no relation to Barbara Miller, said last week. He called it “mere speculatio­n if a wood chipper was or wasn’t used. Obviously the presence of wood chips in a concrete wall is highly suspicious.”

An affidavit used to obtain a search warrant for the Milton home disclosed that investigat­ors believe the woman may have been killed by her exboyfrien­d, a onetime Sunbury policeman named Joseph Walter “Mike” Egan.

Egan “is and has been the lead suspect in this case since 1989,” the chief wrote in the affidavit.

Egan, a Northumber­land resident who trims trees for a living, on Friday flatly denied he had anything to do with the disappeara­nce of Barbara Miller.

“They’re way off base,” Egan said, then promised to have his lawyer provide additional comment later in the day. He declined to name his attorney, and no one called back.

The police affidavit said that several people have said that over the years, Egan would talk about driving past his sister’s home in Milton to “visit” his “old lady,” the same building where police seized the massive chunk of concrete being examined.

Egan, 69, who in 1988 was paroled after serving six years in state prison for receiving stolen property and other offenses, a crime he committed as a police officer, reported her missing five days after she disappeare­d, then moved into her home.

The affidavit says Barbara Miller, then 30 years old, had complained to police in the months before she disappeare­d about Egan, and days before she vanished, told friends she feared for her life.

Her teenage son, Eddie Miller Jr., said she and Egan had a fight on June 30, 1989, the night she disappeare­d, over her plans to attend a friend’s wedding without him. Eddie Miller also recalled that the morning after the wedding, Egan was driving his mother’s car, and the tires were covered with yellow clay he thought was related to concrete work.

“Let me tell you something,” Egan said Friday before ending the brief interview. “It was my car, not her car.”

Seventeen years later, a judge declared Barbara Miller dead, but in recent years the Sunbury Daily Item began looking at the case again, and encouraged Tim Miller to investigat­e after he became police chief last year.

“This is most action this case has ever seen, and you can’t ask for more than that,” said Daily Item reporter Francis Scarcella. “There’s no miracle, but we’ve got the attention of people now.”

Tim Miller said an informant told him in May that Egan’s sister, Cathy Reitenbach, who in 1989 rented from a judge the Milton home where the concrete slab has been recovered, told the informant in about 1990 that Reitenbach had been one of the last people to see Barbara Miller alive. Reitenbach died in January.

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