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Howard B Elkins 1929 - 1999

Howard Burton Elkins of Boca Raton, Palm Beach County, FL was born on June 20, 1929 in Brooklyn, New York United States, and died at age 70 years old on September 10, 1999 at Boca Raton in FL.
Howard Burton Elkins
Howard Burton Elkins
Boca Raton, Palm Beach County, FL 33433
June 20, 1929
Brooklyn, New York, United States
September 10, 1999
Boca Raton in Florida, United States
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Howard Burton Elkins' History: 1929 - 1999

Uncover new discoveries and connections today by sharing about people & moments from yesterday.
  • Introduction

    Howard Burton Elkins was born on June 20th, 1929 in Brooklyn, New York to Joseph Elkins (1899-1990) and Beatrice Rand (1906-1986). He had a brother named Stuart Elkins (1932-2005). Howard Elkins grew up in New York City and later served in the US Air Force from January 17, 1946 until his discharge on June 24, 1948. A few years after his discharge, Howard Elkins married Ruth Shapiro in Brooklyn, NY in 1952. Together the couple had a son and a daughter. Howard Elkins later became the prime suspect in the 1969 murder of Reyna Angélica Marroquín in Nassau County, New York. Reyna's body was discovered 30 years later in a 55-gallon drum in the basement crawl space of a house that Elkins once owned. The drum was traced back to Melrose Plastics, a synthetic flower company in which Howard was a part owner. Reyna was believed to have had an affair with Howard, and it is thought that he murdered her to avoid fathering a child with her. When detectives interviewed Howard and requested his DNA to compare with the fetus found inside Marroquín's body, he committed suicide the next day. Post-mortem DNA testing confirmed that Howard was indeed the father of the nine-month-old fetus. This tragic story has received significant media attention and has been featured in various television episodes, such as The New Detectives, Murder Book, NYPD Blue, Forensic Files (see The Reyna Marroquin Story Unsealed for a detailed report on the crime, the perpetrator, and the victim from Forensic Files), Grave Secrets, and Buried in the Backyard. Read the details of this story and about Howard's suicide at Suicide Adds to Mystery Of Corpse Found in Barrel and an 2005 updated article about the crime at 70-year-old man questioned in woman's death commits suicide.
  • 06/20
    1929

    Birthday

    June 20, 1929
    Birthdate
    Brooklyn, New York United States
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Howard Burton Elkins was born on June 20, 1929 to parents Joseph Elkins and Beatrice Rand. He had a brother Stuart Robert Elkins (1932-2005). Howard was of Russian heritage on his paternal line and of Polish and Austrian descent on his maternal line. His father Joseph was born on July 14, 1899 in Russia and immigrated to the US in 1904. His native language was Yiddish. He then resided in Brooklyn, NY where he worked as a salesman in a dry goods house. He passed away on October 8, 1990 in Margate, Broward, Florida, USA. His mother Beatrice was born on April 4, 1906 in Kings County, New York, USA and grew up in Brooklyn Ward 20, Kings, New York, USA. Her father was from Austria and her mother was from New York. She married Joseph on December 13, 1927 in New York City, NY and they raised their family in New York, Kings, New York, USA. She passed away on July 31, 1986 in Pompano Beach, Broward, Florida, USA.
  • Nationality & Locations

    Howard was Caucasian, of Russian heritage on his paternal side and of Polish descent on his maternal side. He was born in Brooklyn, New York and grew up in NYC. In 1940, Howard, along with his parents and brother, lived with his maternal grandparents in New York. In 1950, he was listed as living with his parents, grandparents, and his brother Stuart, who was 18 years old. By then, Howard had completed high school and was in the Armed Forces at an air base. Howard also lived in Boca Raton, Florida, and Pembroke Pines, Florida .
  • Early Life & Education

    Howard finished high school and then went into the United States Air Force.
  • Religious Beliefs

