ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
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ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Chambersburg PA ---- Police in Franklin County have discovered the remains
of a girl who was reported missing nearly 15 years ago.
State police in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania said they found the body of
Angie Daley on Tuesday in a wooded area off State Route 16 near the
border of Washington and Antrim Townships.
Daley, of Waynesboro, disappeared in August of 1995 when she was 17.
A team of forensic anthropology investigators from Mercyhurst College in
Erie helped recover the remains.
Forensic anthropologist Dr. Dennis Dirkmaat said the cause of Daley's
death was blunt force trauma to the head. Investigators were able to
identify Daley using dental records.
Police said they received information on the location of Daley's body
while investigating the stabbing death of Kristy Hoke, of Hagerstown,
Md.
Hoke's body was discovered early Tuesday morning in a wooded area in
Waynesboro.
Police have charged Jeffrey Miles with her death, though they will not
say if Miles is involved in the Daley case.
of a girl who was reported missing nearly 15 years ago.
State police in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania said they found the body of
Angie Daley on Tuesday in a wooded area off State Route 16 near the
border of Washington and Antrim Townships.
Daley, of Waynesboro, disappeared in August of 1995 when she was 17.
A team of forensic anthropology investigators from Mercyhurst College in
Erie helped recover the remains.
Forensic anthropologist Dr. Dennis Dirkmaat said the cause of Daley's
death was blunt force trauma to the head. Investigators were able to
identify Daley using dental records.
Police said they received information on the location of Daley's body
while investigating the stabbing death of Kristy Hoke, of Hagerstown,
Md.
Hoke's body was discovered early Tuesday morning in a wooded area in
Waynesboro.
Police have charged Jeffrey Miles with her death, though they will not
say if Miles is involved in the Daley case.
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Nearly 15 years of uncertainty for the family of Angie Lynn Daley
ended this week with the discovery of her remains in a remote wooded
area in western Washington Township, Pa.
“We had just come back from a vacation at the beach,” her father,
Clarence Daley of Chambersburg, Pa., recalled Thursday after learning
that the skeletal remains recovered Tuesday were those of his
long-missing daughter. After returning from that vacation, Daley said he
drove his daughter to the house of a friend on Hawbaker Avenue in
Waynesboro, where she was to spend the weekend.
That was Aug. 24, 1995, the last time he saw Angie. After her
weekend with her friends, Angie was supposed to go to the home of his
ex-wife, with whom he shared custody, he said.
On Tuesday afternoon, Angie’s mother, Sunday Gossert, learned
from Waynesboro Police Chief Mark King that the remains found could be
those of her daughter. Gossert said King met with her Wednesday and told
her the remains had been identified through dental records.
Pennsylvania State Police said Angie Daley’s remains were
discovered through an investigation into the recent slaying of Kristy
Dawn Hoke, 29, of Hagerstown. Hoke’s body was found Tuesday morning in a
wooded area off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro after 47-year-old
Jeffrey Eldon Miles of State Line, Pa., had been taken into custody.
Daley’s remains were found at noon Tuesday and recovered
Wednesday at a farm between Waynesboro and Greencastle in southern
Franklin County, Pa.
“She was a great kid. We loved spending time together,” Daley
said of his daughter. “We didn’t have any more problems with Angie
growing up than with any other child.”
However, Daley said his daughter would run away from home,
usually staying at friend’s houses for a few days.
“She’d always come back, and we’d work things out,” Daley said.
“Angie was happy-go-lucky. Just your average 17-year-old,”
Gossert said.
Over the years their daughter was missing, the mother and father
came up with ways to keep the memory of their daughter alive, while they
dealt with the uncertainty of her fate. Gossert said they would play
the Rolling Stones song “Angie” on her daughter’s birthday and the
anniversary of her disappearance.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children on
Thursday still had Angie Daley’s 1995 photo on its Web site, along with a
computer age-progression picture showing what she might have looked
like at age 29. The physical description was of a slight girl, under 5
feet tall and about 100 pounds.
Her younger sister, Ashley Daley, said Angie, who would be 32,
was “a fighter” who would’ve strongly resisted any attack, despite her
diminutive size.
The worst part of the past 15 years was “the never knowing and
wondering continually,” Clarence Daley said. Over the years, he said he
had come to terms with the possibility that Angie was dead.
“At least we know now,” Clarence Daley said.
“It’s sad, but at least the case is closed,” Gossert said.
Angie’s relatives said they feel slightly different when they
wake up each morning now that they know she died.
“I still had that little bit of hope that maybe ...” Ashley Daley
said, trailing off. “You just never know.”
Angie’s family praised King for his dedication to the missing
person case while he was a detective.
“He seemed like he actually cared about this particular case,”
Ashley Daley said.
Posters with Angie’s picture have dotted the police department’s
walls for years. King said new officers were told about her
disappearance and veterans were routinely reminded about it.
Angie’s family described her as “a partier” who enjoyed spending
time with her dog, Sebastian, and going to McDonald’s.
“My last note (from her) on the table was, ‘I’m going to McDonald's. Don’t leave without me,’” Gossert said.
Gossert said she’d tell other parents of missing children to not
give up hope.
“Keep sending your prayers up,” she said.
ended this week with the discovery of her remains in a remote wooded
area in western Washington Township, Pa.
“We had just come back from a vacation at the beach,” her father,
Clarence Daley of Chambersburg, Pa., recalled Thursday after learning
that the skeletal remains recovered Tuesday were those of his
long-missing daughter. After returning from that vacation, Daley said he
drove his daughter to the house of a friend on Hawbaker Avenue in
Waynesboro, where she was to spend the weekend.
That was Aug. 24, 1995, the last time he saw Angie. After her
weekend with her friends, Angie was supposed to go to the home of his
ex-wife, with whom he shared custody, he said.
On Tuesday afternoon, Angie’s mother, Sunday Gossert, learned
from Waynesboro Police Chief Mark King that the remains found could be
those of her daughter. Gossert said King met with her Wednesday and told
her the remains had been identified through dental records.
Pennsylvania State Police said Angie Daley’s remains were
discovered through an investigation into the recent slaying of Kristy
Dawn Hoke, 29, of Hagerstown. Hoke’s body was found Tuesday morning in a
wooded area off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro after 47-year-old
Jeffrey Eldon Miles of State Line, Pa., had been taken into custody.
Daley’s remains were found at noon Tuesday and recovered
Wednesday at a farm between Waynesboro and Greencastle in southern
Franklin County, Pa.
“She was a great kid. We loved spending time together,” Daley
said of his daughter. “We didn’t have any more problems with Angie
growing up than with any other child.”
However, Daley said his daughter would run away from home,
usually staying at friend’s houses for a few days.
“She’d always come back, and we’d work things out,” Daley said.
“Angie was happy-go-lucky. Just your average 17-year-old,”
Gossert said.
Over the years their daughter was missing, the mother and father
came up with ways to keep the memory of their daughter alive, while they
dealt with the uncertainty of her fate. Gossert said they would play
the Rolling Stones song “Angie” on her daughter’s birthday and the
anniversary of her disappearance.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children on
Thursday still had Angie Daley’s 1995 photo on its Web site, along with a
computer age-progression picture showing what she might have looked
like at age 29. The physical description was of a slight girl, under 5
feet tall and about 100 pounds.
Her younger sister, Ashley Daley, said Angie, who would be 32,
was “a fighter” who would’ve strongly resisted any attack, despite her
diminutive size.
The worst part of the past 15 years was “the never knowing and
wondering continually,” Clarence Daley said. Over the years, he said he
had come to terms with the possibility that Angie was dead.
“At least we know now,” Clarence Daley said.
“It’s sad, but at least the case is closed,” Gossert said.
Angie’s relatives said they feel slightly different when they
wake up each morning now that they know she died.
“I still had that little bit of hope that maybe ...” Ashley Daley
said, trailing off. “You just never know.”
Angie’s family praised King for his dedication to the missing
person case while he was a detective.
“He seemed like he actually cared about this particular case,”
Ashley Daley said.
Posters with Angie’s picture have dotted the police department’s
walls for years. King said new officers were told about her
disappearance and veterans were routinely reminded about it.
Angie’s family described her as “a partier” who enjoyed spending
time with her dog, Sebastian, and going to McDonald’s.
“My last note (from her) on the table was, ‘I’m going to McDonald's. Don’t leave without me,’” Gossert said.
Gossert said she’d tell other parents of missing children to not
give up hope.
“Keep sending your prayers up,” she said.
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- Job/hobbies : Searching for Truth and Justice
Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Waynesboro reacts to deaths
April 09, 2010|By KATE S. ALEXANDER
WAYNESBORO, PA. -- The bright floral tribute stood on a vacant lot at the edge of a brambled wood.
There was no name, no photos and no letters on the memorial to Kristy Dawn Hoke near the intersection of East Ninth Street and Clayton Avenue.
Police found the body of the 29-year-old Hagerstown woman in that wooded area Tuesday morning.
"Yeah, I read about that," John Kriner of Waynesboro said. "In fact, I live just a few blocks down from where that happened."
"It was unfortunate," Melissa March of Waynesboro said.
Police have charged Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., 47, of State Line, Pa., with criminal homicide in Hoke's death. He remained in Franklin County jail without bail Friday on one count of criminal homicide, Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Tom Pinkerton said.
Police said Thursday the investigation into Hoke's death led them to the remains of Waynesboro teen Angie Lynn Daley in western Washington Township near Waynecastle, Pa.
Daley was 17 when she went missing Aug. 24, 1995.
