Andre Rand

Andre Rand (born Frank Rostum Rushan; March 11, 1944) is an American convicted child kidnapper, sex offender, and suspected serial killer, currently serving two twenty-five years to life sentences in prison for the abductions of two girls, age 7 and 12. He is eligible for parole in 2037. He is the subject of the 2009 documentary Cropsey which states that he may have been the source of that urban legend.

Early life and criminal history
Rand was born Frank Rostum Rushan on March 11, 1944. According to his younger sister in the 2009 documentary Cropsey, neither she nor her brother were sexually or physically abused as children. His father died on March 27, 1958, when Rand was 14. His mother was institutionalized at Pilgrim Psychiatric Center in Brentwood, New York, where he and his sister would visit her as teenagers. Between 1966 and 1968, using the name Frank Bruchette, he worked as a custodian, orderly and physical therapy aide at Willowbrook State School, later renamed the Staten Island Development Center.

On May 5, 1969, Rand was arrested in the South Bronx for kidnapping and attempting to rape a nine-year-old girl, whom he had enticed into his car and driven to a vacant lot. He removed his clothes and hers, but a passing police car interrupted the crime. Charged with attempted rape, Rand pleaded guilty to sexual abuse and was sentenced to four years. He served sixteen months in prison, gaining parole in January 1972 and legally changing his name to Andre Rand, but logging three more arrests by the end of the decade for "minor" offenses, including burglary.

In 1979, he was accused of raping a young woman and a 15-year-old girl, but neither pressed charges. In 1983, driving a school bus, Rand picked up a group of 11 children from a Staten Island YMCA, purchased a meal for them without the consent of any of their parents, and took them to Newark Liberty International Airport. None of the children were harmed in this encounter, but Rand was apprehended and served ten months in jail for unlawful imprisonment.

Suspected victims
On July 7, 1972, five-year-old Alice Pereira vanished from the area around the Tysens Lane Apartments in the 600 block of Tysens Lane on Staten Island. Pereira was playing in the building's lobby with her brother and disappeared around 3:30 p.m. after he briefly left her alone. After that, Pereira might have been seen in a park close to the apartment complex in the island's New Dorp neighborhood. She has not been seen or heard from since. At 6:15 p.m., her mother reported her missing. At the time of her disappearance, her parents were divorced. She lived with her mother, and her father lived in Manhattan. Authorities at first believed that Pereira's father had taken her, but he was later cleared as a suspect. Rand is the prime suspect in Pereira's case. He worked as a painter in Tysens Lane Apartments at the time of Pereira's disappearance.

Audrey Lyn Nerenberg, 18, was last seen July 5, 1977, leaving her family's home in the 1200 block of Ryder Street in the Canarsie neighborhood of Brooklyn. The house was close to Flatlands Avenue, Kings Highway, and Flatbush Avenue. Nerenberg informed her mother that she would be returning immediately after going two blocks to get cigarettes, but she has never been heard from again. Nerenberg's hebephrenic schizophrenia had caused her to spend brief periods of time in numerous New York City healthcare institutions between 1974 and 1977. She had been a patient at Hillside Medical Center in Queens, Gracie Square Hospital in Manhattan, and Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn. At the time of her disappearance, Nerenberg was an outpatient at Kingsboro Psychiatric Center in Brooklyn. She was not carrying any identification or medication with her at the time. On July 4, 1977, the day before she vanished, Nerenberg travelled with her family to Staten Island in the evening to see a movie at the former Jerry Lewis Theater on Forest Avenue. The theatre was adjacent to a campsite that Rand had previously visited. There is suspicion that Nerenberg may have returned to the area on July 5 while feeling disoriented and may have crossed paths with Rand as a result of her mental illness, which occasionally caused her to repeat her actions. He has not been officially connected to Nerenberg's case.

Ethel Louise Atwell, 42, was last seen October 24, 1978, at the Willowbrook State School, where she worked as a physical therapy assistant. At 6:00 a.m., she arrived, parked behind Building 47, and locked her car. Before she could get from the parking lot into her building, two female employees inside the building heard a male voice outside say, "come on, come on", and Atwell say "no, you'll beat me". Then she screamed. The employees called the police after hearing the screams. The parking lot was still dark, the streetlights were off, and it was difficult for them to see anything. Atwell's tan pocketbook, one earring, one black shoe, three black coat buttons, and part of her set of dentures were all discovered by responding authorities along the left side of her locked car. About 75 feet away in the woods, her keys were discovered. Atwell has never been seen or heard from again despite a thorough search of the region.

Shin Lee, 44, was a nurse who had gone missing earlier in 1978 from Willowbrook under similar circumstances to Atwell. She was reported missing on July 20 and was last seen walking home from Building 11 of the Centre towards her Sea View home close to midnight. She was found murdered by strangulation and buried in a shallow grave near a wooded area on facility grounds on August 6, only two months prior to Atwell's disappearance. Atwell and Lee are considered victims of Rand, however, there is no concrete evidence linking Rand to either incident.

