'Giangrasso also believed Sister Cathy's killing was church-related, telling the Huffington Post: 'I personally thought it was in-house, within her social network – the priests and the religious order. However, they say there’s nothing, even though Jean Wehner found many victims willing to come forward simply by sending out letters in the mail. More than 40 years after her death, the case of Sister Cathy Cesnik's murder is still unsolved. They scared the living hell out of us. Sharon May states firmly and rudely in her interview that she had absolutely no involvement in any sort of cover-up.Audiences reacted poorly to how cold, smarmy, and arrogant Sharon May appeared to be, and with good reason: they have every reason to believe she was very much involved in a cover-up for the Archdiocese of Baltimore, evident enough from her complete inaction throughout the case.However, there’s even more to the story to be considered: Sharon May’s husband used to be a Sharon May’s husband, V. Eric W. May, Sr., was a state cop while Sharon was a prosecutor, providing the two of them even more opportunity to participate in a cover-up.The mysterious Brother Bob is, in many ways, even more chilling a figure than A. Joseph Maskell.


A twig hooked with yellow thread was found on the turn-signal lever. The mutilated body of the 26-year-old teacher was found on January 3, 1970. There are countless untold stories backing up the accusations made against A. Joseph Maskell and the Catholic Church that the docuseries doesn’t even begin to explore.One of the most famous pieces of evidence from the show is the cigarette butt shown in episode six, found near Sister Cathy’s body.
The car was processed by the crime lab. The missing nun was described as 5 feet, 5 inches tall, 115 pounds with green eyes, blonde hair and fair complexion. However, the Catholic Church is completely unwilling to share these documents, even though Supposedly, according to White and Jean Wehner, the Archdiocese opened an investigation into A. Joseph Maskell, and so, those records should exist. 'After a week of teaching, Sister Cathy, a member of the Sisters of Notre Dame, and the daughter of a Pennsylvania postal worker, decided on Friday night that she was going to go shopping. This is huge news regarding Sister Cathy’s case. Spitz did the official autopsy back in 1970. Possibly Missing: 1)An engagement gift 2) $255 cash (minus the rolls and gift?) 'Father Maskell picked me up, took me to a wooded area where there was a lot of policemen gathered around, he left me in the backseat and two policemen abused me while Maskell stood next to the car.'

The grisly case has inspired the Netflix docu-series The KeepersThe beloved nun who was an English and drama teacher at Archbishop Keough High School is believed to have been killed by someone in the church in an attempt to keep her quietLike a scene out of a horror movie, the high school junior was driven to a garbage dump by the school's 30-year-old spiritual counselor, Father Joseph Maskell - who died in 2001 - and reportedly told the 16-year-old student: 'You see what happens when you say bad things about people? Because the federal government keeps stalling and refusing to release information under the FOIA regarding Joyce Malecki’s murder, there are likely countless pieces of possibly helpful evidence related to the homicides of both Joyce Malecki and Sister Cathy.James Maskell, A. Joseph Maskell’s uncle, is a similarly powerful and threatening figure that deserves to be prodded harder. She has her B.A. She currently resides in Boston, Massachusetts with her partner and two best friends. The Keepers was an intense docu-series on Netflix about an unsolved murder, and here are some bits of evidence the show has left out. She had left her home in Baltimore to go shopping in Glen Burnie and for a date with a friend stationed at Fort Meade Army base. It seems that either the Archdiocese is lying about having investigated the accusations, or the Archdiocese is lying about having internal records on A. Joseph Maskell. Unless some brave sleuths or particularly inspired detectives go digging, Keough High School is now, for better or worse, closed to a continuing story.Though White says he included absolutely all the information he knew in the documentary, he did contradict himself later by saying, “The project was heavily vetted by lawyers — there were times when I believed we knew somebody that was involved in the abuse, but we couldn't include a name for legal reasons.” True crime buffs will know that this often happens, that the law tangles everything up in red tape so details like names and dates will be removed from stories.This begs the question, though, that if White says he included everything he knew, and we know he had to remove names for legal reasons — where in the documentary does he reveal these hidden suspects? Sister Cathy's body was undressed to the waist. Sister Cathy's body was undressed to the waist. Sister Catherine 'Cathy' Cesnik, a pretty and popular 26-year-old nun who taught at an all-girls Catholic school in Baltimore, was last seen by her roommate, another nun, going off to shop on the evening of Friday November 7, 1969.When she was reported missing later that night, several dozen cops and half-a-dozen dog teams unsuccessfully searched a wide swath of Baltimore's southwest neighborhood searching for clues to her whereabouts.A headline in a Baltimore newspaper blared: 'City Police Fail To Find Missing Nun. Online. 7.5k. The show is responsible for initiating a deeper look into the case of A. Joseph Maskell and Sister Cathy Cesnik, as Baltimore County Police start investigating again due to a public outcry. Just a few days before she vanished, the priest reportedly called her and, once again expressing his love, had asked her to marry him.But when he was questioned by the police, he had an ironclad alibi for the night of Sister Cathy's disappearance.In 2004, a retired Baltimore homicide detective told the Baltimore City Paper that the church lawyers had 'stepped in and they talked to the higher-ups at the police department.'