No charges had been filed in Daley's death as of Friday, Magisterial District Justice Larry Pentz said.
Despite ongoing investigations into both incidents, most residents said they still think Waynesboro is a safe place to live.
Robert Cole, an employee of the Borough of Waynesboro, said he walks the streets every day and does not fear for his or anyone's safety.
"It's a nice little town, quiet, not too much goes on around," Cole said. "Unfortunately, this went on here, but that happens everywhere."
Pinkerton assured residents that the public should not feel unsafe.
"The recent homicide arrest and discovery of skeletal remains should in no way infer the community is in danger," he said during a press conference Thursday. "We have no information to suggest that the community is in danger."
Washington Township Police Chief Barry Keller said major crime will have an effect on a community, especially if it does not frequently see such incidents.
"We are aware people are capable of committing such things, but I think deep down we are glad we don't see it very often," he said.
Keller said most people tend to believe police when they say there is no cause for concern.
"If there were anything to be concerned about with these incidents, state police would have (identified) it and given guidance as how to act," he said.
Regardless of assurances from police, Joe Hess of Waynesboro said the recent events have changed the way he feels about the place he has lived his whole life.
"Waynesboro started out as a nice town," he said. "You just don't know what will happen any more."
While he said he does not think town residents are in danger, he understands how someone could feel that way.
"You got to protect yourself," he said.
With modern forms of communication readily available, residents have an increased sense of security, Keller said.
Knowing that a child or loved one can be reached any time on a cell phone is a resource that police and the public did not have years ago, he said.
Friends have planned a candlelight vigil Sunday to remember Kristy Dawn Hoke, the Hagerstown woman and mother of three who was found dead Tuesday in Waynesboro, Pa.
The vigil will be at the bridge by the lake in Hagerstown's City Park, said Wendy Churchey, a friend of Hoke's. She said people should arrive between 7 and 7:30 p.m.
Churchey and Kristen Riddle are organizing the vigil.
A memorial service for Hoke is planned for April 16 at 6 p.m. at Wilson Ruritan Club in Hagerstown, according to her obituary.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2010-04-09/news/25202996_1_kristy-dawn-hoke-angie-lynn-daley-jeffrey-eldon-miles
April 09, 2010|By KATE S. ALEXANDER
WAYNESBORO, PA. -- The bright floral tribute stood on a vacant lot at the edge of a brambled wood.
There was no name, no photos and no letters on the memorial to Kristy Dawn Hoke near the intersection of East Ninth Street and Clayton Avenue.
Police found the body of the 29-year-old Hagerstown woman in that wooded area Tuesday morning.
"Yeah, I read about that," John Kriner of Waynesboro said. "In fact, I live just a few blocks down from where that happened."
"It was unfortunate," Melissa March of Waynesboro said.
Police have charged Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., 47, of State Line, Pa., with criminal homicide in Hoke's death. He remained in Franklin County jail without bail Friday on one count of criminal homicide, Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Tom Pinkerton said.
Police said Thursday the investigation into Hoke's death led them to the remains of Waynesboro teen Angie Lynn Daley in western Washington Township near Waynecastle, Pa.
Daley was 17 when she went missing Aug. 24, 1995.
No charges had been filed in Daley's death as of Friday, Magisterial District Justice Larry Pentz said.
Despite ongoing investigations into both incidents, most residents said they still think Waynesboro is a safe place to live.
Robert Cole, an employee of the Borough of Waynesboro, said he walks the streets every day and does not fear for his or anyone's safety.
"It's a nice little town, quiet, not too much goes on around," Cole said. "Unfortunately, this went on here, but that happens everywhere."
Pinkerton assured residents that the public should not feel unsafe.
"The recent homicide arrest and discovery of skeletal remains should in no way infer the community is in danger," he said during a press conference Thursday. "We have no information to suggest that the community is in danger."
Washington Township Police Chief Barry Keller said major crime will have an effect on a community, especially if it does not frequently see such incidents.
"We are aware people are capable of committing such things, but I think deep down we are glad we don't see it very often," he said.
Keller said most people tend to believe police when they say there is no cause for concern.
"If there were anything to be concerned about with these incidents, state police would have (identified) it and given guidance as how to act," he said.
Regardless of assurances from police, Joe Hess of Waynesboro said the recent events have changed the way he feels about the place he has lived his whole life.
"Waynesboro started out as a nice town," he said. "You just don't know what will happen any more."
While he said he does not think town residents are in danger, he understands how someone could feel that way.
"You got to protect yourself," he said.
With modern forms of communication readily available, residents have an increased sense of security, Keller said.
Knowing that a child or loved one can be reached any time on a cell phone is a resource that police and the public did not have years ago, he said.
Friends have planned a candlelight vigil Sunday to remember Kristy Dawn Hoke, the Hagerstown woman and mother of three who was found dead Tuesday in Waynesboro, Pa.
The vigil will be at the bridge by the lake in Hagerstown's City Park, said Wendy Churchey, a friend of Hoke's. She said people should arrive between 7 and 7:30 p.m.
Churchey and Kristen Riddle are organizing the vigil.
A memorial service for Hoke is planned for April 16 at 6 p.m. at Wilson Ruritan Club in Hagerstown, according to her obituary.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2010-04-09/news/25202996_1_kristy-dawn-hoke-angie-lynn-daley-jeffrey-eldon-miles
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Jeffrey Miles' murder trial may be delayed until 2012
By Staff reports
The Record Herald
Posted Apr 16, 2011 @ 08:00 AM
The murder trial for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., 48, will likely be delayed until 2012.
Miles, formerly of State Line, has been in Franklin County Jail since April 2010 after he reportedly confessed to killing Kristy Dawn Hoke, 29, of Hagerstown. Hoke was acting as a police informant at the time of her stabbing death. Miles led local police forces to her body on April 5, 2010, which was dumped in a wooded area off of Ninth Street in Waynesboro.
Franklin County Judge Douglas Herman said Friday he expects the trial to last one week or longer and the first opportunity to schedule such a lengthy proceeding would be in January 2012. Trial dates are expected to be scheduled at a pretrial conference on April 26.
Miles’ attorneys, Public Defender Mike Toms and Waynesboro Attorney Eric Weisbrod, are seeking a change in venue in the case because they do not feel Miles will have a fair trial in Franklin County. The request and other motions will be considered at the April 26 conference.
The case
Miles pleaded not guilty to the charge of criminal homicide in the case. The Franklin County District Attorney’s office is seeking the death penalty if he is convicted.
A notice of aggravating circumstances was filed against Miles, saying he committed the crime during a felony, the offense was committed by a means of torture, he committed the crime during a drug-related felony and the victim was a police informant.
Miles’ attorneys are asking that the aggravating circumstances, which are needed to seek the death penalty, be struck from the case because the circumstances do not legally constitute torture and there is no proof Miles knew Hoke was a police informant.
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x1798432466/Jeffrey-Miles-murder-trial-may-be-delayed-until-2012
By Staff reports
The Record Herald
Posted Apr 16, 2011 @ 08:00 AM
The murder trial for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., 48, will likely be delayed until 2012.
Miles, formerly of State Line, has been in Franklin County Jail since April 2010 after he reportedly confessed to killing Kristy Dawn Hoke, 29, of Hagerstown. Hoke was acting as a police informant at the time of her stabbing death. Miles led local police forces to her body on April 5, 2010, which was dumped in a wooded area off of Ninth Street in Waynesboro.
Franklin County Judge Douglas Herman said Friday he expects the trial to last one week or longer and the first opportunity to schedule such a lengthy proceeding would be in January 2012. Trial dates are expected to be scheduled at a pretrial conference on April 26.
Miles’ attorneys, Public Defender Mike Toms and Waynesboro Attorney Eric Weisbrod, are seeking a change in venue in the case because they do not feel Miles will have a fair trial in Franklin County. The request and other motions will be considered at the April 26 conference.
The case
Miles pleaded not guilty to the charge of criminal homicide in the case. The Franklin County District Attorney’s office is seeking the death penalty if he is convicted.
A notice of aggravating circumstances was filed against Miles, saying he committed the crime during a felony, the offense was committed by a means of torture, he committed the crime during a drug-related felony and the victim was a police informant.
Miles’ attorneys are asking that the aggravating circumstances, which are needed to seek the death penalty, be struck from the case because the circumstances do not legally constitute torture and there is no proof Miles knew Hoke was a police informant.
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x1798432466/Jeffrey-Miles-murder-trial-may-be-delayed-until-2012
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Jeffrey Miles Sr. Charged in 2010 PA Murder of Informant, May Face DP
April 06, 2011, 04:03:02 PM
Jeffrey Miles’ attorneys challenge death penalty in Kristy Hoke's murder
State Line man charged in 2010 death of Hagerstown woman
By Staff reports
The Record Herald
Posted Apr 06, 2011 @ 11:26 AM
Attorneys for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., the State Line man accused of killing Kristy Dawn Hoke a year ago, are asking a Franklin County judge to change the trial location, suppress some of his statements and remove the possibility of the death penalty.
Miles, who will be 48 on Friday, is charged with criminal homicide in the death of Hoke, 29, a Hagerstown woman who was a police informant. She was stabbed to death and her body was found April 5, 2010, in a wooded area off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro.
Miles has pleaded not guilty in Hoke’s death.
Legal action
Mike Toms and Eric Weisbrod, Miles’ attorneys, said in a pretrial motion that he cannot get a fair trial in Franklin County because of media coverage.
The motion also said that police obtained several incriminating statements from Miles without reading him his rights. Toms and Weisbrod are asking that those statements be suppressed.