    Howard's lineage was Jewish.
  • Military Service

    Howard Elkins enlisted in the United States Army on January 17th, 1946, in Cleveland, Ohio. At the time of his enlistment, he was single without dependents, had completed one year of high school, and resided in Stark, Ohio. He joined the Air Corps as a Private with the service number 15214320. His enlistment came after being discharged from prior service for at least three months, as indicated by his enlistment source in the Regular Army, which includes officers, nurses, warrant officers, and enlisted men. Howard Elkins served in the United States Air Force from January 17, 1946 until his discharge on June 24, 1948. He spent some time living on the Air Force Base in the later 1940's.
  • Professional Career

    Howard was a businessman who had ownership in several businesses. One of them was the Jericho House, located at 170 W 121st St, New York, New York 10027. Additionally, he was a part-owner of a synthetic flower company named Melrose Plastics.
  • Personal Life & Family

    Howard married Ruth Shapiro in 1952 and they had had two children, a son and a daughter. It is surmised that Howard was having an affair with Reyna Angélica Marroquín and that she became pregnant. His paternity was confirmed by a DNA test which was taken after he committed suicide 30 years after Reyna's death, and when her body was finally found.
  • 09/10
    1999

    Death

    September 10, 1999
    Death date
    A Cowardly act of Suicide
    Cause of death
    Boca Raton in Florida United States
    Death location
  • Obituary

    American plastics company owner and murderer. Killed his pregnant mistress, Reyna Marroquín, when she told his wife about their affair and her pregnancy, in 1969. Marroquín's body was found in a barrel in a crawlspace of Elkins's former home in Jericho, NY, thirty years later. After authorities came to question him at his home in Boca Raton, FL, in 1999 he killed himself at a friend's home. - Find a Grave
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10 Memories, Stories & Photos about Howard

The Reyna Marroquin Story Unsealed
Forensic Files - February 23, 2017:

This week, it’s back to concentrating on an individual Forensic Files episode, and “A Voice from Beyond” is good way to start, with its blend of nostalgia and horror. The story takes us back to a pre-internet world, when people kept handwritten address books with real paper. It was exciting to see how investigators applied millennial-era forensic technology to evidence from the 1960s.

Only in L.I. In fact, the story had everything a true crime fan could hope for: an affluent businessman leading a double life, a desperate mother-to-be, a 95-year-old woman praying for word on her daughter, a crucial anonymous call to the police. Oh, and a mummified body in a crawl space. And for a little extra flavor, this Greek tragedy took place in Long Island, the same New York City commuter haven that gave rise to Amy Fisher, Joey Buttafuoco, and numerous others who can’t quite pronounce the letter “r” in words that contain it but append it to words that don’t.

Forensic Files, as usual, did a great job of telling the story in 22 minutes, but I was curious about something not shown — the reaction of friends and neighbors when they learned a horrible secret about the respectable-seeming retiree in their midst.

No Barrel of Fun. So let’s get started on the recap of “A Voice From Beyond,” along with some extra information drawn from internet research. On September 2, 1999, as Ronald Cohen was preparing to vacate the Jericho, New York, house he had just sold for $455,000, he pried off the lid of a 55-gallon drum that had sat undisturbed beneath the bottom floor ever since he moved in.

He smelled noxious chemicals and saw a hand poking out of a pile of plastic pellets. Authorities found an intact mummified body of a woman inside the barrel. They determined the deceased was young, petite, dark-haired, and pregnant and had died from blunt force trauma. She had some unusual dental work, likely performed in South America. The fetus was a boy, 17-inches long.

The body had been preserved because the drum was airtight, but the pages of an address book (Millennial readers: This is how folks kept track of friends before Outlook, iPhones, and Facebook) found in the barrel had decayed. What really gave the episode armrest-grabbing suspense was the effort — via moisture extraction, magnification, and a video spectral comparator study — on the part of forensics experts to yield clues from the rotting paper. They uncovered some names, addresses, and phone numbers, although the first batch yielded no leads since the people had long moved away or changed phone numbers. And this was 1999, post-internet but before social media enabled everyone to track down anyone.

