New York

New York Woman Pleads Guilty in Death of WWI Veteran

Edmund Schreiber was found strangled with his own neckties in June 1983

What to Know

  • Edmund Schreiber was found strangled with his own neckties in June 1983
  • Saundra Adams, of Buffalo, entered a guilty plea Wednesday in connection with Schreiber's death
  • Schreiber was wounded during WWI and had been awarded a Purple Heart medal

A 51-year-old western New York woman has pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of a World War I veteran more than three decades ago.

Erie County District Attorney John Flynn says Saundra Adams, of Buffalo, entered the plea Wednesday in state Supreme Court, just a day into jury selection for her murder trial.

Adams, a librarian, admitted that she and an accomplice broke into a Buffalo home in June 1983 and caused the death of 92-year-old Edmund Schreiber. The original indictment accused the two of tying up Schreiber and strangling the decorated war veteran with his own neckties.

Adams' plea comes almost a year to the day that she was arrested and charged. She faces a maximum of 25 years in prison when she's sentenced in November.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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