North Carolina parents live carefree life after not reporting disappearance of daughter still missing
Madalina Cojocari was last seen in public getting off a school bus in November 2022
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A North Carolina couple recently found guilty of failing to report their daughter missing in 2022 has gone back to their day-to-day lives in Cornelius, a lake town north of Charlotte.
Christopher Palmiter and Diana Cojocari were recently released following their sentencings in connection with the November 2022 disappearance of 11-year-old Madalina Cojocari, leaving locals feeling unnerved.
"It seems to me with everything we see online that everybody's bothered about it, but nobody's really saying or doing anything," a woman named Jennifer of Huntersville, a town directly south of Cornelius, told Fox News Digital. Jennifer frequently visits a friend in Cornelius who happens to live in the same neighborhood as Palmiter and Diana Cojocari.
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"Her porch is so close to the road. So, I stopped in front and… yelled out of the window, ‘Bring her home!’" Jennifer said. "She didn't look up."
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Jennifer noted that their front yard is overgrown, and the front porch is cluttered with different items, making her wonder if the HOA has fined them yet.
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Mecklenburg County records show that Palmiter filed for divorce from Diana on Monday, saying they have been separated since around the time Madalina went missing. Locals say they have seen the couple together at home after they were both released from prison.
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Residents have also seen Diana at the neighborhood pool and walking downtown, where posters of Madalina are still strung up around Catawba Avenue.
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"I noticed at the pool, parents going to the bathroom with their kids, where you would normally say, ‘Just go to the bathroom,’ and I found that disturbing. I thought, if I were here with my little kids, and she were here – first of all, I wouldn't be able to keep my mouth shut. Second of all, I'd be weirded out.… It's all so creepy."
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Madalina was last seen getting off a school bus in her hometown of Cornelius, just north of Charlotte, on Nov. 21, 2022, when she was 11 years old. Authorities have been unable to locate her since.
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"It breaks my heart. It just seems like nobody can do anything."
A Mecklenburg County jury found Palmiter guilty of failure to report a missing child to law enforcement on May 31 after a weeklong trial, according to FOX 8 Greensboro.
Her mother, Diana Cojocari, pleaded guilty last month to the same charge as Palmiter. Diana, a Moldova native, and Pamliter did not report the 11-year-old girl missing to police until weeks later on Dec. 15, 2022, despite telling police the last time they saw their daughter was at home the evening of Nov. 23, 2022.
The Mecklenburg County judge sentenced Palmiter to serve a suspended 30-month supervised probation, FOX 8 reported. Palmiter's lawyer did not immediately respond to an inquiry from Fox News Digital.
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Public defenders changed Diana's plea to guilty on May 20, and she was sentenced to up to 17 months in prison. Due to her time already served, however, she was released. Her public defender also did not immediately respond to an inquiry from Fox News Digital.
Palmiter's defense attorneys argued that Diana manipulated him and made him believe his stepdaughter was safe at the time of her disappearance. Prosecutors, however, included testimony from an FBI analyst, who presented phone and email evidence that suggested Palmiter knew Madalina was missing yet did not report her disappearance to authorities, according to FOX 8.
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"I think Diana took her somewhere with her Moldovan family."
"I think Diana took her somewhere with her Moldovan family," Palmiter testified during his trial, FOX 8 reported. "I believe Diana has tucked her away somewhere where she’s not going to be found."
Locals have hope that Madalina is still alive, somewhere.
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Soon after reporting Madalina missing last year, her parents penned a handwritten note expressing their concern for her, which the CPD shared with the public on Dec. 22.
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"Our family is doing everything we know to do to support the efforts to find Madalina and bring her home," the letter reads, in part. "We are and continue to have hope and positivity in this difficult time and pray that she is found safe very soon. We know and greatly appreciate that the local, state, national and online communities have come together to share fliers, offer positive, hold prayer vigils, support law enforcement, and are doing everything possible to find and bring Madalina safely home."
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Authorities are asking anyone with information about Madalina's whereabouts to contact the CPD at 704-892-7773.