They have also asked Judge Douglas Herman to strike a notice of aggravating circumstances filed by the Franklin County District Attorney’s office. This notice is required for the prosecution to seek the death penalty.
The circumstances listed in the Aug. 31, 2010, filing say:
* Miles committed the killing during a felony.
* The offense was committed by a means of torture.
* Miles committed the killing during a drug-related felony.
* The victim was a police informant.
Miles’ attorneys told Herman that the circumstances do not legally constitute torture and there is no proof that Miles knew Hoke was a police informant.
A hearing on the motions is scheduled for April 26.
Background
Miles reportedly led police to Hoke’s body a year ago Tuesday on April 5, 2010, after he was found threatening suicide on a bridge over Interstate 81. According to documents filed by Pennsylvania State Police, Miles admitted to killing Hoke.
A short time later on the same day and 4 miles from where Hoke’s body was found, police discovered the remains of Angie Lynn Daley, who was 17 when she disappeared from her Hawbaker Avenue home on Aug. 24, 1995. Daley died of blunt force head trauma.
No one has been charged in connection with Daley’s death and police have declined to say how the two cases are connected.
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x675821917/Jeffrey-Miles-attorneys-challenge-death-penalty-in-Kristy-Hokes-murder
April 06, 2011, 04:03:02 PM
Jeffrey Miles’ attorneys challenge death penalty in Kristy Hoke's murder
State Line man charged in 2010 death of Hagerstown woman
By Staff reports
The Record Herald
Posted Apr 06, 2011 @ 11:26 AM
Attorneys for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., the State Line man accused of killing Kristy Dawn Hoke a year ago, are asking a Franklin County judge to change the trial location, suppress some of his statements and remove the possibility of the death penalty.
Miles, who will be 48 on Friday, is charged with criminal homicide in the death of Hoke, 29, a Hagerstown woman who was a police informant. She was stabbed to death and her body was found April 5, 2010, in a wooded area off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro.
Miles has pleaded not guilty in Hoke’s death.
Legal action
Mike Toms and Eric Weisbrod, Miles’ attorneys, said in a pretrial motion that he cannot get a fair trial in Franklin County because of media coverage.
The motion also said that police obtained several incriminating statements from Miles without reading him his rights. Toms and Weisbrod are asking that those statements be suppressed.
They have also asked Judge Douglas Herman to strike a notice of aggravating circumstances filed by the Franklin County District Attorney’s office. This notice is required for the prosecution to seek the death penalty.
The circumstances listed in the Aug. 31, 2010, filing say:
* Miles committed the killing during a felony.
* The offense was committed by a means of torture.
* Miles committed the killing during a drug-related felony.
* The victim was a police informant.
Miles’ attorneys told Herman that the circumstances do not legally constitute torture and there is no proof that Miles knew Hoke was a police informant.
A hearing on the motions is scheduled for April 26.
Background
Miles reportedly led police to Hoke’s body a year ago Tuesday on April 5, 2010, after he was found threatening suicide on a bridge over Interstate 81. According to documents filed by Pennsylvania State Police, Miles admitted to killing Hoke.
A short time later on the same day and 4 miles from where Hoke’s body was found, police discovered the remains of Angie Lynn Daley, who was 17 when she disappeared from her Hawbaker Avenue home on Aug. 24, 1995. Daley died of blunt force head trauma.
No one has been charged in connection with Daley’s death and police have declined to say how the two cases are connected.
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x675821917/Jeffrey-Miles-attorneys-challenge-death-penalty-in-Kristy-Hokes-murder
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Jeffrey Miles Sr. Charged in 2010 PA Murder of Informant, May Face DP
April 27, 2011, 10:50:19 AM
Pretrial testimony indicates state troopers read Miranda rights to Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr. several times in connection with a murder investigation
By Denise Bonura
The Record Herald
Posted Apr 27, 2011 @ 11:42 AM
Pennsylvania State Police troopers say they read accused murderer Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr. his Miranda rights five times on April 6, 2010 — the day the body of a Hagerstown woman was found dumped in a wooded area off of Ninth Street in Waynesboro.
Trooper Aaron Martin testified during a pretrial conference in Franklin County Court Tuesday that he and other state troopers made sure Miles, 48, understood he had the right to remain silent.
Conversations with Miles were recorded in a marked police cruiser and at the Chambersburg Borough Police Department after those rights were read to him, according to Martin.
Miles’ defense attorneys, Mike Toms, public defender, and Eric Weisbrod, filed a motion to suppress some statements Miles made to police during his trial, claiming he made the statements prior to knowing his rights.
The defense has also filed numerous other motions in the case, including a request to change the location of the trial and to strike a notice of aggravating circumstances seeking the death penalty if Miles is convicted.
Miles has been in Franklin County Jail for the past year in connection with the stabbing death of Kristy Dawn Hoke, 29, who was a police informant when she was killed.
Miles was found on an Interstate 81 overpass in State Line early on the morning of April 6, 2010, threatening to jump 50 feet below to the northbound lanes of the highway.
Martin testified that Miles led police to Hoke’s body and her car that day after he was coaxed off of the bridge.
State police Sgt. William McAreavy testified that Miles told him at the bridge, “This is not about suicide. It’s about getting rid of the demon.”
Miranda rights
“I told him (Miles) that we had to find Kristy and he agreed,” Martin continued, saying police had been actively searching for Hoke who went missing a few days earlier. “I told him I had to read him his rights and I think he took that as I was disrespecting him. He told me he would take me to her and I said, ‘I understand. I’m not trying to disrespect you. I have to read these to you.’”
Martin told the court he asked Miles if he understood the rights and if he wished to speak with Martin. Miles said yes and proceeded to lead Martin and two other troopers to Hoke’s body. Martin added throughout the course of the day, Miles was read his rights five times and he signed a waiver indicating he understood them.
Police were also led to a farm in Waynecastle the same day, where the remains of Waynesboro teen Angie Lynn Daley were found. Daley, who was 17 when she disappeared in August 1995, died of blunt force head trauma. Police have not revealed how the two cases are connected and no one has been charged in Daley’s death.
Weisbrod asked Martin about Miles’ demeanor and whether Martin felt Miles was under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
“There wasn’t anything that indicated to me that he was under the influence of anything,” Martin responded. “He was lucid, he responded to my questions and I didn’t have any problems conversing with him.”
Pretrial motions
President Judge Douglas Herman told Weisbrod and Toms the only way the notice of aggravating circumstances can be stricken is if there is no evidence to support the reasons behind seeking the death penalty, namely:
— Miles committed the killing during a felony
— The offense was committed by a means of torture
— Miles committed the killing during a drug-related felony
— The victim was a police informant
He added it is the defendant’s “burden to prove that.”
Herman delayed his ruling on the motion and gave the attorneys 20 days to file a supplemental motion that shows the state has no evidence to support the circumstances.
He also deferred ruling on a change of venue, saying the request is premature.
“There has to be overwhelming evidence that we could not possibly get an unbiased jury because of publicity,” he said. “We haven’t even begun to examine jurors, so we would not be in a position to know that.”
Assistant District Attorney Eric Augustine told Herman the defense has received all requested evidence, except a DNA report on the alleged murder weapon — a pair of scissors.
Herman said the trial will take about two weeks and the earliest it can be held is in January or February 2012. Augustine asked that it be scheduled in January because he is preparing to deploy overseas with the military next year.
Toms told the court he was not optimistic for a January trial.
“There is a minimum of 200 hours of work to be done on this case,” he said. “I know there’s time between now and January, but that time gets eaten up. We have to get experts and DNA results. I’m not very hopeful January is going to be achieved.”
Toms said the defense will need testimony from a forensic pathologist and a DNA expert during the trial. Herman asked Augustine to get the DNA report as soon as possible.
Another pretrial conference will be held subject to the DNA testing and jury selection is slated for the January 2012 term.
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x1630334748/Pretrial-testimony-indicates-state-troopers-read-Miranda-rights-to-Jeffrey-Eldon-Miles-Sr-several-times-in-connection-with-a-murder-investigation
April 27, 2011, 10:50:19 AM
Pretrial testimony indicates state troopers read Miranda rights to Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr. several times in connection with a murder investigation
By Denise Bonura
The Record Herald
Posted Apr 27, 2011 @ 11:42 AM
Pennsylvania State Police troopers say they read accused murderer Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr. his Miranda rights five times on April 6, 2010 — the day the body of a Hagerstown woman was found dumped in a wooded area off of Ninth Street in Waynesboro.
Trooper Aaron Martin testified during a pretrial conference in Franklin County Court Tuesday that he and other state troopers made sure Miles, 48, understood he had the right to remain silent.
Conversations with Miles were recorded in a marked police cruiser and at the Chambersburg Borough Police Department after those rights were read to him, according to Martin.
Miles’ defense attorneys, Mike Toms, public defender, and Eric Weisbrod, filed a motion to suppress some statements Miles made to police during his trial, claiming he made the statements prior to knowing his rights.
The defense has also filed numerous other motions in the case, including a request to change the location of the trial and to strike a notice of aggravating circumstances seeking the death penalty if Miles is convicted.
Miles has been in Franklin County Jail for the past year in connection with the stabbing death of Kristy Dawn Hoke, 29, who was a police informant when she was killed.
Miles was found on an Interstate 81 overpass in State Line early on the morning of April 6, 2010, threatening to jump 50 feet below to the northbound lanes of the highway.
Martin testified that Miles led police to Hoke’s body and her car that day after he was coaxed off of the bridge.
