A woman’s remains were found in a trash bag in 1999. Atlanta police just arrested her husband for murder

Melissa Wolfenbarger’s mom and sister said they were always suspicious of her husband

Katie Hawkinson
Wednesday 07 August 2024 23:43 BST
Atlanta husband charged in wife's 1999 murder

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Atlanta police have arrested a woman’s husband for her murder, 25 years after her remains were found dumped in a trash bag.

Melissa Wolfenbarger’s family last heard from her on Thanksgiving Day in 1998 when the 21-year-old called her mother, Norma Patton, from her husband’s grandparents’ home. But no one reported the woman missing until January 2000, when her mother filed a report.

Christopher Wolfenbarger (left) has been arrested for the 1999 murder of his wife, Melissa Wolfenbarger (right)
Christopher Wolfenbarger (left) has been arrested for the 1999 murder of his wife, Melissa Wolfenbarger (right) (Fulton County Sheriff’s Office (left), Atlanta Police Department (right))

Decades later, her husband, Christopher Wolfenbarger, was arrested for murder after being a person of interest in the case for years, police said at a Wednesday press conference. The arresting officers found Wolfenbarger hiding behind a dryer at his Atlanta home on Tuesday.

“Christopher Wolfenbarger knowingly and intentionally killed Melissa Dawn Wolfenbarger and dismembered her body,” read an arrest warrant obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Christopher Wolfenbarger, pictured in a booking photo, was arrested for the 1999 murder of his wife. The arresting officers found him hiding behind a dryer at his home
Christopher Wolfenbarger, pictured in a booking photo, was arrested for the 1999 murder of his wife. The arresting officers found him hiding behind a dryer at his home (Fulton County Sheriff’s Office)

The deceased woman’s mother and her sister, Tina Patton, attended the press conference wearing shirts with photos of Melissa.

In April 1999, police found human remains in a trash bag dumped in an Atlanta neighborhood. At the time, officials misidentified those remains as belonging to another missing person. Additional human remains were found in another bag, two months later.

DNA testing in 2003, three years after Wolfenbarger was reported missing, confirmed that both sets of remains belonged to the Atlanta woman. Police have been hunting for her killer ever since.

Melissa Wolfenbarger, pictured, was last heard from on Thanksgiving Day 1998. Her remains were found in two trash bags in 1999 but weren’t identified until 2003
Melissa Wolfenbarger, pictured, was last heard from on Thanksgiving Day 1998. Her remains were found in two trash bags in 1999 but weren’t identified until 2003 (Atlanta Police Department)

Melissa’s father, Carl Patton, was the reason police investigated the remains again in 2003, her sister previously revealed. Carl Patton was arrested and convicted that same year for five murders across Georgia from 1973 to 1977.

“My mom was able to convince him to say something about my sister,” Tina said, according to local outlet 11Alive. “And somebody in Atlanta saw it in the paper the next day and said, ‘Wait a minute, there’s some remains over here in the morgue. And the address, the vicinities are kind of close to where this girl lived. So let’s go get DNA.’”

Tina said her father would have never hurt Melissa, according to 11Alive. “Dad loved us,” she said. “He was devastated. Just like us. He broke down and cried.”

But her husband was a long-time suspect in Melissa’s disappearance, Tina Patton said at the Wednesday press conference.

Norma Patton and Tina Patton (right) at a press conference on Wednesday wearing shirts honoring Melissa Wolfenbarger
Norma Patton and Tina Patton (right) at a press conference on Wednesday wearing shirts honoring Melissa Wolfenbarger (Fox 5 Atlanta)

“From day one, we knew it was Christopher,” she told reporters. “There was never, ever any doubt in our minds, who did this. My mom has said, ‘I don’t know how many times, that when she first met him, there was just evil in his eyes,’” she continued.

Both Norma and Tina said they never heard from Christopher again after Melissa’s disappearance.

Wolfenbarger had left her husband the summer before she disappeared, according to her sister, after saying her husband hit her and dragged her by the hair down a sidewalk.

“But when [Christopher] went in front of the judge, he asked the judge to let him talk to her alone, and she went back to him,” her sister said.

The Atlanta Police Department is transferring the case to the attorney general’s office.

Norma recalled her last words to her daughter: “I love you, and you know where I am if you need me.”

“Melissa was very loving, if she loved you, you would know it,” the mother continued. “She loved her kids, and there’s no way on this Earth that she would have left him, because she wanted her kids.”

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