The warrant applications regarding the home and outbuildings that were submitted by an investigator, Trooper Adam Black, said the victim's husband, Andy Byler, found her body “a short distance inside” the home shortly after noon.
Black wrote that a woman, previously described by police as a family friend, called 911 at 12:36 p.m. to report that she and Andy Byler found Rebekah Byler unresponsive when they arrived.
Arriving at the crime scene, state police officers found Rebekah Byler on her back in the living room, Black wrote. The warrants sought knives, blades, cutting instruments and other items.
The home is located along a dirt road in a very remote farming area. There were no signs of activity Thursday afternoon at the house, where a buggy, a bike and a truck were parked outside. A few miles away, a gift shop displayed a handwritten sign offering prayers for their Amish neighbors.
Scores of Amish turned out for calling hours Thursday evening at a home in the community. Many arrived by buggies lit by headlights along the narrow country roads
Search warrants reveal new details as police investigate the killing of 23-year-old Rebekah A. Byler, who was found at her home in a very remote farming area in northwestern Pennsylvania.
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Search warrants issued in connection with the death of a pregnant Amish woman from the Spartansburg area said she appeared to have suffered cutting wounds to her neck and head.
Rebekah A. Byler, 23, was found deceased around midday Monday in the living room of her home on Fish Flats Road in Sparta Township.
Black wrote that a woman, previously described by police as a family friend, called Crawford County 911 at 12:26 p.m. to report that she and Andy Byler found Rebekah Byler unresponsive when they arrived.
Trooper Cynthia Schick told The Associated Press on Thursday that the investigation and autopsy have given police an idea of what the murder weapon might have been, but they do not have it in their possession.
Schick confirmed to The Meadville Tribune on Thursday that Byler had received two wounds — one to the neck and one to the head.
Search warrants issued in connection with the death of a pregnant Amish woman from the Spartansburg area said she appeared to have suffered cutting wounds to her neck and head.
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