State police Sgt. William McAreavy testified that Miles told him at the bridge, “This is not about suicide. It’s about getting rid of the demon.”
Miranda rights
“I told him (Miles) that we had to find Kristy and he agreed,” Martin continued, saying police had been actively searching for Hoke who went missing a few days earlier. “I told him I had to read him his rights and I think he took that as I was disrespecting him. He told me he would take me to her and I said, ‘I understand. I’m not trying to disrespect you. I have to read these to you.’”
Martin told the court he asked Miles if he understood the rights and if he wished to speak with Martin. Miles said yes and proceeded to lead Martin and two other troopers to Hoke’s body. Martin added throughout the course of the day, Miles was read his rights five times and he signed a waiver indicating he understood them.
Police were also led to a farm in Waynecastle the same day, where the remains of Waynesboro teen Angie Lynn Daley were found. Daley, who was 17 when she disappeared in August 1995, died of blunt force head trauma. Police have not revealed how the two cases are connected and no one has been charged in Daley’s death.
Weisbrod asked Martin about Miles’ demeanor and whether Martin felt Miles was under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
“There wasn’t anything that indicated to me that he was under the influence of anything,” Martin responded. “He was lucid, he responded to my questions and I didn’t have any problems conversing with him.”
Pretrial motions
President Judge Douglas Herman told Weisbrod and Toms the only way the notice of aggravating circumstances can be stricken is if there is no evidence to support the reasons behind seeking the death penalty, namely:
— Miles committed the killing during a felony
— The offense was committed by a means of torture
— Miles committed the killing during a drug-related felony
— The victim was a police informant
He added it is the defendant’s “burden to prove that.”
Herman delayed his ruling on the motion and gave the attorneys 20 days to file a supplemental motion that shows the state has no evidence to support the circumstances.
He also deferred ruling on a change of venue, saying the request is premature.
“There has to be overwhelming evidence that we could not possibly get an unbiased jury because of publicity,” he said. “We haven’t even begun to examine jurors, so we would not be in a position to know that.”
Assistant District Attorney Eric Augustine told Herman the defense has received all requested evidence, except a DNA report on the alleged murder weapon — a pair of scissors.
Herman said the trial will take about two weeks and the earliest it can be held is in January or February 2012. Augustine asked that it be scheduled in January because he is preparing to deploy overseas with the military next year.
Toms told the court he was not optimistic for a January trial.
“There is a minimum of 200 hours of work to be done on this case,” he said. “I know there’s time between now and January, but that time gets eaten up. We have to get experts and DNA results. I’m not very hopeful January is going to be achieved.”
Toms said the defense will need testimony from a forensic pathologist and a DNA expert during the trial. Herman asked Augustine to get the DNA report as soon as possible.
Another pretrial conference will be held subject to the DNA testing and jury selection is slated for the January 2012 term.
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x1630334748/Pretrial-testimony-indicates-state-troopers-read-Miranda-rights-to-Jeffrey-Eldon-Miles-Sr-several-times-in-connection-with-a-murder-investigation
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Families of Angie Lynn Daley and Kristy Dawn Hoke await answers in murder cases
By Denise Bonura
The Record Herald
Posted Mar 05, 2011 @ 08:47 AM
April 6, 2010, seemed like another normal day in Waynesboro — warm and sunny with no cloud in the sky.
A nightmare soon unfolded as local police were led to a wooded area off of East Ninth Street where the body of a 29-year-old Hagerstown woman was found stabbed to death. And they would soon learn that just four miles away, the remains of a missing Waynesboro teenager had lain undiscovered for 15 years.
Seventeen-year-old Angie Lynn Daley disappeared from Hawbaker Avenue on Aug. 24, 1995. Her family thought she had run away, but when they never heard from her, police were notified and they waited for answers. Police were led to Daley’s remains last April, and a forensic psychology team from Mercyhurst College in Erie spent three hours collecting them. She was identified by dental records and died of blunt force head trauma at the hands of another person.
The women’s families are constantly reminded of their tragic deaths, and no end seems in sight.
Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., 47, of State Line has been charged with criminal homicide in Hoke’s death. He reportedly admitted to the murder after he was found threatening suicide on an Interstate 81 overpass. Miles led police to Hoke’s body and they were later led to Daley’s remains. Miles has since pleaded not guilty to Hoke’s murder and awaits trial in May for the crime. A pre-trial conference is scheduled for April 15.
No one has been charged in connection with Daley’s death.
Trooper Tom Pinkerton, a public communications officer with Pennsylvania State Police, said there have been no new developments with the cases and they are still under investigation.
Police will not reveal how the two cases are connected. Daley’s friends have told The Record Herald in the past that Daley knew Miles and his family.
Waiting game
The past year has been a waiting game for the families. Hoke’s mother, Beverly Durboraw of Hagerstown, and other family members have attended some of Miles’ court hearings and expressed disbelief and anger when he pleaded not guilty to the crime and seemed to show no remorse.
They waited outside the Franklin County Courthouse to watch deputies escort him in his yellow jumpsuit and shackles.
Hoke, who was later determined to be a police informant, was the mother of three children — Whitnie Wyand, Alivia Hoke and Darian Ingram.
Durboraw could not be reached for further comment on the case.
Sunday Gossert of Waynesboro, Daley’s mother, said she is waiting patiently for police to find her daughter’s killer or killers.
“We still don’t have her remains,” she said. “We were first told three to six months, but then we were told it would probably take six months to a year. We should know something in the next few weeks.”
Forensic anthropologists at Mercyhurst are studying Daley’s remains for the investigation. In the meantime, Gossert and her family have been planning Daley’s memorial service and burial.
“I can’t really set a date until they let me know,” she added.
Family and friends raised $2,700 last year with a spaghetti dinner and motorcycle ride. Gossert said Lochstampfor Funeral Home will handle her daughter’s arrangements.
“They were nice enough to donate some of their services,” she said. “That helps us out quite a bit.”
A hummingbird visiting some morning glories and the face of an angel are carved into her headstone. Daley will be buried in Quincy Cemetery next to her grandfather, Clarence Daley, who died in 1984. Her grandmother, Gloria Daley, donated the lot for Angie.
‘Day to day’
Gossert said it’s a little different now that they know Daley is gone. Family members began to lose hope two or three years ago when rumors circulated that Daley was killed.
“I wouldn’t believe it until I knew there was a body,” she said previously.
Gossert is waiting patiently for the investigation to shed some light on her daughter’s disappearance and death.
“I’m just waiting from day to day,” she said. “I want them to do a thorough job. I talked to the officer a few weeks ago and he assured me he was interviewing people. They just want to be absolutely sure.”
Gossert said every time she hears of remains discovered, she wonders if there are any other victims connected to her daughter’s and Hoke’s cases.
“They found a body in Indiana and it took them four years to test the body. This could take a long time to unfold.”
Gossert keeps her daughter’s picture close by.
“I have her picture looking right at me,” she said, “along with the last note she wrote me that I kept in my purse for 15 years.”
Gloria Daley said she wishes the investigation was over. She is also frustrated that police will not reveal how the Daley and Hoke cases are connected, but is glad her granddaughter has finally been found.
“It’s been a long, drawn-out process,” she added. “I’m just thankful to state police for getting him (Miles) off that bridge. If they hadn’t, we might never know what happened to Angie.”
Gloria Daley said she has constant reminders of her granddaughter.
“Just the other week I found a recipe she wrote for peanut butter cookies,” she recalled. “We’re just anxiously awaiting to have the service for her.”
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x1512120346/Families-of-Angie-Lynn-Daley-and-Kristy-Dawn-Hoke-await-answers-in-murder-cases
By Denise Bonura
The Record Herald
Posted Mar 05, 2011 @ 08:47 AM
April 6, 2010, seemed like another normal day in Waynesboro — warm and sunny with no cloud in the sky.
A nightmare soon unfolded as local police were led to a wooded area off of East Ninth Street where the body of a 29-year-old Hagerstown woman was found stabbed to death. And they would soon learn that just four miles away, the remains of a missing Waynesboro teenager had lain undiscovered for 15 years.
Seventeen-year-old Angie Lynn Daley disappeared from Hawbaker Avenue on Aug. 24, 1995. Her family thought she had run away, but when they never heard from her, police were notified and they waited for answers. Police were led to Daley’s remains last April, and a forensic psychology team from Mercyhurst College in Erie spent three hours collecting them. She was identified by dental records and died of blunt force head trauma at the hands of another person.
The women’s families are constantly reminded of their tragic deaths, and no end seems in sight.
Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., 47, of State Line has been charged with criminal homicide in Hoke’s death. He reportedly admitted to the murder after he was found threatening suicide on an Interstate 81 overpass. Miles led police to Hoke’s body and they were later led to Daley’s remains. Miles has since pleaded not guilty to Hoke’s murder and awaits trial in May for the crime. A pre-trial conference is scheduled for April 15.
No one has been charged in connection with Daley’s death.
Trooper Tom Pinkerton, a public communications officer with Pennsylvania State Police, said there have been no new developments with the cases and they are still under investigation.
Police will not reveal how the two cases are connected. Daley’s friends have told The Record Herald in the past that Daley knew Miles and his family.
Waiting game
The past year has been a waiting game for the families. Hoke’s mother, Beverly Durboraw of Hagerstown, and other family members have attended some of Miles’ court hearings and expressed disbelief and anger when he pleaded not guilty to the crime and seemed to show no remorse.
They waited outside the Franklin County Courthouse to watch deputies escort him in his yellow jumpsuit and shackles.