Marroquin Story Unsealed
A Pregnant Worker, an Enraged Boss
(“A Voice From Beyond,” Forensic Files)

This week, it’s back to concentrating on an individual Forensic Files episode, and “A Voice from Beyond” is good way to start, with its blend of nostalgia and horror.


Site of the barrel discovery in Jericho, New York
The story takes us back to a pre-internet world, when people kept handwritten address books with real paper.

It was exciting to see how investigators applied millennial-era forensic technology to evidence from the 1960s.

Only in L.I. In fact, the story had everything a true crime fan could hope for: an affluent businessman leading a double life, a desperate mother-to-be, a 95-year-old woman praying for word on her daughter, a crucial anonymous call to the police.

Oh, and a mummified body in a crawl space.

And for a little extra flavor, this Greek tragedy took place in Long Island, the same New York City commuter haven that gave rise to Amy Fisher, Joey Buttafuoco, and numerous others who can’t quite pronounce the letter “r” in words that contain it but append it to words that don’t.

Forensic Files, as usual, did a great job of telling the story in 22 minutes, but I was curious about something not shown — the reaction of friends and neighbors when they learned a horrible secret about the respectable-seeming retiree in their midst.

Photo of the book Forensic Files Now
Book available in stores
or online
No Barrel of Fun. So let’s get started on the recap of “A Voice From Beyond,” along with some extra information drawn from internet research.

On September 2, 1999, as Ronald Cohen was preparing to vacate the Jericho, New York, house he had just sold for $455,000, he pried off the lid of a 55-gallon drum that had sat undisturbed beneath the bottom floor ever since he moved in.


He smelled noxious chemicals and saw a hand poking out of a pile of plastic pellets.


Plastic leaves linked the body to the killer
Authorities found an intact mummified body of a woman inside the barrel. They determined the deceased was young, petite, dark-haired, and pregnant and had died from blunt force trauma. She had some unusual dental work, likely performed in South America.

The fetus was a boy, 17-inches long.

Wrong numbers. The body had been preserved because the drum was airtight, but the pages of an address book (Millennial readers: This is how folks kept track of friends before Outlook, iPhones, and Facebook) found in the barrel had decayed.

What really gave the episode armrest-grabbing suspense was the effort — via moisture extraction, magnification, and a video spectral comparator study — on the part of forensics experts to yield clues from the rotting paper.

They uncovered some names, addresses, and phone numbers, although the first batch yielded no leads since the people had long moved away or changed phone numbers. And this was 1999, post-internet but before social media enabled everyone to track down anyone.

Locals help. By this time, police had traced the barrel to a chemical company in Linden, New Jersey, and dated its manufacture to 1965. It contained some plastic leaves in addition to the pellets. Neighbors in Jericho remembered that an occupant around that time period, Howard Elkins, was part owner of the Melrose Plastic Company, a New York City maker of decorative artificial plants. The neighbors didn’t mention any gossip about him, but the aforementioned anonymous caller did, telling Nassau County police that, in the 1960s, Elkins had been having an affair with a Hispanic woman who worked in his factory.

Elkins had long since moved to Boca Raton, Florida. He was none-too-happy to find New York detectives on the other side of his door in his upscale retirement community. Presented with the evidence of the barrel and green dye inside, Elkins denied he’d ever seen such a thing. He admitted to having an affair but said he couldn’t remember what the woman looked like or her name. He refused to give a DNA sample to determine whether he was the father of the fetus. Before leaving, Nassau County Detective Brian Parpan told Elkins the police would be getting an order for a blood sample.

Elkins, 70, promptly bought a shotgun and ammunition from Walmart and killed himself. By this time, the lab had tapped the address book for the name of one more of the dead woman’s friends, and this one answered when police dialed her 30-year-old phone number. Kathy Andrade knew immediately the body belonged to a friend she met in an English class, Reyna Angelica Marroquin, who disappeared in 1969 at the age of 27. A resident alien number found in the address book substantiated the identification, according to Cold Case Files Classic’s “The Barrel” segment. Marroquin came to the U.S. from El Salvador in 1966, went to fashion school, and got a job at the Melrose factory. Shortly before disappearing, she let on that she was pregnant and that the father told her he was going to marry her.

