JusticeWillBeServed
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Detectives relieved new DA will reopen Mandy Steingasser murder case
Unsolved 93 murder of teen is still being worked - September 2013

Amanda Mandy Steingasser was a fun-loving 17-year-old with a dazzling smile and a wide circle of friends at North Tonawanda High School.
She loved animals, loved her family, loved classic rock bands like Led Zeppelin and loved to party. Like many teenagers, she sometimes made mistakes in judgment.
After a night of partying at several different locations, Mandy got into a car with a male classmate around 1:20 a.m. on Sept. 20, 1993. The car headed off into the night, north on Oliver Street.
None of Mandys friends or family members ever saw her alive again. Someone got away with murder that night.
Five weeks later, two men searching for mushrooms found Mandys body, dumped near a pond at Bond Lake County Park in Lewiston. Someone had strangled her and fractured her skull in two places.
Twenty-three years later, friends still mourn the girl they remember as a kind and thoughtful friend.
Almost from the beginning of the investigation, DiBernardo and other detectives were convinced that they knew who killed Mandy the teenage male classmate who picked her up in his car. He still remains the prime person of interest. The Buffalo News is withholding his name because he never was charged and possibly never will be.
Now in his early 40s, the former classmates actions on the night of Mandys disappearance are still under investigation, sources close to the case told The News.
But the former classmate vehemently denies any involvement in the slaying. He told police and a News reporter that, soon after Mandy got into his car, she changed her mind about going with him and asked to be dropped off. He said he let her out of his car at another location on Oliver Street, near a church about four blocks from where he picked her up.
I dont want them to stop investigating, the former classmate said. "I want them to find out who did this. But it wasnt me. As long as they keep looking at me as the suspect, theyre never going to find out who did it, because it wasnt me.
Sources close to the case said police have good reasons for looking at the former classmate as a person of interest in the case. In the days, weeks and months after the slaying, they say detectives caught him lying several times about his actions that night. They also said witnesses saw him washing his car at a coin-operated car wash around 2:15 a.m. not long after police believe Mandys body was dumped at a muddy location at Bond Lake.
Who goes out and washes his car at 2 a.m.? asked Glenn Gardner, a retired North Tonawanda detective whose daughter was a close friend of Mandys.
According to police, the person of interest failed two polygraph tests after the murder, one administered by State Police and another by the FBI. Authorities said he walked out of a police office during the first polygraph test because he was upset by the tone of the questioning. During the second test, a polygraph operator felt the subject gave untruthful answers to two questions: Are you involved in the disappearance of Mandy? and Are you withholding any information?
The former classmate answered no to both questions.
Unsolved 93 murder of teen is still being worked - September 2013