Hoke, who was later determined to be a police informant, was the mother of three children — Whitnie Wyand, Alivia Hoke and Darian Ingram.
Durboraw could not be reached for further comment on the case.
Sunday Gossert of Waynesboro, Daley’s mother, said she is waiting patiently for police to find her daughter’s killer or killers.
“We still don’t have her remains,” she said. “We were first told three to six months, but then we were told it would probably take six months to a year. We should know something in the next few weeks.”
Forensic anthropologists at Mercyhurst are studying Daley’s remains for the investigation. In the meantime, Gossert and her family have been planning Daley’s memorial service and burial.
“I can’t really set a date until they let me know,” she added.
Family and friends raised $2,700 last year with a spaghetti dinner and motorcycle ride. Gossert said Lochstampfor Funeral Home will handle her daughter’s arrangements.
“They were nice enough to donate some of their services,” she said. “That helps us out quite a bit.”
A hummingbird visiting some morning glories and the face of an angel are carved into her headstone. Daley will be buried in Quincy Cemetery next to her grandfather, Clarence Daley, who died in 1984. Her grandmother, Gloria Daley, donated the lot for Angie.
‘Day to day’
Gossert said it’s a little different now that they know Daley is gone. Family members began to lose hope two or three years ago when rumors circulated that Daley was killed.
“I wouldn’t believe it until I knew there was a body,” she said previously.
Gossert is waiting patiently for the investigation to shed some light on her daughter’s disappearance and death.
“I’m just waiting from day to day,” she said. “I want them to do a thorough job. I talked to the officer a few weeks ago and he assured me he was interviewing people. They just want to be absolutely sure.”
Gossert said every time she hears of remains discovered, she wonders if there are any other victims connected to her daughter’s and Hoke’s cases.
“They found a body in Indiana and it took them four years to test the body. This could take a long time to unfold.”
Gossert keeps her daughter’s picture close by.
“I have her picture looking right at me,” she said, “along with the last note she wrote me that I kept in my purse for 15 years.”
Gloria Daley said she wishes the investigation was over. She is also frustrated that police will not reveal how the Daley and Hoke cases are connected, but is glad her granddaughter has finally been found.
“It’s been a long, drawn-out process,” she added. “I’m just thankful to state police for getting him (Miles) off that bridge. If they hadn’t, we might never know what happened to Angie.”
Gloria Daley said she has constant reminders of her granddaughter.
“Just the other week I found a recipe she wrote for peanut butter cookies,” she recalled. “We’re just anxiously awaiting to have the service for her.”
http://www.therecordherald.com/features/x1512120346/Families-of-Angie-Lynn-Daley-and-Kristy-Dawn-Hoke-await-answers-in-murder-cases
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Linked by tragedy
Police found two bodies on the same day 11 months ago but have filed charges related to only one death
March 19, 2011|By JENNIFER FITCH | waynesboro@herald-mail.com
It was exceptionally warm early on the morning of April 6, 2010, when Jeffrey Miles stood on a bridge and looked out over the northbound lanes of Interstate 81.
Police said Miles threatened suicide and mused about "evil and demons" inside him after officers arrived at 2:30 a.m.
Was Miles sincere? Or was the threat a ploy undertaken because he knew authorities were investigating him in connection with the death of a Hagerstown woman?
Whatever his intentions, Miles didn't jump and instead left the bridge in police custody. Later that day, he was charged with criminal homicide in the death of Kristy Dawn Hoke, whose body was found, in part, because of a conversation Miles' son had with police.
According to court documents, Miles later that day took investigators to the woods off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro, Pa. There, in a small clearing surrounded by brambles, police found the slashed body of Hoke.
The Hagerstown mother of three, identified in court as a police informant, had been reported missing days earlier.
At noon on the day Hoke's body was found, troopers descended on a farm adjacent to the underpass between Waynesboro and Greencastle, Pa.
"As a result of this (Hoke) investigation, information was developed that led troopers to a wooded area off state Route 16 in Washington Township. ... Upon the troopers' arrival there, they discovered skeletal remains that were partially concealed by vegetation and overgrowth," Trooper Tom Pinkerton said at a news conference at the time.
Dental records identified the remains as those of Angie Lynn Daley, who was 17 in 1995 when her family in Waynesboro reported her missing.
No one has been charged in Daley's death.
Eleven months have passed since the bodies of Hoke and Daley were found near the Maryland border.
A daughter disappears
Sunday Gossert was surprised when she learned she was pregnant with her first child. She and Angie's father, Clarence Daley, married five months into the pregnancy, preparing for the child's birth with the nervousness not uncommon for first-time parents.
Gossert spent 16 hours in labor before Angie's entrance into the world on Nov. 28, 1977, at Waynesboro Hospital. She weighed 6 pounds 6 ounces and didn't have a single hair on her head.
"We have a lot of pictures of her, with her being the first born," Sunday Gossert said.
"Angie was a good child. She didn't cry a lot," Clarence Daley said.
Sister Ashley was born 5 1/2 years later, and brother, Eddie, followed 3 1/2 years after that.
Angie, who started talking at age 2, enjoyed helping to clean and cook. Mother and daughter listened to the rock band AC/DC when Angie got older, and she taught her grandmother to play "Tetris" on Nintendo.
Angie's parents divorced when she was 11, and after that, she took care of her younger sister and brother while living with Clarence Daley, Gossert said.
Gossert said she suspects that Angie resented stepping into a motherly role, then "broke loose" when she turned 16 and started driving.
Angie would stay out for a few days at a time, and at least once, she hitched a ride across the country with a truck driver. Gossert said Angie ended up in California, and Clarence Daley said he received a call from Angie when she was in Texas.
But when Gossert's second husband, David Lehnhart, died in January 1995, Angie stayed around the house and comforted her mother.
The last exchange Gossert remembers having with her oldest daughter was paying Angie's speeding ticket before Angie and her siblings left for their annual beach trip with their father.
For years, Gossert carried in her wallet the last note she had from her daughter, who wrote "Mom, went to McDonald's. Be back. Don't leave. Love, Angie" in looping letters.
That crumpled note is tucked in a picture frame with an 8-by-10-inch copy of one of the final pictures taken of Angie.
Angie often would hang out at Waynesboro's McDonald's with other teenagers, her parents said.
On Aug. 24, 1995, after they returned from the beach, Clarence Daley dropped Angie off at a friend's house on Waynesboro's Hawbaker Avenue.
Her family never heard from her again.
They waited a couple of weeks before reporting Angie missing.
"We just figured that it was another adventure," Sunday Gossert said, noting she'd keep from worrying by recalling the time her daughter disappeared to go on the cross-country trek and returned safely.
Police had been contacted in previous instances of Angie leaving home, so Clarence Daley suspects officers weren't too concerned when told she had gone missing after that beach trip.
"They brushed it off that she had run off," he said.
Others, however, felt something was amiss almost immediately.
"We were scared for her. We wondered where she was," said Suzi Delarnoux, Angie's counselor at Manito, an alternative school.
Sunday Gossert said Angie did fairly well in traditional school until she reached ninth grade. She said her oldest daughter didn't fit into the high school environment, so she attended Manito for two years.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011-03-19/news/29147530_1_hoke-and-daley-kristy-dawn-hoke-angie-lynn-daley
Police found two bodies on the same day 11 months ago but have filed charges related to only one death
March 19, 2011|By JENNIFER FITCH | waynesboro@herald-mail.com
It was exceptionally warm early on the morning of April 6, 2010, when Jeffrey Miles stood on a bridge and looked out over the northbound lanes of Interstate 81.
Police said Miles threatened suicide and mused about "evil and demons" inside him after officers arrived at 2:30 a.m.
Was Miles sincere? Or was the threat a ploy undertaken because he knew authorities were investigating him in connection with the death of a Hagerstown woman?
Whatever his intentions, Miles didn't jump and instead left the bridge in police custody. Later that day, he was charged with criminal homicide in the death of Kristy Dawn Hoke, whose body was found, in part, because of a conversation Miles' son had with police.
According to court documents, Miles later that day took investigators to the woods off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro, Pa. There, in a small clearing surrounded by brambles, police found the slashed body of Hoke.
The Hagerstown mother of three, identified in court as a police informant, had been reported missing days earlier.
At noon on the day Hoke's body was found, troopers descended on a farm adjacent to the underpass between Waynesboro and Greencastle, Pa.
"As a result of this (Hoke) investigation, information was developed that led troopers to a wooded area off state Route 16 in Washington Township. ... Upon the troopers' arrival there, they discovered skeletal remains that were partially concealed by vegetation and overgrowth," Trooper Tom Pinkerton said at a news conference at the time.
Dental records identified the remains as those of Angie Lynn Daley, who was 17 in 1995 when her family in Waynesboro reported her missing.
No one has been charged in Daley's death.
Eleven months have passed since the bodies of Hoke and Daley were found near the Maryland border.
A daughter disappears
Sunday Gossert was surprised when she learned she was pregnant with her first child. She and Angie's father, Clarence Daley, married five months into the pregnancy, preparing for the child's birth with the nervousness not uncommon for first-time parents.
Gossert spent 16 hours in labor before Angie's entrance into the world on Nov. 28, 1977, at Waynesboro Hospital. She weighed 6 pounds 6 ounces and didn't have a single hair on her head.
"We have a lot of pictures of her, with her being the first born," Sunday Gossert said.
"Angie was a good child. She didn't cry a lot," Clarence Daley said.
Sister Ashley was born 5 1/2 years later, and brother, Eddie, followed 3 1/2 years after that.
