The Blackbird Creek Murder Mystery In Delaware Still Baffles People Today
By Kim Magaraci|Published July 31, 2018
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Kim Magaraci
Author
Kim Magaraci graduated Rutgers University with a degree in Geography and has spent the last seven years as a freelance travel writer. Contact: kmagaraci@onlyinyourstate.com
For the most part, Delaware is a peaceful state. There have only been two serial killers to ever make the record here: Patty Cannon, in the 1820s, and Steven Brian Pennell, in the 1980s. Crime rates in our small state hover around the national median, and it’s not common to ever fear for your life while exploring our beautiful state. Unfortunately, though, there have been some brutal murders here in the First State, and one of the most notorious remains unsolved to this day. Do you remember when this story hit the news?
Blackbird State Forest is a wild, untamed wilderness in New Castle County that's a favorite spot of hikers, hunters and researchers.
On September 20, 1986, one young researcher named Jane Prichard, from the University of Maryland, drove up to Blackbird to study wild hog peanut plants.
That evening, two campers found the body, partially unclothed. Jane was a shot from behind with a shotgun, and left with her research equipment. Her blue and white Blazer was found parked nearby.
Though he was cooperative with detectives, the good samaritan was arrested and thrown in Gander Hill Prison, where he lived miserably for 10 months until a DNA test proved his innocence. The case went cold once again.
The case remains cold, despite a second look by detectives and DNA testing in 2015. To this day, the air in Blackbird State Forest has an eerie feel to it, and you can't help but wonder what secrets these trees are hiding.
You can read more about Delaware Cold Cases here. With modern technology, there’s still hope that Jane’s killer will be brought to justice. Until then, though, this mystery will stay on the minds of many Delawareans who remember.