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   nyc.politics      Politics specific to New York City      92,003 messages   

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   Message 91,224 of 92,003   
   He was black to All   
   Re: New York police close to cracking de   
   19 Mar 23 22:15:23   
   
   XPost: alt.law-enforcement, alt.politics.republicans, sac.politics   
   XPost: talk.politics.guns   
   From: he.was.black@aol.com   
      
   On 01 Nov 2021, "13% = 6x the crimes!"  posted   
   some news:slq02t$d2f$92@news.dns-netz.com:   
      
   > Text-Drivers R Killers wrote send niggers back to Africa   
      
   Megan McDonald, the 20-year-old daughter of an NYPD detective, was beaten   
   to death in the backseat of her white Mercury Sable and dumped on the side   
   of the road in Orange County, New York, 20 years ago Wednesday.   
      
   This year, New York State Police believe they're closer than ever to an   
   arrest in the case.   
      
   "We're coming for you," said New York State Police (NYSP) Lieutenant Brad   
   Natalizio. "And we're not going to stop until justice is served for Megan   
   and her family, who has been suffering for 20 years."   
      
   Authorities found McDonald's vehicle at the Kensington Manor apartment   
   complex parking lot in Wallkill, New York, two days after they discovered   
   her body. A medical examiner determined her cause of death to be repeated   
   blunt-force trauma to the head.   
      
   ALASKA MAN ARRESTED IN COLORADO MURDER FOR SECOND TIME AFTER WITNESSES   
   COME FORWARD   
      
   McDonald had been a student at SUNY Orange Community College and working   
   as a waitress to pay for her tuition.   
      
   READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP   
      
   MARYLAND HIGH SCHOOL GIRL'S MURDER SOLVED HALF A CENTURY LATER   
      
   NYSP is "very focused" on one suspect who knew McDonald. They believe the   
   20-year-old's murder was "a crime of passion" and "intimate partner   
   violence."   
      
   "We're getting to the point now where we see the finish line in sight,"   
   Natalizio told Fox News Digital.   
      
   The lieutenant feels a personal connection to the case for several   
   reasons. He was the same age as McDonald, grew up in Orange County, and   
   worked for the NYPD in 2006 before he eventually moved back upstate.   
      
   "Prior to getting promoted to investigator, when I was on patrol, I was   
   actually … driving around and my wife — my girlfriend at the time. She   
   texted me, and she asked, ‘Hey, do you know Megan McDonald?’ And I said,   
   'Yeah, I've heard of her.' It's a very popular case in the Orange County   
   area," Natalizio recalled. "And she said, 'If you're ever promoted to   
   investigator, I … want you to get that case. And I want you solve that   
   case because I work with her mom at the hospital.' They were both…   
   registered nurses on the same floor. It hits home."   
      
   When Natalizio eventually began working for the NYSP, he took on   
   McDonald's case in 2017 and hasn't stopped digging since despite several   
   job changes, calling the work a "community effort" across departments,   
   personnel and the community.   
      
   DNA STRANDS ARE KEY IN SOLVING COLD CASE INVESTIGATIONS THROUGH GENETIC   
   GENEAOLOGY   
      
   Their current suspect "flew under the radar for the first several years of   
   the investigation because there was an original suspect that the police   
   and even the suspect were focused on," he explained.   
      
   Police have since been able to "confidently eliminate" that individual as   
   a suspect and have narrowed down their focus to the new suspect. The New   
   York City Detective’s Endowment Association and FBI have offered two   
   separate $10,000 rewards that could lead to the suspect's arrest.   
      
   In a March 12 statement posted to the Facebook group "Justice for Megan   
   McDonald," her family said that "as always," they stand "with the State   
   Police" and are "grateful for the enormous amount of support from other   
   agencies."   
      
   "There is nowhere this COWARD can hide from all of them," they wrote.   
      
   McDonald's father died in 2002, a year before she was killed.   
      
   Authorities are asking anyone with information about this case to call   
   State Police Middletown BCI at 845-344-5300. Anonymous tips may be called   
   into the Troop F Major Crimes confidential tip line at (845) 344-5370 or   
   emailed to crimetip@troopers.ny.gov   
      
      
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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