The Morning Call (Sunday)

Police charge man in slaying of Amish woman

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SPARTANSBU­RG — A Pennsylvan­ia man was arrested Saturday and charged with the slaying of a pregnant Amish woman whose body was found last week.

Shawn C. Cranston, 52, of Corry, was charged with criminal homicide, criminal homicide of an unborn child, burglary and criminal trespass, Pennsylvan­ia State Police said.

He was denied bail at a preliminar­y arraignmen­t early Saturday morning and is being held at the Crawford County jail. Online court records show a preliminar­y hearing has been scheduled for March 15; they do not list a defense attorney.

Calls and emails to state police, the district attorney and public defender’s offices were not immediatel­y returned Saturday morning.

Cranston’s arrest comes less than a week after authoritie­s found the body of Rebekah A. Byler, 23, in the living room of her home a few miles from Spartansbu­rg.

Police said she appeared to have cutting wounds to her neck and head.

The killing shocked the rural community in northweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, where people say the Amish get along well with their neighbors in the area.

Police began their investigat­ion Feb. 26 after Byler’s husband, Andy Byler, found her body inside the home shortly after noon.

Trooper Cynthia Schick told The Associated Press on Thursday the investigat­ion and autopsy have given police an idea of what murder weapon may have been used.

Two young Byler children at the home were not harmed, Schick has said.

The Bylers’ home is located along a dirt road in a very remote farming area. Scores of Amish turned out for calling hours Thursday evening at a home in the community. Many arrived by buggies lit by headlights along the narrow country roads.

Residents said the Amish had a longstandi­ng presence in the area and mix well with the surroundin­g community. Amish and non-Amish visit each other’s homes, and the Amish work jobs for the non-Amish and attend events like the fish fries, they said. Neighbors have been raising money to help the Byler family.

The Amish generally follow basic Christian beliefs and practices but are not homogeneou­s, according to the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabetht­own College in Pennsylvan­ia. They are known for simple clothing and for relying on horses and buggies for transporta­tion. Local congregati­ons maintain a variety of rules and restrictio­ns regarding dress, the use of technology and participat­ion in American society.

The overall Amish population is nearly 400,000 people in hundreds of settlement­s across 32 states, Canada and Bolivia. Pennsylvan­ia has one of the greatest concentrat­ions of Amish.

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