Angie, who started talking at age 2, enjoyed helping to clean and cook. Mother and daughter listened to the rock band AC/DC when Angie got older, and she taught her grandmother to play "Tetris" on Nintendo.
Angie's parents divorced when she was 11, and after that, she took care of her younger sister and brother while living with Clarence Daley, Gossert said.
Gossert said she suspects that Angie resented stepping into a motherly role, then "broke loose" when she turned 16 and started driving.
Angie would stay out for a few days at a time, and at least once, she hitched a ride across the country with a truck driver. Gossert said Angie ended up in California, and Clarence Daley said he received a call from Angie when she was in Texas.
But when Gossert's second husband, David Lehnhart, died in January 1995, Angie stayed around the house and comforted her mother.
The last exchange Gossert remembers having with her oldest daughter was paying Angie's speeding ticket before Angie and her siblings left for their annual beach trip with their father.
For years, Gossert carried in her wallet the last note she had from her daughter, who wrote "Mom, went to McDonald's. Be back. Don't leave. Love, Angie" in looping letters.
That crumpled note is tucked in a picture frame with an 8-by-10-inch copy of one of the final pictures taken of Angie.
Angie often would hang out at Waynesboro's McDonald's with other teenagers, her parents said.
On Aug. 24, 1995, after they returned from the beach, Clarence Daley dropped Angie off at a friend's house on Waynesboro's Hawbaker Avenue.
Her family never heard from her again.
They waited a couple of weeks before reporting Angie missing.
"We just figured that it was another adventure," Sunday Gossert said, noting she'd keep from worrying by recalling the time her daughter disappeared to go on the cross-country trek and returned safely.
Police had been contacted in previous instances of Angie leaving home, so Clarence Daley suspects officers weren't too concerned when told she had gone missing after that beach trip.
"They brushed it off that she had run off," he said.
Others, however, felt something was amiss almost immediately.
"We were scared for her. We wondered where she was," said Suzi Delarnoux, Angie's counselor at Manito, an alternative school.
Sunday Gossert said Angie did fairly well in traditional school until she reached ninth grade. She said her oldest daughter didn't fit into the high school environment, so she attended Manito for two years.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011-03-19/news/29147530_1_hoke-and-daley-kristy-dawn-hoke-angie-lynn-daley
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Attorneys seek change of venue for State Line, Pa. man accused of killing Kristy Dawn Hoke
Lawyers for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr. also want to suppress some of his statements
April 05, 2011|By JENNIFER FITCH | waynesboro@herald-mail.com
WAYNESBORO, Pa. — Attorneys for a man charged with killing a police informant a year ago have asked a Franklin County, Pa., judge to move the location of the trial and suppress some of the defendant's statements.
A hearing is scheduled for April 26 on motions filed by the defense for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., a State Line, Pa., man charged with criminal homicide in the death of Kristy Dawn Hoke. The Hagerstown woman's body was found a year ago today in a wooded area in Waynesboro.
Contained in pretrial motions is a request to change the venue of the trial due to media coverage and Internet content that has "reached virtually every household in Franklin County." The motion said that the coverage has been prejudicial to Miles, because it "consistently included reference to an alleged confession" as well as references to Miles leading police to Hoke's body and a second body.
Miles, who turns 48 on Friday, cannot have a fair and impartial trial in Franklin County, according to the motion.
The motion also claimed that police obtained several incriminating statements without affording him a Miranda warning or waiver of those rights. As a result, defense attorneys Mike Toms and Eric Weisbrod asked the court to suppress those statements from the trial.
Toms and Weisbrod, who did not return calls seeking comment Tuesday, have asked Judge Douglas W. Herman to strike a notice of aggravating circumstances filed by the Franklin County District Attorney's Office. That notice is required for the prosecution to seek the death penalty.
The aggravating circumstances included in the Aug. 31, 2010, notice are: the defendant committed the killing while in the perpetration of a felony; the offense was committed by means of torture; the defendant committed the killing while in the perpetration of a drug-related felony; and the victim was a confidential informant.
In asking the judge to strike the notice of aggravating circumstances, the defense has said the circumstances did not legally constitute torture, and there is no proof that Miles knew about Hoke's role as an informant.
Franklin County Coroner Jeffrey R. Conner said Hoke was killed April 3, 2010. Her body was found the morning of April 6, 2010, in the south end of Waynesboro borough.
Pennsylvania State Police found human remains on a farm west of Waynesboro hours after finding Hoke's body. Those remains were identified as Angie L. Daley, who was 17 years old when she was reported missing in Waynesboro in 1995.
Troopers have said the cases are related, but won't say how.
Assistant District Attorney Eric Augustine said in court Oct. 26, 2010, that investigators believe they have recovered a pair of scissors used to kill Hoke, who had three children. She had obtained a new job as a server at Golden Corral shortly before her death.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011-04-05/news/29386900_1_jeffrey-eldon-miles-kristy-dawn-hoke-informant
Lawyers for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr. also want to suppress some of his statements
April 05, 2011|By JENNIFER FITCH | waynesboro@herald-mail.com
WAYNESBORO, Pa. — Attorneys for a man charged with killing a police informant a year ago have asked a Franklin County, Pa., judge to move the location of the trial and suppress some of the defendant's statements.
A hearing is scheduled for April 26 on motions filed by the defense for Jeffrey Eldon Miles Sr., a State Line, Pa., man charged with criminal homicide in the death of Kristy Dawn Hoke. The Hagerstown woman's body was found a year ago today in a wooded area in Waynesboro.
Contained in pretrial motions is a request to change the venue of the trial due to media coverage and Internet content that has "reached virtually every household in Franklin County." The motion said that the coverage has been prejudicial to Miles, because it "consistently included reference to an alleged confession" as well as references to Miles leading police to Hoke's body and a second body.
Miles, who turns 48 on Friday, cannot have a fair and impartial trial in Franklin County, according to the motion.
The motion also claimed that police obtained several incriminating statements without affording him a Miranda warning or waiver of those rights. As a result, defense attorneys Mike Toms and Eric Weisbrod asked the court to suppress those statements from the trial.
Toms and Weisbrod, who did not return calls seeking comment Tuesday, have asked Judge Douglas W. Herman to strike a notice of aggravating circumstances filed by the Franklin County District Attorney's Office. That notice is required for the prosecution to seek the death penalty.
The aggravating circumstances included in the Aug. 31, 2010, notice are: the defendant committed the killing while in the perpetration of a felony; the offense was committed by means of torture; the defendant committed the killing while in the perpetration of a drug-related felony; and the victim was a confidential informant.
In asking the judge to strike the notice of aggravating circumstances, the defense has said the circumstances did not legally constitute torture, and there is no proof that Miles knew about Hoke's role as an informant.
Franklin County Coroner Jeffrey R. Conner said Hoke was killed April 3, 2010. Her body was found the morning of April 6, 2010, in the south end of Waynesboro borough.
Pennsylvania State Police found human remains on a farm west of Waynesboro hours after finding Hoke's body. Those remains were identified as Angie L. Daley, who was 17 years old when she was reported missing in Waynesboro in 1995.
Troopers have said the cases are related, but won't say how.
Assistant District Attorney Eric Augustine said in court Oct. 26, 2010, that investigators believe they have recovered a pair of scissors used to kill Hoke, who had three children. She had obtained a new job as a server at Golden Corral shortly before her death.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011-04-05/news/29386900_1_jeffrey-eldon-miles-kristy-dawn-hoke-informant
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Judge: Trial for State Line man charged in Hoke homicide case won't begin this year
January 2012 is 'first opportunity' for trial, says Franklin County judge
April 15, 2011|By JENNIFER FITCH | waynesboro@herald-mail.com
WAYNESBORO, Pa. — The trial for a State Line, Pa., man charged with killing a police informant in April 2010 will not be held this year, Franklin County (Pa.) Judge Douglas Herman said Friday morning.
Herman presided over a brief case-management conference for Jeffrey E. Miles Sr., 48, in the Franklin County Jail's courtroom. Separated from the public by a wall with large windows, the judge and attorneys did a cursory update of the case and chose to defer several matters to another pretrial conference scheduled for April 26.
Miles appeared before the judge in an orange prison-issued jumpsuit. He is charged with criminal homicide in the April 3, 2010, stabbing death of Kristy Dawn Hoke, a Hagerstown area mother of three whose body was found in a wooded section of Waynesboro borough.
Herman said he expects a trial would require scheduling a courtroom and staff for a week or longer.
"The first opportunity to have this scheduled for a trial with that length of time is January 2012," he said.
Trial dates should be set during the April 26 pretrial conference, Herman said.
A notice of aggravating circumstances, which identifies Hoke as a confidential informant, was filed last August and allows the prosecution to seek the death penalty against Miles. He is being represented by Public Defender Mike Toms and court-appointed co-counsel Eric Weisbrod, who did not attend Friday's conference.
Assistant District Attorney Eric Augustine, who is prosecuting the case, also did not attend the conference. The prosecution was represented by Assistant District Attorney Jeremiah Zook, who told the judge he had little to discuss beyond asking for that day's proceeding to be held in conjunction with deliberations on motions April 26.
The judge asked the attorneys about the prosecution's response to an omnibus pretrial motion. That response was due March 25.
"It does not appear there was an answer," Herman said, saying that should be filed as soon as possible.
Toms said he received photographs as well as video and audio recordings in items provided by the district attorney's office.
"I have received a thick notebook of hard copy police reports," Toms said, saying he also received 10 to 12 gigabytes of electronic data.
