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New bodies could bring Craigslist death toll to 3

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
This is an undated hand out photo of Timothy Kern of Massillon, Ohio provided by the FBI. Kern, missing since Nov. 13, interviewed for a Craigslist help-wanted ad that police say was actually a deadly robbery scheme that lured people to a nonexistent farm job in southern Ohio, according to the man?s father, who called the outlook for his son ?pretty grim.? (AP Photo/The FBI)
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This undated photo provided by the Summit County Sheriff Department in Ohio shows Richard J. Beasley. Beasley's mother, Carol Beasley, said Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, her son has "a very caring heart" and was a mentor to a teenager charged in a deadly robbery scheme in which police say victims were lured with bogus help-wanted ads on Craigslist. Carol Beasley told The Associated Press that she spoke to her son Richard and she prays that a newspaper report that he is a suspect is not true. (AP Photo/Summit County Sheriff Department)
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The vehicle of Timothy Kern was recovered from this Italo's Pizza parking lot in Canton, Ohio which is shown Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Kern has been missing for over a week after responding to a Craigslist help wanted ad. He is believed to be the third victim of a be linked to the employment robbery scheme. (AP Photo/The Repository, Scott Heckel)

COLUMBUS, Ohio >> The discovery of two new bodies 90 miles apart in Ohio could bring the death toll to three from a Craigslist ad that police say lured victims into a robbery.

A body found Friday in a shallow grave near a mall in Akron, Ohio, may be that of a missing man who answered the ad, according to the FBI. And an Ohio sheriff in a rural county said later in the day that the body of a white male was found in a shallow grave without identification.

The FBI is working on the supposition that the body found near the Rolling Acres shopping mall in Akron may be that of Timothy Kern, 47, of Massillon, who hasn’t been seen in more than a week, agency spokeswoman Vicki Anderson said.

"Do we think it might be? Maybe," Anderson said. "He’s missing. We haven’t been able to find him. It could possibly be, but we just don’t know that yet."

Anderson declined to specify how authorities discovered the body, saying only it was through "information."

Kern answered the same ad for a farm hand that authorities say led to the shooting death of Norfolk, Va., resident David Pauley, 51, in a rural area of Nobel County 90 miles south of Akron. A South Carolina man reported answering the ad but managing to escape after being shot Nov. 6.

In announcing that a third body had been discovered in the same area, Noble County Sheriff Steve Hannum said he is continuing his investigation along with state investigators and FBI agents and cannot comment further.

Two people from the Akron area are in custody: a high school student who has been charged with attempted murder and 52-year-old Richard Beasley, who is in jail on unrelated charges.

Agents have contacted individuals to check on their well-being, FBI spokesman Harry Trombitas said Friday in an email.

One was Heather Tuttle, of Ravenna, who applied for the job Oct. 7 but never got a response. She had forgotten about the posting until an FBI agent called and left a message for her Monday.

When she called back, she was stunned at what the agent told her.

"It could have been me," said Tuttle, 27, who has since taken work as an assistant manager at a gas station.

"When the situation was explained to me, it just instantly made me sick and made me realize how lucky I am that I didn’t get a response back," she said.

Another man who responded to the ad has said he met Beasley at a food court at a different mall in the Akron area on Oct. 10. Ron Sanson, of Stow, was told the man was looking for an older, single or divorced person to watch over a 688-acre farm in southeast Ohio — the kind of man, Sanson said, whose disappearance might not be quickly noticed.

Sanson and Kern are both divorced. So was Pauley.

Sanson, 58, said he filled out an application and talked for about 20 minutes with Beasley about a $300-a-week job overseeing a swath of land a mile from the nearest neighbor and living rent-free in a two-bedroom trailer with opportunities to hunt and fish, as well as free access to ATVs and snowmobiles.

Law enforcement officials have released few details because of a judge’s gag order. The sheriff in Noble County, where Pauley and the South Carolina man were shot, previously said it was unclear how long the ad was online or whether there were other victims.

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Sheeran reported from Cleveland. Associated Press writer JoAnne Viviano in Columbus contributed to this report.

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