Holly Ann Hughes, seven, was last seen July 15, 1981, on Staten Island near Richmond Terrace and Park Avenue. Her mother sent her to the Port Richmond Deli two blocks away to purchase a bar of Ivory soap, and she was last seen buying it around 9:30 p.m. She never returned home and has never been heard from again. A month after Hughes' disappearance, her mother, Holly Cederholm, received a phone call from a man who identified himself as "Sal" who informed Cederholm that he was imprisoning the child and asked that they meet so that Cederholm could engage in sex acts for the camera in exchange for Hughes' safe return. Cederholm went with detectives to meet Sal at Penn Station in New York City, but he never showed up. She stated that she never believed Sal really had Hughes; by this time, she thought Hughes was dead. In January 2002, authorities examined the yard of Rand's former Staten Island home on Vreeland Street, but they were unable to find any evidence pertaining to Hughes' case. Shortly after Hughes vanished, police questioned Rand and searched his car, but they did not prosecute him until twenty years later. Cederholm identified Rand's voice as the same voice she heard during the extortion phone call. Witnesses claimed to have seen Rand's green Volkswagen circle the business where Hughes vanished in 1981. Some claimed they even saw Hughes in Rand's car. He acknowledged playing hide-and-seek with Hughes on the day she vanished and gave her money to buy soap because she was "filthy", but he claims to have left her before she vanished. Authorities also determined that Rand's aunt lived in the same Port Richmond apartment building where Hughes' family resided in 1981. The defence team for Rand insisted that their client was innocent and that the people who said they saw Hughes in his car were wrong or lying. His attorneys made an effort to cast doubt on the child's family. Prior to her disappearance, Hughes had been the subject of a custody dispute between her parents and had been taken by both of them at one time or another, but her parents have been ruled out as suspects in her 1981 disappearance. Rand was convicted of kidnapping Hughes in October 2004. Rand was never charged with the child's murder due to a lack of evidence. He was sentenced to twenty-five years to life in prison. He is also serving twenty-five years to life for the Schweiger kidnapping. The second sentence made it extremely unlikely that he would ever be freed.

On August 14, 1983, 12 days after Rand was released from prison, 11-year-old Tiahease Jackson was last seen leaving the Mariners Harbor Motel on Forest Avenue in Staten Island. She lived in the motel with her mother and three siblings, the family having moved there after their apartment was damaged by fire. The Jackson family intended to move to the southern United States. At 1:30 p.m., while Jackson's mother was asleep, another resident of the hotel sent Jackson out to purchase chicken wings from the Crown Supermarket in the 900 block of Richmond Avenue. Jackson never returned to the hotel and has never been heard from again. Her mother woke up at 4:30 p.m. and, discovering her daughter had been missing for three hours, immediately called police. Having both passed lie detector tests, Jackson's mother and uncle were ruled out as suspects in her disappearance. Andre Rand had a campsite at the Baron Hirsch Cemetery less than 1/2 mile from the Mariners Harbor Motel, and Jackson's mother said she had seen a man matching his description loitering in the motel's parking lot. Although Rand was interrogated, no charges were filed.

Hank Gafforio, a 22-year-old native of Staten Island had gone out drinking on June 8, 1984. He first went to Mugs Away, but was declined service. After that, he went to the Spa Lounge in the Port Richmond neighbourhood and remained there until it closed at 4:00 a.m. Before going missing, he was spotted at the diner with Rand. Gafforio vanished without a trace. At 7:00 p.m., he was reported missing. Gafforio was described as being "slow" and had an intelligence quotient in the 70s. Gafforio lived with his parents and three brothers in the 90 block of Heberton Avenue, on the same block as Rand and just around the corner from Hughes' residence. His body has never been found.

12-year-old Jennifer Schweiger, born with Down syndrome, was reported missing on July 9, 1987. Witnesses spotted Schweiger walking with Rand. Her body was found underground after a 35-day search. While combing the area around Willowbrook State School, a particular spot caught the eye of retired New York City firefighter George Kramer. He returned with the police, the entire body was unearthed from the shallow grave, and the remains were positively identified as those of Schweiger. Police searched the grounds for evidence and found one of Rand's makeshift campsites in proximity to Schweiger's grave.

Convictions
In 1988, Rand was charged with the kidnapping and first-degree murder of Schweiger. The Staten Island jury could not reach a verdict on the murder charge, but convicted Rand of the first-degree kidnapping charge. He was sentenced to twenty-five years to life in prison. He would have been eligible for parole in 2008 if not convicted of a second kidnapping. According to the documentary Cropsey, some people along with detectives speculated that Rand may have been involved with Satanism and provided the children to be sacrificed. There were people who also thought that Rand was not alone in the commission of his crimes and many believed he was passing the children around to his friends in the underground network of homeless and mentally disabled people living in the tunnel systems of the former Willowbrook state school.

Officers and inmates at the prison where Rand is currently incarcerated testified regarding conversations in which he allegedly bragged about his paedophiliac exploits. He reportedly confessed Hughes' murder to an inmate and compared himself to the serial killer Ted Bundy. In 2004, Rand was again brought to trial, this time charged with the kidnapping of Holly Ann Hughes twenty-three years earlier. There is no statute of limitations in New York for first-degree kidnapping, which made this charge possible. A jury convicted Rand of the kidnapping in October 2004, and he was sentenced to another consecutive twenty-five years to life in prison. He will become eligible for parole in 2037, when he will be 93.

All of his alleged victims vanished from or were murdered in the Staten Island area, with the possible exception of Nerenberg. Their cases remain unsolved. Volunteers continue to search the abandoned property twice a year for evidence related to Rand's other alleged victims, but nothing has been discovered.