On. Aug. 15, 1975, 8-year-old Gretchen Harrington was walking to Bible camp in a township outside Philadelphia when she was kidnapped and murdered.
On Monday, authorities announced a man who was the pastor of one of the camp’s host churches at the time has been arrested and charged with Harrington’s murder.
The Delaware County District Attorney’s Office said David Zandstra, 83, recently confessed after he was confronted with new evidence of his alleged involvement, including a witness’ story that the former pastor groped her when she was a girl and may have tried to kidnap another local girl.
A law office representing Zandstra said it was aware of the charges but had no comment, according to NBC Philadelphia.
The allegations against him include criminal homicide, murder in the first, second, and third degrees, kidnapping, and the possession of an instrument of crime. The alleged crimes happened in Marple Township, about 10 miles west of Philadelphia.
The new witness, who was not identified, provided a diary from that era, prosecutors said. In it, she wrote an entry one month after Harrington went missing, speculating that Zandstra may have been responsible for twice trying to kidnap another girl, prosecutors said in the criminal complaint against Zandstra.
“Guess what?” the witness is quoted as writing in an entry dated Sept. 15, 1975. “A man tried to kidnap Holly twice! It’s a secret I can’t tell anyone, but I think he might be the one who kidnapped Gretchen. I think it was Mr. Z.”
She also said she was groped by the suspect during a sleepover at his home seven days before Harrington went missing, according to the complaint. The witness, 10 at the time, was best friends with one of Zandstra’s daughters.
Pennsylvania State Police Cpl. Andrew Martin was credited by prosecutors with reopening the case in 2017, eliminating at least one person of interest, and focusing on the former pastor.
On July 17, Martin and State Police Trooper Eugene Tray interviewed Zandstra near his home in Georgia, according to the complaint and to Delaware County D.A.’s spokesperson Margie McAboy.
The suspect volunteered to speak, the trooper said at Monday’s news conference, and he was read Miranda rights advising him that he could have a lawyer present and that his words could be used by prosecutors.
Confronted with the new witness information, Tray said, Zandstra confessed.
“He was relieved,” the trooper said. “It was like a weight was lifted off his shoulders.”
Zandstra admitted that he was driving his green Rambler station wagon, an extinct model line made by Nash and then AMC, on Aug. 15, 1975, when he came upon Harrington walking to the Bible camp hosted by his congregation, Trinity Church Chapel Christian Reform Church, the criminal complaint states.
Prosecutors said he routinely picked children up to take them to the mid-morning camp. Harrington was best friends with another daughter in the Zandstra household, so he was a familiar face, they said in the complaint.
Prosecutors said she was last seen two blocks from home, en route to church, by neighbors who spoke to police.
On that morning, Zandstra, told the officers, he picked up Harrington as she walked to the church and drove her to nearby woods, where he parked. She asked him to take her home, but he ordered her to take off her clothes, and he ejaculated, he told officers. When she refused to disrobe, he punched her in the head once, he said, and she never regained consciousness, the filing stated.
The suspect left her body, described in the complaint as “half-naked,” in the woods, and he covered it with foliage, according to the complaint.
Harrington’s father was the pastor at an adjacent church, Reformed Presbyterian Church, which hosted the second half of each day’s summer Bible camp, prosecutors said.
The victim usually walked to Bible camp with her two sisters, but they stayed home that day because her mother had just given birth, prosecutors said. Harrington’s father encouraged her to walk alone despite the risks because she had a perfect attendance record, they said.
When she didn’t show up for the 11 a.m. phase of Bible study at Reformed Presbyterian Church, Harrington’s father drove off in an attempt to find her along adjacent Lawrence Road, according to the complaint. When the clock marked her as 23 minutes late, he called police, the filing states.
He gave a description noting that Harrington was 3 feet 6 inches, 50 pounds, with blonde pigtails, according to the complaint. Interviewed days later, Zandstra described specific details about the girl’s shorts including that they had a zipper and a snap in front but no visible buttons, the complaint said.
The details were unusual for two reasons, prosecutors argued: The girl never arrived at Bible camp, thus he wouldn’t have seen her there; and the shorts were unique, handmade by the girl’s mother.
On Oct. 14, 1975, Harrington’s remains were discovered in a state park in nearby Edgmont Township, prosecutors said in the complaint. She was wearing blue denim shorts, they said.
Cause and manner of death was homicide by at least two strikes to the head, the complaint stated.
Harrington’s survivors said in a statement they are grateful to police and prosecutors for the arrest. “The abduction and murder of Gretchen has forever altered our family and we miss her every single day,” the family said.
Marple Township Police Chief Graeff Brandon said Harrington’s time on Earth was “a life unfulfilled … because of pure evil and depravity.”
He said during Monday’s news conference that her murder represented a shift in the timeline for a suburb that had once felt relatively innocent and crime free.
“It transformed this community,” the chief said. “It was Anytown, U.S.A.”
Prosecutors said Zandstra left the church and moved away from the area, settling first in Plano, Texas, and then in Georgia, where he was in the Cobb County Adult Detention Facility on Monday for a sixth day with no bail, according to prosecutors and inmate records.
Authorities have expressed concern there may be more victims in communities where he has lived, and they asked anyone with pertinent information about the suspect to reach out. State police were in the process of comparing his DNA to other cold or open cases, the D.A.’s office said in a statement Monday.
Prosecutors said Zandstra has refused to waive extradition to Pennsylvania, which will prolong the process but is unlikely to stop it.
On Monday, Delaware County District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer said the 48-year-old case is closed.
“We’re going to bring him here to Delaware County, we’re going to try him, we’re going to convict him, and he’s going to die in jail,” he said.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com