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Leiby Kletzky Only Known Victim Of Levi Aron, Police Say


Investigators say they haven’t established any links between New York murder suspect Levi Aron and unsolved crimes in other states, a day after the Brooklyn man was indicted in the killing of Leiby Kletzky A”H.

Aron, 35, has pleaded not guilty to charges of murdering and kidnapping Leiby Kletzky, who got lost July 11 while walking home alone from day camp, and asked the suspect for help.

Police have since used Aron’s DNA to investigate possible connections to crimes in other states where Aron once lived, according to a report on CBS 2’s website. The website reported that investigators are looking at crimes in states like Tennessee, Arkansas and Florida.

New York City Police spokesman Paul Browne told FoxNews.com on Thursday that it is “standard procedure” to look for possible connections to other crimes.

“We would do that in every serious crime,” Browne said.

“We don’t have anything to suggest victims other than the one in this case,” he said. “We have him linked to only the one.”

But that could change, law enforcement sources say, as more details emerge about Aron, who authorities say has no known criminal past.

The New York Post, citing police sources, reported Thursday that authorities searching Aron’s Brooklyn apartment removed children’s clothing that did not belong to Leiby. But police have not discovered any other victims.

Captain Mike Griffus of the Germantown Police Department in Germantown, Tenn., a suburb of Memphis where Aron once lived, told FoxNews.com on Thursday that “we’re not looking at him for anything.”

“We don’t have anything remotely related to that type of a crime,” Griffus said, adding that the only involvement his department had with Aron was over a speeding ticket issued on April 7, 2006.

A spokeswoman with the police department in Memphis also told FoxNews.com that Aron is not currently being investigated for any crimes committed within the city.

The FBI said Thursday that the case is still considered a “local matter” and that the bureau has no involvement in the case at this point.

READ MORE: FOX NEWS



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