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Criminal Records - Most Wanted |
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Profile |
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Name: Welder
"Dario"
Morente Dubon
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Sex: Male |
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Race: Hispanic |
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Hair (Color, Description, Facial Hair): Black |
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Eyes (Color and Correction): Brown |
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Wanted for :
First Degree Murder, Plainfield, NJ;
Mar 29, 2007
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Location(s) |
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Last Seen : Plainfield, NJ |
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Possible Location : Unkown |
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Last Known : Unkown |
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Traits |
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Scrap dealer |
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Case Story |
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Fugitive Sought in Beating Death of Morris County, N.J. Entrepreneur |
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Plainfield, N.J. cops continue to hunt for a scrap yard worker who they say viciously beat a Morris County entrepreneur to death.
On March 29, 2007, authorities say Welder Morente Dubon, also known as "Dario," killed Joseph Tremarco at the scrap yard where Dubon worked.
Police have no idea what sparked the attack, but say Dubon was known as a hot head and believe he flew into a rage and killed Tremarco after a heated argument.
Authorities have issued a warrant for Dubon's arrest, and say they won't rest until he is in custody. |
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Police Piece Together Clues of Violent Attack |
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On March 30, 2008, police were summoned to a small Somerset County neighborhood by residents who reported what appeared to be an abandoned pick-up truck.
Officers who arrived on the scene noted the white, Ford F-650. As they inspected the vehicle, they found traces of blood along its side.
Alarmed by their findings, they carefully peered inside and made a gruesome discovery: the beaten, battered, and lifeless body of a young man in the truck's cab.
Police later identified the man as Joseph Michael Tremarco, a 23-year-old scrap metal dealer.
What police didn't know yet was that just the night before, the Tremarco family had already begun their own search for Joseph.
When Joseph didn't call or come home after finishing his daily route in the field on March 29, his father, Anthony and mother Debra, began to retrace his steps. They, along with police, would later use this information to piece together the last hours of their son's life.
Around 8:00 a.m. on the morning of March 29th, cops say the young Tremarco bounded into his father's scrap metal shop ready to start the day in the job he loved.
Not long after talking with his father, the self-described "Scrapoholic," bounded out of the shop ready to begin his work day. His first stop was a scrap yard where he was going to pick up rims. But cops say that business appointment would quickly deteriorate into a violent attack.
Within minutes of walking into the shop, down the hall and back, cops say Welder Morente-Dubon, was on Joseph. Police can't say for sure what transpired, but find it hard to believe it was enough to provoke the violent attack which ensued.
Cops say after killing Joseph, Dubon dragged his beaten and bloody body to Joseph's truck and loaded him inside. Dubon then drove to a quiet neighborhood in Somerset County and abandoned the vehicle where it was discovered the next day. |
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Joseph Tremarco's Unfinished Life |
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Friend David Miller, remembers Joseph as a kind and caring young man who could light up a room with his smile and whose mere presence engendered warm feelings.
"At 23, he had already accomplished what many do not attain in a lifetime," he said. "He had the love of family and friends. He had found the love of his life and soul mate, Carmela, and was to be married in July."
While Joseph's murder shocked his family and friends, his parents were determined to track down his killer, but more importantly to honor their son.
Debra and Anthony Tremarco celebrate Joseph's life. In addition to the website dedicated to his memory, every year the family hosts "Joe Fest" and have started the Joseph Michael Tremarco Memorial Fund, which makes donations to organizations which they say they believe reflect the goodness of mankind. |
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