Toms said he either had not seen or could not recall seeing physical evidence and reports from testing of the scissors alleged to have been used in the killing.
The April 26 pretrial conference will be used to "fill in the blanks so to speak" for those and other matters, Herman said.
The parties also are expected to review several requests made by the defense, including one for a change of venue.
Pennsylvania State Police found the skeletal remains of a Waynesboro teenager reported missing in 1995 hours after finding Hoke's body. Police have said information from the Hoke investigation led them to Angie L. Daley's bones, but no one has been charged in her death, which a coroner said was caused by blunt force trauma.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011-04-15/breakingnews/29424016_1_trial-dates-judge-douglas-herman-kristy-dawn-hoke
January 2012 is 'first opportunity' for trial, says Franklin County judge
April 15, 2011|By JENNIFER FITCH | waynesboro@herald-mail.com
WAYNESBORO, Pa. — The trial for a State Line, Pa., man charged with killing a police informant in April 2010 will not be held this year, Franklin County (Pa.) Judge Douglas Herman said Friday morning.
Herman presided over a brief case-management conference for Jeffrey E. Miles Sr., 48, in the Franklin County Jail's courtroom. Separated from the public by a wall with large windows, the judge and attorneys did a cursory update of the case and chose to defer several matters to another pretrial conference scheduled for April 26.
Miles appeared before the judge in an orange prison-issued jumpsuit. He is charged with criminal homicide in the April 3, 2010, stabbing death of Kristy Dawn Hoke, a Hagerstown area mother of three whose body was found in a wooded section of Waynesboro borough.
Herman said he expects a trial would require scheduling a courtroom and staff for a week or longer.
"The first opportunity to have this scheduled for a trial with that length of time is January 2012," he said.
Trial dates should be set during the April 26 pretrial conference, Herman said.
A notice of aggravating circumstances, which identifies Hoke as a confidential informant, was filed last August and allows the prosecution to seek the death penalty against Miles. He is being represented by Public Defender Mike Toms and court-appointed co-counsel Eric Weisbrod, who did not attend Friday's conference.
Assistant District Attorney Eric Augustine, who is prosecuting the case, also did not attend the conference. The prosecution was represented by Assistant District Attorney Jeremiah Zook, who told the judge he had little to discuss beyond asking for that day's proceeding to be held in conjunction with deliberations on motions April 26.
The judge asked the attorneys about the prosecution's response to an omnibus pretrial motion. That response was due March 25.
"It does not appear there was an answer," Herman said, saying that should be filed as soon as possible.
Toms said he received photographs as well as video and audio recordings in items provided by the district attorney's office.
"I have received a thick notebook of hard copy police reports," Toms said, saying he also received 10 to 12 gigabytes of electronic data.
Toms said he either had not seen or could not recall seeing physical evidence and reports from testing of the scissors alleged to have been used in the killing.
The April 26 pretrial conference will be used to "fill in the blanks so to speak" for those and other matters, Herman said.
The parties also are expected to review several requests made by the defense, including one for a change of venue.
Pennsylvania State Police found the skeletal remains of a Waynesboro teenager reported missing in 1995 hours after finding Hoke's body. Police have said information from the Hoke investigation led them to Angie L. Daley's bones, but no one has been charged in her death, which a coroner said was caused by blunt force trauma.
http://articles.herald-mail.com/2011-04-15/breakingnews/29424016_1_trial-dates-judge-douglas-herman-kristy-dawn-hoke
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Miles tells judge he's unhappy with representation in homicide case
State Line, Pa., man is charged in 2010 slaying of Hagerstown woman
By JENNIFER FITCH
waynesboro@herald-mail.com
1:18 p.m. EST, January 23, 2012
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — A man charged with criminal homicide in the April 2010 stabbing death of a Hagerstown mother told a Franklin County, Pa., judge Monday he is frustrated with how his court case is proceeding.
Pennsylvania State Police allege Jeffrey E. Miles Sr., 48, of State Line, Pa., killed a woman identified in court documents as a confidential informant. The body of Kristy Dawn Hoke was found in a wooded area off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro, Pa.
On Monday morning, Miles appeared before Judge Douglas Herman in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas for a hearing about defense motions. The hearing opened with Miles telling the judge he was upset only one of his two court-appointed attorneys was present.
“The court system has (had) plenty of time to reschedule this for him to be here. ... He should be here to speak on my behalf,” Miles said.
Public Defender Mike Toms said a trial in neighboring Cumberland County, Pa., required the presence of Miles’ other attorney, Eric Weisbrod.
Herman proceeded with a few scheduling issues and updates, but said he would save more pressing matters until Miles had full representation.
One of the most significant motions pending is a request to dismiss the Franklin County District Attorney’s Office’s notice of aggravating circumstances, which is a document required for prosecutors to seek the death penalty.
“Very seldom does a defendant have a burden of proof, ... but in this circumstance, when you’re seeking dismissal of notice of aggravating circumstances, the defendant has to come forward (proving) that no aggravating circumstances exist,” Herman said.
Miles claimed his attorneys do not talk to him for months at a time.
When the judge asked if Weisbrod had visited the jail last week, Miles said the attorney dropped off paperwork but did not talk in detail with him.
“I’m entitled to a fair trial. I’m entitled to good and fair counsel,” he said.
Herman issued a court order that contained a section calling for the defense team to keep Miles advised and provided with sufficient information, although he said he doesn’t “expect them to be at the jail every single day.” He asked the defendant if he requests specific things of his attorneys in writing.
Miles also told the judge he wants a private investigator assigned.
“I feel I need a private investigator because (the case is based on) evidence I had given almost two years ago. ... Evidence will be lost,” Miles said, adding that he fears witnesses’ memories will change.
A mitigation expert working for the defense team will partner with an investigator, Herman said.
Police discovered a second set of human remains six miles away on the day they found Hoke’s body. Angie Lynn Daley, a teenager who went missing in 1995, was identified through dental records.
No one has been charged in Daley’s death, which was classified as homicide by blunt force head trauma.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/hm-miles-tells-judge-hes-unhappy-with-representation-in-homicide-case-20120123,0,4259937.story
State Line, Pa., man is charged in 2010 slaying of Hagerstown woman
By JENNIFER FITCH
waynesboro@herald-mail.com
1:18 p.m. EST, January 23, 2012
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — A man charged with criminal homicide in the April 2010 stabbing death of a Hagerstown mother told a Franklin County, Pa., judge Monday he is frustrated with how his court case is proceeding.
Pennsylvania State Police allege Jeffrey E. Miles Sr., 48, of State Line, Pa., killed a woman identified in court documents as a confidential informant. The body of Kristy Dawn Hoke was found in a wooded area off East Ninth Street in Waynesboro, Pa.
On Monday morning, Miles appeared before Judge Douglas Herman in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas for a hearing about defense motions. The hearing opened with Miles telling the judge he was upset only one of his two court-appointed attorneys was present.
“The court system has (had) plenty of time to reschedule this for him to be here. ... He should be here to speak on my behalf,” Miles said.
Public Defender Mike Toms said a trial in neighboring Cumberland County, Pa., required the presence of Miles’ other attorney, Eric Weisbrod.
Herman proceeded with a few scheduling issues and updates, but said he would save more pressing matters until Miles had full representation.
One of the most significant motions pending is a request to dismiss the Franklin County District Attorney’s Office’s notice of aggravating circumstances, which is a document required for prosecutors to seek the death penalty.
“Very seldom does a defendant have a burden of proof, ... but in this circumstance, when you’re seeking dismissal of notice of aggravating circumstances, the defendant has to come forward (proving) that no aggravating circumstances exist,” Herman said.
Miles claimed his attorneys do not talk to him for months at a time.
When the judge asked if Weisbrod had visited the jail last week, Miles said the attorney dropped off paperwork but did not talk in detail with him.
“I’m entitled to a fair trial. I’m entitled to good and fair counsel,” he said.
Herman issued a court order that contained a section calling for the defense team to keep Miles advised and provided with sufficient information, although he said he doesn’t “expect them to be at the jail every single day.” He asked the defendant if he requests specific things of his attorneys in writing.
Miles also told the judge he wants a private investigator assigned.
“I feel I need a private investigator because (the case is based on) evidence I had given almost two years ago. ... Evidence will be lost,” Miles said, adding that he fears witnesses’ memories will change.
A mitigation expert working for the defense team will partner with an investigator, Herman said.
Police discovered a second set of human remains six miles away on the day they found Hoke’s body. Angie Lynn Daley, a teenager who went missing in 1995, was identified through dental records.
No one has been charged in Daley’s death, which was classified as homicide by blunt force head trauma.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/hm-miles-tells-judge-hes-unhappy-with-representation-in-homicide-case-20120123,0,4259937.story
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
Coroner, police trooper testify about evidence in Pa. murder trial
By JENNIFER FITCH waynesboro@herald-mail.com
6:57 p.m. EDT, September 17, 2012
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — Investigators probing the 1995 disappearance of a Waynesboro, Pa., teenager knew of Jeffrey E. Miles Sr. before his alleged confession 15 years later to her bludgeoning death, a state police trooper testified in court Monday.
“I was notified by two sources his name had come up in a missing-person report,” Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Aaron B. Martin said.
Franklin County (Pa.) Court of Common Pleas Judge Carol Van Horn presided over Monday’s preliminary hearing for Miles, 49, on a criminal homicide charge. State police allege Miles beat 17-year-old Angie Lynn Daley with a board in 1995.
