May 04, 2010
Mar 23, 2020
Mary Ann
Verdecchia
72
10
58 inches
60 lbs
White / Caucasian
Female
On an early summer day in 1962, 10-year-old Mary Ann Verdecchia vanished from her Bloomfield neighborhood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, leaving behind a mystery that would span decades. On June 7th, after a half-day of classes at Immaculate Conception School, Mary Ann returned to the home she shared with her aunt, changed out of her school uniform and into a white blouse and red shorts, and went back outside around 12:30 p.m. For the previous five years, Mary Ann had been living with her aunt and cousins, a consequence of her parents' separation in 1957. Described as a lonely child who often wandered the neighborhood on her own, she was a familiar face to many in the community. That afternoon, Mary Ann made her way to the Martinique Apartments on Baum Boulevard to visit a former neighbor. The woman asked her to run an errand to a nearby store to buy cat food. Mary Ann was reportedly last seen re-entering the apartment building around 2:45 p.m. When she didn't return home for dinner by 6:00 p.m., her relatives grew concerned and began to search for her. After hours of looking with no success, they contacted the Pittsburgh Police at 10:30 p.m., setting in motion one of the most extensive missing person investigations in the city's history. The initial days of the search yielded a potential clue when a piece of jewelry thought to belong to Mary Ann was discovered near the entrance to the Highland Park Zoo, but a thorough search of the area revealed nothing further, and authorities could not definitively link the item to her disappearance. The investigation into Mary Ann's vanishing was exhaustive, with police interviewing numerous individuals and following up on every lead. Her parents were investigated and later cleared by polygraph tests. The case grew cold over the years, but a significant development occurred in 1991 when a man came forward with a disturbing claim. He alleged that as a nine-year-old boy in 1962, he had witnessed a Presbyterian minister molest and murder a young girl he believed to be Mary Ann. However, his account could never be confirmed, and no charges were ever filed against the minister, who maintained his innocence. The Martinique Apartments, where Mary Ann was last seen, was also the location of another unsolved disappearance three years prior, that of Marcella Krulce, though no official connection between the two cases has ever been established. Despite the passage of time and the tireless efforts of investigators, the case of Mary Ann Verdecchia remains an open and haunting mystery, a poignant story of a young girl who went to run a simple errand and never came home.
Jun 07, 1962
Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania
Allegheny County
15224
No
27083
Pittsburgh Police Department
Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania
Allegheny County
15233
1203 Western Avenue, Pennsylvania
4123237800
Local
Law Enforcement
62-744
1962-06-07
Pittsburgh Police Department
Brown
Brown
Brown
No
05/22/2026