But he already had a wife and three children and Marroquin was worried he would never keep his promise. (Something mentioned in more than one newspaper story that Forensic Files didn’t bring up: Marroquin already had a small child whom she sometimes brought to the factory with her; it was never revealed who the father was, but co-workers suspected Elkins.)

According to Kathy Andrade, after Marroquin called her boyfriend’s house and told his wife she was pregnant, the man became enraged and threatened to kill Marroquin. She disappeared soon after. Police theorized Elkins beat Marroquin about the head in a fit of anger, took the body to Long Island with the intention of dumping it in the ocean, put it in a steel drum, and weighted it with plastic pellets from his factory. But at 350 pounds, it was too heavy to load onto his boat, so he pushed it into a crawl space, where it remained untouched for 30 years.

With the mystery solved and the perpetrator dead, the last loose end was finding Marroquin’s family. Newsday reporter Oscar Corral flew to El Salvador and tracked down Reyna Marroquin’s mother in the town of San Martin. The 95-year-old, known as “Grandma Marroquin,” nearly collapsed when told of the discovery, Corral recalled in his Forensic Files interview. She’d been heartbroken ever since Reyna stopped writing home with no explanation in 1969. She’d had dreams depicting Reyna in a barrel.

As for Elkins, it sounded as though he’d been able to mask any feelings of guilt about his role in the tragedy. Below are two excerpts, including neighbors’ statements, from newspaper articles published after his suicide in 1999: “Howard was very active in the community, very much in the social scene,” said neighbor Robert Froment. Elkins’ Florida neighbors yesterday were shocked that the big, bearded, jovial man could have been involved in such a crime. — New York Post “He seemed like a very sociable fellow,” Frank Lonano, a neighbor in Boca Raton, said of Mr. Elkins, whom he had known only casually around the walled and affluent community of town houses overlooking a golf course. “He was just not the type.” Judith Ebbin, who with her husband, Arthur, bought the Jericho house from Mr. Elkins and his wife, Ruth, in 1972, owned it for 12 years, never suspecting all that while that a woman’s body lay in a drum in a crawl space under the den. “They seemed like such a lovely family,” she said of the former owners. — New York Times

The one bright note to the story is the resolution brought to Reyna’s mother. As CBS quoted her: “Now I know she’s with me. She came flying like a dove back to her home.”
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70-year-old man questioned in woman's death commits suicide
Published on Sept 13, 1999 -updated on September 29, 2005

A 70-year-old man killed himself after New York police questioned him about the body of an unidentified pregnant woman found in an oil drum stored for decades under a house he once owned. The body of Howard Elkins of Boca Raton was found Friday in the back seat of a Ford Explorer at a friend's home with a shotgun between his legs _ a day after he was questioned by police from Nassau County, N.Y.

Elkins owned a split-level home in Jericho, N.Y., 27 years ago that was put up for sale by its current owner, Ronald Cohen. On Sept. 2, when Cohen went to dispose of a rusting, 345-pound oil drum that had been rotting in a crawl space underneath the house, he found the mummified body inside. The timing of the woman's death led detectives to Elkins.

Police in New York determined that the drum was manufactured in 1963 and originally held paint that was discontinued after 1973. Elkins and his wife, Ruth, owned the home from 1957 to 1972. The house had two owners between 1972 and the time Cohen bought it in 1984. Police do not know for sure whether the suicide and oil drum are related. But a source in the Nassau County Police Department's homicide squad said the department was investigating a murder and that Elkins had not been "eliminated from suspects" in the developing case.

A Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office log entry confirms Elkins as "a suspect in a 30-year homicide in Nassau County, N.Y." Police credit the airtight drum for preserving clues decades after the death of the woman, who was nine months pregnant. On the day she was found, the unidentified woman measured 4 feet 9 inches and weighed 59 pounds. She wore a sweater and skirt over high socks and shoes. Jewelry also hints at the details of her life: A locket engraved with the words "Patrice, Love Uncle Phil" and a wedding band bearing the inscription "M.H.R. XII-59."

The Nassau County police said detectives have turned over evidence to a forensic anthropologist, anticipating the scientist will be able to raise fingerprints. The Elkinses had lived in Hollywood before moving into Crescent Lakes, which is just north of the Broward County line, in 1997. A man who answered the door to the family home declined to answer questions Saturday. Elkins and his wife took walks around their gated community daily, a neighbor said. "I didn't know him well," said Joe Schulman, who lives two doors down from the Elkins residence. "I would wave at him over the fence."
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Such a sad story
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Some reports say that Mrs. Elkins did not know about the affair when Howard was caught in a lie in 1999. But then the reports say that the catalyst for the murder of Reyna Marraquin was that she angered Howard Elkins when she called Mrs. Elkins and told her about the affair and her pregnancy back in the late 1960s. I wonder if Howard lied to his wife (as he had been all along) and told her it had to have been a prank call or that he was being stalked by a delusional crazy woman and the wife took her husband's word for it.
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Suicide Adds to Mystery Of Corpse Found in Barrel
The New York Times By Robert D. McFadden Spet 13 1999

The mystery of a pregnant woman murdered long ago and hidden for decades in a steel drum under a home on Long Island until her mummified remains were found 11 days ago has taken another strange twist. A day after being questioned by detectives last week, the original owner of the home apparently killed himself.

Howard B. Elkins, 71, the first of five owners of the white split-level home at 67 Forest Drive in Jericho, N.Y., where the body was found, was interrogated by Nassau County homicide investigators on Thursday at his retirement home in a condominium community in Boca Raton, Fla. He was not taken into custody.

On Friday afternoon, the police said, he left home and did not return. His worried family called the authorities to report him missing. Later that evening, he was found by a son in the garage of a friend's house in Boca Raton, the victim of an apparently self-inflicted shotgun blast to the head.

The police, at least publicly, drew no connections between Mr. Elkins's death and the discovery of the woman's body under his former home, or his questioning in that mystery. ''We are aware that the man did commit suicide in Florida,'' Officer Doreen McGuinness, a Nassau County police spokeswoman, said yesterday. ''But we're still investigating, and we are not drawing any conclusion.''

Whatever the death of Mr. Elkins seemed to suggest, investigators said they were no closer to unraveling a tangled case whose grim discoveries, tantalizing clues and twisting plot might have been drawn from one of Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe mysteries.

Who was the woman?

Why was she killed?

Why was her body hidden where it would inevitably be found?

The case came to light on Sept. 2, when Hamid Tafaghodi, having just bought the Jericho house for $455,000, found a rusted 55-gallon drum, weighing 345 pounds, in a 36-inch crawl space. He insisted that Ronald Cohen, the seller, take it away.

After garbage men refused to handle it, apparently fearing that toxic waste might have been inside, Mr. Cohen and a real estate agent pried the lid off, found another container inside and spotted a hand and a shoe. They called the police, who removed the body of a woman, her full-term fetus, her apparel and other items, all remarkably well preserved, apparently because the drum had been airtight.

The body, shrunken over time, was 4 feet 9 inches tall, weighed 59 pounds and was clad in a skirt, button-down sweater, high socks and a shoe with a mid-level heel. Around the neck was a religious scapular and a locket with the words, ''Patrice, Love Uncle Phil.'' A wedding band on the left hand bore an inscription ''M.H.R. XII-59,'' there was another ring with a green stone, and an imitation leopard-skin coat and a pocketbook with makeup also were found. The gender of the fetus could not be determined.

An autopsy found that the woman, who was 25 to 30 years old at the time of her death, had been killed by blunt force head trauma, and estimated that she had been dead 25 to 30 years. Despite many clues and searches of missing persons reports, her identity has not been uncovered. No fingerprints were obtainable, but the police hope that DNA samples may provide useful leads. Any DNA taken from the remains of the fetus might help identify its father, detectives said.

