North Carolina man charged with first-degree murder in 1990 New Jersey cold case after DNA breakthrough

 April 14, 2026

Robert William McCaffrey Jr. was arrested Friday evening in Manteo, North Carolina, and charged with first-degree murder, first-degree kidnapping, and second-degree burglary in the 1990 killing of 27-year-old Lisa Marie McBride, a cold case that went unsolved for more than three decades before advances in DNA technology finally pointed investigators toward a suspect.

McCaffrey, 54, is also the husband of a separate missing woman, Marjorie "Gayle" McCaffrey, whose 2012 disappearance South Carolina detectives are now investigating as a homicide. The two cases, separated by more than two decades and hundreds of miles, paint a grim picture of a man who may have left a trail of violence across state lines.

The Vernon Police Department in New Jersey announced the arrest in a Facebook press release on Sunday, April 12. McCaffrey was taken into custody at 8 p.m. local time on April 10 and is currently detained in Dare County, North Carolina, awaiting extradition to Sussex County, New Jersey.

The night Lisa Marie McBride vanished

On June 23, 1990, McBride spent the evening in New York City. Neighbors in Vernon Township, New Jersey, saw her enter her home at approximately 2:00 a.m., what investigators believe was the last time she was seen alive.

When McBride failed to show up for work that same morning, her brother went to check on her. What he found alarmed him enough to call police. Officers discovered that someone had cut a telephone line from outside the home. Two slits had been made in a window screen.

The signs of forced entry. The severed phone line. A young woman who walked through her front door and never walked out again. For four months, McBride's fate remained unknown.

Then, on October 20, 1990, her body was found in the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area in Sandyston. The discovery confirmed what her family likely feared from the start, but it did not produce an arrest. The case went cold, and it stayed cold for decades.

Cases like this remind us why the public's faith in the justice system depends on investigators who refuse to let go. As John Ramsey has argued regarding his own daughter's unsolved murder, DNA technology has the power to crack cases that seemed permanently beyond reach.

DNA and persistence break the case

In 2022, investigators exhumed McBride's body to perform new forensic testing, a move that signaled renewed determination to solve the case. Sussex Prosecutor Daniel Perez credited the breakthrough to science and grit.

As NBC 4 New York reported, Perez described how the "decades-old cold case was solved through significant advancements in DNA technology, combined with the relentless investigative efforts" of law enforcement.

Four years passed between the exhumation and the arrest. Whatever testing was conducted, whatever leads were generated, the investigation moved quietly until McCaffrey was picked up in Manteo on that Friday evening. The Sussex County Prosecutor's Office, New Jersey State Police, and Dare County Sheriff's Office did not immediately respond to requests for further information.

The charges McCaffrey now faces are severe: first-degree murder, first-degree kidnapping, and second-degree burglary. The burglary charge aligns with the physical evidence found at McBride's home, the cut phone line, the slashed window screen. Someone came prepared. Someone came to make sure she couldn't call for help.

A second woman, a second disappearance

McCaffrey's arrest in the McBride case is alarming enough on its own. But it gains a darker dimension when set against the separate disappearance of his wife, Marjorie "Gayle" McCaffrey, more than a decade ago.

On March 18, 2012, McCaffrey reported Gayle missing to police. He told investigators the couple had argued the night before. He said he drove to the "Upstate area" and returned the next day to find her gone. Gayle McCaffrey, who was 36 at the time, has not been seen since. She remains missing for over a decade.

The Charleston County Sheriff's Office did not take McCaffrey's account at face value. In a Facebook post, the office stated that detectives had charged him with obstructing justice after determining he "had lied to them about various elements of the investigation, including a farewell letter supposedly from Gayle McCaffrey that was determined to have been fabricated."

"He was convicted of that charge and was released in 2023."

Read that again: convicted of fabricating a farewell letter from his missing wife and lying to detectives, then released. And now, two years later, he stands charged with the murder of a different woman whose case went cold in 1990.

The pattern here, a husband whose wife vanishes, who lies to police, who fabricates evidence, echoes other disturbing cases where husbands became suspects after their wives went missing. In each instance, the early explanations offered by the husband unraveled under scrutiny.

Live 5 WCSC and Newsweek both reported that detectives are now investigating Gayle McCaffrey's case as a homicide. Her body has not been found. The Charleston County Sheriff's Office has asked anyone with information to contact Detective Barry Goldstein at 843-554-2241 or send tips to tips@charlestoncounty.org.

Two states, two women, one suspect

The geography of these cases spans the Eastern Seaboard. McBride lived in Vernon Township, New Jersey. Her body turned up in a national recreation area in Sandyston. McCaffrey was arrested in Manteo, North Carolina, and is detained in Dare County. The Gayle McCaffrey case centers on the Charleston, South Carolina, area.

Cross-jurisdictional cases are notoriously difficult to prosecute. They require cooperation among agencies that may have different priorities, different caseloads, and different budgets. That the Vernon Police Department, the Sussex County Prosecutor's Office, and the Charleston County Sheriff's Office appear to be working in coordination is a credit to the investigators involved.

The case also underscores a hard truth about the criminal justice system: sometimes a conviction for a lesser charge, in this case, obstruction of justice, is not enough to keep a dangerous person off the streets. McCaffrey was convicted of lying to investigators about his wife's disappearance and released in 2023. Within two years, he was charged with murder in a separate case. Whether the system could have done more, sooner, is a question worth asking.

High-profile cold cases, from the Robert Durst saga to long-dormant local investigations, have shown that persistent detective work and modern forensic tools can eventually deliver accountability, even when decades separate the crime from the courtroom.

What remains unanswered

Prosecutors have not disclosed what specific DNA evidence links McCaffrey to McBride's killing. The nature of their connection, whether they knew each other, whether investigators have identified a motive, remains unclear. The charges suggest a planned attack: burglary, kidnapping, murder. But the public record, so far, is thin on the details that would explain how a 54-year-old man in North Carolina came to be connected to a 27-year-old woman's death in New Jersey more than 35 years ago.

The Vernon Police Department has asked anyone with information about the McBride case to call 973-764-6155.

Meanwhile, Gayle McCaffrey's case remains open. Detectives have classified it as a homicide investigation, but without a body, without a definitive break, her family is left waiting. The same DNA advances that cracked the McBride case may yet provide answers, but that is far from guaranteed.

The broader pattern in cases like these, where investigators revisit old evidence with fresh eyes and better tools, offers some measure of hope for families who have waited years or decades for justice.

Lisa Marie McBride was 27 years old when someone cut her phone line, slashed her window screen, and took her from her home. She deserved better from the system in 1990. If the charges against Robert McCaffrey hold, she may finally get a measure of justice in 2026, 36 years too late, but not too late to matter.

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