Pulse logo
Pulse Region

Body Found in Storage Unit May Be Missing Staten Island Teacher, Police Say

Body Found in Storage Unit May Be Missing Staten Island Teacher, Police Say
Body Found in Storage Unit May Be Missing Staten Island Teacher, Police Say

Police officers and staff from the New York City chief medical examiner’s office flocked to the scene of an Extra Space Storage location in Staten Island on Thursday morning to investigate human remains that were found there.

Police had not yet determined whether the body was that of Jeanine Cammarata, 37, a mother of three who has not been seen in public since Saturday night, and were still working to identify the body as of 9:30 a.m., a police spokesman said.

“A connection to the missing teacher has not been verified,” the spokesman said.

Cammarata was reported missing Tuesday. She was last seen Saturday night at her boyfriend’s home in Staten Island, about 6 miles from her own residence.

Friends and family became alarmed when Cammarata, a first-grade teacher at a Staten Island public school who also had a part-time job at a Dollar Tree, did not show up for work. She also did not attend a court appearance Monday for the divorce proceedings that she had initiated against her husband, Michael Cammarata, 42.

Michael Cammarata has been in police custody on charges that he assaulted his wife in an incident unrelated to her disappearance, a police spokesman said Wednesday.

Cammarata was still being questioned at the 120th Precinct in Staten Island on Thursday morning when investigators discovered a body in a unit at the storage facility.

Jeanine Cammarata had filed for divorce from her husband in February, court records show. They had separated nearly two years ago, according to Jeanine Cammarata’s attorney, Eric M. Gansberg.

Cammarata left the home she shared with her husband because of domestic violence, Gansberg said.

The couple have two children together: a 7-year-old daughter and a 3-year-old son. She also has a third child from her first husband.

In the time Jeanine Cammarata and Michael Cammarata had been living apart, the couple had worked out a visitation agreement. Jeanine Cammarata had agreed to allow the children to remain with Michael Cammarata in the family’s home, because it was a house that they were familiar with, Gansberg said.

After her husband relocated to Far Rockaway in Queens, however, she began to get upset about the arrangement, Gansberg said.

“She came to me and said she had to take action,” Gansberg said. “Her husband was being dictatorial about when she could see the children.”

Jeanine Cammarata’s landlord, Jose Perez, also said that she had been upset about the arrangement because it was breaking down.

“She was very angry about not being able to see her kids,” Perez said. “He didn’t follow his end of the agreement. She said, ‘I can’t see my kids; that’s unacceptable.’ ”

Perez also said Jeanine Cammarata had said that her husband mistreated and harassed her. She told Perez, who lived above her, that Michael Cammarata would follow her in his car and send her menacing text messages.

“It was not good,” he said. “It was all sexual and inappropriate.”

Perez said Jeanine Cammarata’s reports alarmed him enough that he told her to watch out for her physical safety.

“I told her, ‘You better be careful,’ ” he said. “She said, ‘Oh, he’s harmless, he would never do anything to me.’ ”

Gansberg said that he last spoke to Jeanine Cammarata on Friday, confirming her court appearance. When she didn’t show up, he initially thought that it may be because she was afraid of her husband.

Then, when he saw reports that she had been missing, he was shocked.

Jeanine Cammarata was last seen at the home of her boyfriend, Aaron Suchecki. Police have said that they spoke with Suchecki, and that he was not a suspect in Cammarata’s disappearance.

On Thursday, a man who identified himself as Suchecki’s landlord said that he had seen Jeanine Cammarata at the house several times in the past and that there was never any sign of trouble between them.

He also said that Suchecki was distraught by Cammarata’s disappearance.

“He’s going through something right now, and it’s very difficult for him,” the landlord said.

Family members of Jeanine Cammarata, who has a younger brother and sister, have also spent the past few days anxious about her whereabouts.

Her mother, AnnMarie Ross, said Wednesday that she was struggling to make sense of her daughter’s absence.

“She’s very assertive, she’s strong-willed, she’s a workaholic, she’s determined, she’s smart, witty and for her to become missing is very puzzling to me, because she’s a fighter,” Ross said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Subscribe to receive daily news updates.

Next Article