Police discovered Daley’s skeletal remains on April 6, 2010, the same day they found a body in Waynesboro, Pa., woods. Miles, of State Line, Pa., is being prosecuted separately in that case, which involves the stabbing death of Kristy Dawn Hoke of Hagerstown.
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in the Hoke case.
On Monday, Martin and Franklin County Coroner Jeffrey R. Conner testified about evidence in the Daley case as Van Horn decided whether the criminal charge should remain in place. She ruled the case should continue through the judicial system.
Martin said Miles guided him to the spot where Daley’s remains were found on a farm between Washington and Antrim townships in southern Franklin County. Martin said they stopped first at the state police barrack, and shortly before they did, someone told him of a possible connection to Daley.
“He was mentioned, I believe, in a missing-person report generated by the Waynesboro Police Department,” Martin said.
Daley’s father dropped her off at a friend’s house Aug. 24, 1995. Her family never saw her again, but waited a couple of weeks before reporting her missing because she was known to stay out for a few days at a time, once hitching a ride across the country.
Conner said in court that a single tooth filling served as the first identification for Daley’s remains, which later underwent DNA testing.
Miles’ court-appointed attorney argued against a body being positively identified from one filling. In his arguments, Eric Weisbrod discussed the legal aspects of using DNA in an investigation.
“We don’t believe that is sufficient probable cause to bound this case over (for trial) as a criminal homicide case,” Weisbrod said.
Assistant District Attorney David Drumheller countered that Miles was shown a picture of Daley and allegedly described how he killed her.
“These things, your honor, all lead to the identity” of the remains, Drumheller said.
Miles allegedly told police he was smoking crack with Daley when he hit her with a 2-by-4. Police allege Miles put her in the trunk of a vehicle, drove her to the farm and hit her again twice when she asked that he not kill her. Investigators said those blows were fatal.
Miles removed most of Daley’s clothes and left her facedown but not buried, police allege.
Martin told the judge about how the discovery of the skeletal remains occurred in April 2010.
“He told me not to lose this (opportunity) and he could take me to her now. ... He directed us there from memory,” Martin said.
Miles’ case will be scheduled for mandatory arraignment. He is expected to go to trial in the Hoke case in February 2013.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/hm-coroner-police-trooper-testify-about-evidence-in-pa-murder-trial-20120917,0,4272665.story
By JENNIFER FITCH waynesboro@herald-mail.com
6:57 p.m. EDT, September 17, 2012
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — Investigators probing the 1995 disappearance of a Waynesboro, Pa., teenager knew of Jeffrey E. Miles Sr. before his alleged confession 15 years later to her bludgeoning death, a state police trooper testified in court Monday.
“I was notified by two sources his name had come up in a missing-person report,” Pennsylvania State Police Trooper Aaron B. Martin said.
Franklin County (Pa.) Court of Common Pleas Judge Carol Van Horn presided over Monday’s preliminary hearing for Miles, 49, on a criminal homicide charge. State police allege Miles beat 17-year-old Angie Lynn Daley with a board in 1995.
Police discovered Daley’s skeletal remains on April 6, 2010, the same day they found a body in Waynesboro, Pa., woods. Miles, of State Line, Pa., is being prosecuted separately in that case, which involves the stabbing death of Kristy Dawn Hoke of Hagerstown.
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in the Hoke case.
On Monday, Martin and Franklin County Coroner Jeffrey R. Conner testified about evidence in the Daley case as Van Horn decided whether the criminal charge should remain in place. She ruled the case should continue through the judicial system.
Martin said Miles guided him to the spot where Daley’s remains were found on a farm between Washington and Antrim townships in southern Franklin County. Martin said they stopped first at the state police barrack, and shortly before they did, someone told him of a possible connection to Daley.
“He was mentioned, I believe, in a missing-person report generated by the Waynesboro Police Department,” Martin said.
Daley’s father dropped her off at a friend’s house Aug. 24, 1995. Her family never saw her again, but waited a couple of weeks before reporting her missing because she was known to stay out for a few days at a time, once hitching a ride across the country.
Conner said in court that a single tooth filling served as the first identification for Daley’s remains, which later underwent DNA testing.
Miles’ court-appointed attorney argued against a body being positively identified from one filling. In his arguments, Eric Weisbrod discussed the legal aspects of using DNA in an investigation.
“We don’t believe that is sufficient probable cause to bound this case over (for trial) as a criminal homicide case,” Weisbrod said.
Assistant District Attorney David Drumheller countered that Miles was shown a picture of Daley and allegedly described how he killed her.
“These things, your honor, all lead to the identity” of the remains, Drumheller said.
Miles allegedly told police he was smoking crack with Daley when he hit her with a 2-by-4. Police allege Miles put her in the trunk of a vehicle, drove her to the farm and hit her again twice when she asked that he not kill her. Investigators said those blows were fatal.
Miles removed most of Daley’s clothes and left her facedown but not buried, police allege.
Martin told the judge about how the discovery of the skeletal remains occurred in April 2010.
“He told me not to lose this (opportunity) and he could take me to her now. ... He directed us there from memory,” Martin said.
Miles’ case will be scheduled for mandatory arraignment. He is expected to go to trial in the Hoke case in February 2013.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/hm-coroner-police-trooper-testify-about-evidence-in-pa-murder-trial-20120917,0,4272665.story
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Re: ANGIE DALEY - 17 yo (1995) - Waynesboro PA
State Line man enters not guilty plea in Waynesboro teen's death
Jeffrey E. Miles Sr. is charged in the deaths of Angie Lynn Daley and Kristy Dawn Hoke
By JENNIFER FITCH waynesboro@herald-mail.com
7:46 p.m. EST, December 5, 2012
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — Jeffrey E. Miles Sr., who is charged with killing two people, waived mandatory arraignment Wednesday in the Franklin County (Pa.) Court of Common Pleas and had a not-guilty plea entered on his behalf in the case involving a 17-year-old female beaten to death.
Miles, 49, of State Line, Pa., is charged with criminal homicide in the 1995 death of Waynesboro, Pa., teenager Angie Lynn Daley. Her remains were found in April 2010 on a farm in southern Franklin County.
The same day that Daley’s remains were discovered, law enforcement officials found a Hagerstown woman’s body in the woods off Ninth Street in Waynesboro. Police have charged Miles in the stabbing death of that woman, 29-year-old Kristy Dawn Hoke.
Miles’ court-appointed attorney and prosecutors are scheduled to appear in court Thursday morning to discuss jury selection in the Hoke case. They will work on the wording on forms sent to the jury pool, according to defense attorney Eric Weisbrod.
Weisbrod met with the defendant Wednesday afternoon regarding mandatory arraignment in the Daley case. He said Miles, who is being held without bail in the Franklin County Jail, signed paperwork to waive the arraignment and have a not-guilty plea entered.
Miles’ next court appearance in the Daley case is scheduled for Feb. 15, 2013. Judge Carol L. Van Horn is presiding in that case.
Miles’ trial in the Hoke case is scheduled to start Feb. 4, 2013, with Judge Douglas W. Herman presiding. Prosecutors are taking steps to seek the death penalty in that trial.
The defendant is charged with one count of criminal homicide in each case.
Pennsylvania State Police said Miles confessed to striking Daley in the head three times with a 2-by-4 board and dumping her in a secluded spot.
An autopsy found Hoke suffered multiple stab wounds. Prosecutors have said in court they believe a pair of scissors was used to make those fatal wounds.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/local/hm-state-line-man-pleads-not-guilty-in-waynesboro-teens-death-20121205,0,4539438.story
Jeffrey E. Miles Sr. is charged in the deaths of Angie Lynn Daley and Kristy Dawn Hoke
By JENNIFER FITCH waynesboro@herald-mail.com
7:46 p.m. EST, December 5, 2012
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa. — Jeffrey E. Miles Sr., who is charged with killing two people, waived mandatory arraignment Wednesday in the Franklin County (Pa.) Court of Common Pleas and had a not-guilty plea entered on his behalf in the case involving a 17-year-old female beaten to death.
Miles, 49, of State Line, Pa., is charged with criminal homicide in the 1995 death of Waynesboro, Pa., teenager Angie Lynn Daley. Her remains were found in April 2010 on a farm in southern Franklin County.
The same day that Daley’s remains were discovered, law enforcement officials found a Hagerstown woman’s body in the woods off Ninth Street in Waynesboro. Police have charged Miles in the stabbing death of that woman, 29-year-old Kristy Dawn Hoke.
Miles’ court-appointed attorney and prosecutors are scheduled to appear in court Thursday morning to discuss jury selection in the Hoke case. They will work on the wording on forms sent to the jury pool, according to defense attorney Eric Weisbrod.
Weisbrod met with the defendant Wednesday afternoon regarding mandatory arraignment in the Daley case. He said Miles, who is being held without bail in the Franklin County Jail, signed paperwork to waive the arraignment and have a not-guilty plea entered.
Miles’ next court appearance in the Daley case is scheduled for Feb. 15, 2013. Judge Carol L. Van Horn is presiding in that case.
Miles’ trial in the Hoke case is scheduled to start Feb. 4, 2013, with Judge Douglas W. Herman presiding. Prosecutors are taking steps to seek the death penalty in that trial.
The defendant is charged with one count of criminal homicide in each case.
Pennsylvania State Police said Miles confessed to striking Daley in the head three times with a 2-by-4 board and dumping her in a secluded spot.
An autopsy found Hoke suffered multiple stab wounds. Prosecutors have said in court they believe a pair of scissors was used to make those fatal wounds.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/local/hm-state-line-man-pleads-not-guilty-in-waynesboro-teens-death-20121205,0,4539438.story
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