MD MD - Nancy Marie Shomette, 17, and Michael Ann Ryan, 14, Murdered, 15 Jun 1955

Richard

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Nancy Marie Shomette, 17, and Michael Ann Ryan, 14, were found shot to death in Northwest Branch Park in Prince Georges County, Maryland on 15 June 1955.

The slayings stunned and petrified the Washington region. News of the case ran on the front pages of local newspapers for two weeks straight, elbowing aside the Cold War. Someone had gunned down two innocent young girls in the peaceful suburbs, but even more frightening was the fact that the killer was on the loose. Parents refused to let their children out of their houses for days...

Prince George's police, the FBI and D.C. police interviewed 5,000 people, identified hundreds of suspicious characters and obtained three false confessions. They drained a pond and searched every inch of Northwest Branch Park, where the girls were shot. But they could not find the murder weapon, much less the killer.

For decades, the case haunted Prince George's homicide detectives, who refused to drop the investigation, even though the few fresh leads and tips that tantalized over the years invariably failed to bring resolution.

That changed on Jan. 23, 1997, police say, when they received a phone call out of the blue--from a town called North Pole, Alaska...


LINKS:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPcap/2000-06/15/089r-061500-idx.html

Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, June 27, 1956, Page B-16, Image 61

https://www.amazon.com/Briar-Patch-Murder-That-Would/dp/0764337823
 
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Michael Ann Ryan was my mother’s sister. Our family still feels there is a loose end with the William Newman connection. We never could determine why he was so involved and he acted very fishy posting the memorial in the newspaper and running out of his polygraph…
 
Michael Ann Ryan was my mother’s sister. Our family still feels there is a loose end with the William Newman connection. We never could determine why he was so involved and he acted very fishy posting the memorial in the newspaper and running out of his polygraph…
Welcome to Websleuths. Hopefully this cold case might yet be solved.
 
This year will mark the 70 year anniversary of this unsolved double murder.
Already posted above.

Re: the article from June 2000 in reference to this case. Cannot locate any follow-up to see if they ended up verifying the confession or not.


Deathbed Tale Offers a Solution to 1955 Slayings​

June 15, 2000
Summary
By Craig Whitlock
and
April Witt

Before her brother-in-law succumbed to liver disease, Jean Dobek was summoned to his Florida bedside. The dying man pulled her close, she recounted later, and confessed to a horrible crime he had committed in Prince George's County more than 40 years earlier.

Police say Edward V. Dobek told his sister-in-law that on June 15, 1955--back when he was a skinny 17-year-old from Hyattsville--he aimed his squirrel rifle at two teenage girls passing through a county park on their way to school.

The girls, Nancy Marie Shomette, 17, and Michael Ann Ryan, 14, apparently had offended Dobek in some way several days before. Dobek pulled the trigger 17 times, killing them both, police said.
 

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