The 1982 Carrie Kapok murder may have finally been solved after a man connected to her disappearance and murder called a Wisconsin TV station and confessed to the crime with "disturbing" detail, according to the Inquisitr.
Kapok, 13 at the time of her murder, went missing after attending a house party where she supposedly met her suspected killer, 17-year-old Jose Ferreira.
Ferreira said he pushed her down a flight of stairs after she refused to make out with him, which resulted in the teen snapping her neck, killing her, according to New OXY.
He also admitted to raping her unconscious body, then burying it in the neighborhood where it was later discovered by carpenters.
Ferreira, now 50, also confessed to his wife.
"His story was very detailed — disturbingly so," said the Milwaukee TV station's news director, Chris Gegg.
The mother of the victim, Carolyn Tousignant, had been waiting for her teenage daughter to come home from school. She said the day she was suspended from school was the same day she was buried because she recognized the clothes she was buried in as the same clothes she wore before she disappeared, according to the Journal Sentinel.
"I didn't want to know, yet somehow I knew it would be best if the whole thing would just end," she said.