"She loved this kid," said Toni Binanti, owner of a nearby bakery where Kraus-Breslin worked for nearly two decades. The medical examiner was to determine exactly how Kraus-Breslin died, though police said the death itself didn't appear suspicious. Fuhrer moved in with his grandmother on a tree-lined, dead-end street in the borough's quiet Ridgewood neighborhood several years ago, Binanti said. After Kraus-Breslin's daughter called from out-of-state and asked police to check up on her, Fuhrer told responding officers he was worried he'd have nowhere to live once his grandmother died, police said. Her body was wrapped in layers of plastic bags, which Fuhrer told the officers he applied as the smell of her decomposing body worsened, they said.
Source: Fox News October 06, 2016 20:37 UTC