'Cold Case' Homicide- Blow To The Head Killed Elizabeth Heath
âCold Caseâ Homicideâ
Blow To The Head Killed Elizabeth Heath
By Andrew Gorosko
The chief stateâs medical examiner has determined that Elizabeth Gough Heathâs homicide was caused by a âblunt traumatic head injury,â or a forceful blow to the head.
A spokeswoman for the chief state medical examinerâs office said Wednesday, September 8, that the results of an autopsy have confirmed the policeâs analysis that Ms Heath was the victim of a homicide.
Town police, aided by state police, have been investigating the death of the woman, whose complete skeleton was found on April 14 hidden beneath the floor of a former ground-level efficiency apartment within a barn near her former residence at 89 Poverty Hollow Road.
Danbury Stateâs Attorney Stephen J. Sedensky III said September 8, âItâs an active investigation, so I cannot comment.â
Mr Sedensky asked any members of the public who have information on the case to contact Detective Jason Frank at the Newtown Police Department.
Mr Sedensky is the top law enforcement official in the area served by Danbury Superior Court, which includes Newtown.
âWe look forward to a reportâ from the medical examiner on Ms Heathâs autopsy, said Police Chief Michael Kehoe.
âThis is an ongoing, active [police] investigationâ into Ms Heathâs death, he said.
âWeâre very happy that the medical examiner has come to a conclusionâ¦and if anybody has any information concerning this homicide, please contact the Newtown police,â he said.
The police chief declined to comment on the progress of the police investigation.
 Ms Heath, 30, had lived at the scenic Poverty Hollow Road property until she was reported missing on April 6, 1984, by her husband John Heath, according to police.
The probe into Ms Heathâs death was triggered when while cleaning the vacant apartment, the propertyâs current owners last April 14 discovered what would later be identified as Ms Heathâs skeletal remains, which someone had surreptitiously placed within a dry well, which was hidden beneath the flooring in the apartmentâs kitchen.
Town police and state police on April 29, executed a search/seizure warrant at Mr Heathâs current Bridgewater rental home. About ten town and state police staffers conducted evidence collection at the 5 Keeler Road home for ensuing forensic analysis. Police have declined to say what they were looking for at the property.
John and Elizabeth Heath had been involved in divorce proceedings when Mr Heath reported Ms Heath as missing to the Newtown police.
Police had considered the disappearance of Ms Heath a âcold case,â or a probe into which the investigatory leads had grown cold, until April 14, when the discovery of her skeletal remains provided fresh information for their investigation.
The Heaths were married in May 1978. They had one child, Meghann, who was born in September 1979.
Following Ms Heathâs disappearance, Mr Heath obtained a divorce on the grounds of desertion. In 1985, Mr Heath remarried, with his new wife, Raquel, later legally adopting his daughter.
In 2000, the probate court declared Elizabeth Heath as âpresumed dead.â
John Heath was an owner of the Poverty Hollow Road property from 1973 to 2005. In 2005, that property went into foreclosure, with Mr Heath then moving to Bridgewater.
A reporterâs telephone call to the Heath residence in Bridgewater on September 9, which sought comment on the medical examinerâs findings, was answered by a person identifying herself as Mr Heathâs wife. She said there would be no comment on the matter. Mr Heath is now in his mid-60s.