Prosecutor meets with Autumn's family after rift
Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton met with the parents of slain 12-year-old Autumn Pasquale on Thursday, a day after the victim's family accused his office of bungling the search for the Clayton girl after she disappeared while out riding a bicycle.

Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton met with the parents of slain 12-year-old Autumn Pasquale on Thursday, a day after the victim's family accused his office of bungling the search for the Clayton girl after she disappeared while out riding a bicycle.
"We wanted to assure them we're moving forward, that we're 100 percent behind them in making sure justice is done," he said afterward. "We stand with them."
The meeting was clearly aimed at healing a rift that suddenly appeared between the grieving family and the man whose office will prosecute the two teenage brothers charged with murder in Autumn's death.
There was no immediate comment from Autumn's parents, Anthony Pasquale and Jennifer Cornwell.
The suspects - identified by townspeople as Justin Robinson, 15, and Dante Robinson, 17 - are due in court Friday for a juvenile detention hearing.
As the wheels of justice gear up, a woman identifying herself as Annie O'Neill of Philadelphia launched a national petition on change.org, the petition site, demanding that the brothers be tried as adults. The appeal had received nearly 3,500 signatures by Thursday evening.
The site provided no e-mail link or other contact information for O'Neill.
Dalton has said his office will decide within a week or two if it will seek to try the brothers as adults.
The meeting between Dalton and Autumn's parents followed dueling statements from the two sides on Wednesday.
The parents in interviews and Autumn's paternal great uncle Paul Spadafora, who served as a family spokesman, said the Prosecutor's Office, the lead agency in the investigation, had botched the search.
Spadafora also called for an investigation by the state Attorney General's Office.
Dalton defended the search, saying law enforcement officials had "poured their hearts and souls into this investigation and worked around the clock to find Autumn."
Late Thursday, Westmont lawyer Jaime Kaigh, a former assistant prosecutor in the area, said he had been retained by Autumn's parents to serve as their spokesman. He said he planned to issue a statement Friday thanking law enforcement for its efforts and asking for privacy for the family.
Autumn was last seen alive about 12:30 p.m. Saturday and was reported missing nine hours later when she did not make it back home by a family-imposed curfew. Officials said she sent a text message around 2:30 p.m. but was not heard from again.
Her body was found Monday night in a blue recycling bin at an abandoned house next to the Robinsons' home. Officials said Autumn, a BMX enthusiast, had gone to the Robinson house to exchange bicycle parts and was strangled.
In a Facebook exchange four days before Autumn disappeared, Justin invited her to his house to see a bicycle she had indicated she liked.
Justin, unlike his brother, also faces a charge of luring.
On Thursday, a granite sky clung mournfully to Clayton as the small town seemed to pause between the drama, shock, and anger of the previous five days and the expected emotional tumult of Saturday's funeral.
In Autumn's Victorian house on the 300 block of West High Street, her family made arrangements for her funeral before the meeting with Dalton.
Just around the corner, next to the Robinson backyard and in the shadow of a closed, ramshackle glass factory, a memorial to Autumn of votive lights, flowers, stuffed animals, and even pumpkins continued to grow.
John Strang, 70, who took part in the weekend search for Autumn, rode up on a small bicycle.
"This is our environment today. It's all violence, and life doesn't mean anything anymore," he said. "I hope the good Lord looks down at this and says, 'I'm going to step in do something here.'"
"She was going to be 13 on Monday," he said. "This is the end of her 13th birthday. But she's still with us. Just in a different place."
Michelle Hoffman also stopped by to visit the memorial and was asked if the town should cancel Halloween.
No, the woman said. "I'm sure she would want to have all the kids go out in her memory."
Meanwhile, in Trenton, State Sen. Richard J. Codey (D., Essex) introduced legislation that would impose a mandatory 5- to 10-year prison term for the first conviction for attempted child abduction. Current law gives judges discretion in sentencing first-time offenders.
Codey's news release announcing the legislation cited "the horrific murder" of Autumn as well as a spate of luring incidents in the state, most of them in North Jersey.
at 856-779-3844 or jgambardello@phillynews.com.