Investigators learned that the house had been built in 1957 and had had only five owners: Mr. Elkins, who sold it in 1972, Arthur and Judith Ebbin, who sold it in 1984, Frank and Bernadette Salmaggi, who sold it in 1990, and Mr. Cohen, who sold it to Mr. Tafaghodi this year. Each of the owners, in interviews with the police and the news media, denied knowing anything about the drum.

But detectives concluded that the murder must have taken place during a nine-year period between March 1963, when the drum was manufactured in Linden, N.J., as a container for paint and plastic pigments, and October 1972, when it was first reported seen at the house in Jericho. Mr. Elkins was the owner throughout that period.

In a telephone interview with The New York Times on Sept. 4, Mr. Elkins acknowledged that he had bought the house new in 1957, and had lived in it for 15 years before selling and moving to Florida in 1972. He also noted that he had built a den off the kitchen that created the crawl space in 1966. Asked if he had ever gone into the crawl space, he replied: ''What for?''

He also said he could not remember the name of the contractor who had built the addition, but recalled that the job had gone smoothly. He said that, aside from gardeners, landscapers and maids, he could think of no one who had had access to the property.

On Thursday, Mr. Elkins was questioned at his Boca Raton home by Nassau County police investigators. He was one of a number of people who had not been removed from a list of suspects. It was unclear what they asked him, or what he told them. In any case, he was not arrested.

About 1:30 P.M. on Friday, his family later told the police, Mr. Elkins left his home and did not return. Relatives later reported him missing, and his son, Steve, found Mr. Elkins dead in the garage of a friend's home nearby and called the authorities.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Department reported no signs that the death was anything other than a suicide. It said that Mr. Elkins had been tending the house while his friend was away, and noted that a shotgun was found beside the body, which was in a car parked in the garage, and that no suicide note was found.

Neighbors and acquaintances of Mr. Elkins in Florida and on Long Island recalled him as outgoing and friendly, and said it was hard to imagine that he could have ever killed anyone.

''He seemed like a very sociable fellow,'' Frank Lonano, a neighbor in Boca Raton, said of Mr. Elkins, whom he had known only casually around the walled and affluent community of town houses overlooking a golf course. ''He was just not the type.''

Judith Ebbin, who with her husband, Arthur, bought the Jericho house from Mr. Elkins and his wife, Ruth, in 1972, owned it for 12 years, never suspecting all that while that a woman's body lay in a drum in a crawl space under the den. ''They seemed like such a lovely family,'' she said of the former owners.
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Howard Burton Elkins
Howard Burton Elkins
A photo of Howard Burton Elkins added to Find A Grave by Adam Hill in Feb 2020
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Yeah, it's too bad this guy is a coward. Someone that takes the like of a young woman and his child while she was pregnant and stuffs her body in a barrel. God rest her soul ( Renya Marroquín). The act of a coward.
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Howard B Elkins
Howard B Elkins
A photo of Howard B Elkins - murderer of his lover Reyna Angélica Marroquín
Date & Place: in New York, New York United States
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Reyna Marroquin - Lover & Victim of Howard B. Elkins
Reyna Marroquin - Lover & Victim of Howard B. Elkins
Reyna Angélica Marroquín (1941–1969) was murdered by her lover Howard B. Elkins shortly after Howard's wife discovered the extramarital affair. She died in 1969 and her body was found in a barrel in 1999, 30 years after the crime.
Date & Place: in New York, New York United States
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A rather interesting and sad fact: A writer named Oscar Corral visited Howard's lover & victim Reyna's mother shortly after Reyna's disappearance. The 95 year old mother told Oscar that she had a vivid dream in which her daughter Marroquín was trapped inside a barrel. She died one month after relaying this information and was buried next to her daughter.
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Howard Elkins' Family Tree & Friends

Howard Elkins' Family Tree

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