Huntington Station Man Indicted for Hiding Corpse in Suitcase

Also Indicted for Possession of a Controlled Substance after Claiming Backpack Full of Drugs at LIRR Lost & Found

A Huntington Station man was indicted for hiding a human corpse inside a suitcase and for possession of a controlled substance after he claimed a backpack full of drugs from a train station.

(Photo Courtesy of SCPD) Ronald Schroeder was indicted for concealing the corpse of Seikeya Jones (pictured) inside a suitcase.

On September 2, Suffolk County Police responded to a call  for suspicious activity and a foul odor outside of an apartment building on Nassau Road in Huntington Station. Upon further investigation, police located the partially decomposed remains of Seikeya Jones, 33, inside of a suitcase on the side of the building.  

Jones was found with her wrists and ankles bound with a cord. Her cause of death has not yet been determined and the results of an autopsy are pending. 

Jones was last seen alive on August 29, inside the building with Ronald Schroeder, who also rented an apartment there. After her body was found, police were unable to locate Schroeder for questioning until he resurfaced in Manhattan.  

On September 6, Schroeder was located at Penn Station after he showed up to the Long Island Rail Road Lost  & Found Office to claim his backpack, which he had previously left on a LIRR  train. Schroeder’s backpack was allegedly found to contain quantities of both methamphetamine and GHB or “liquid ecstasy.” Having been located, he was taken into custody and charged with both the narcotics charges and the concealment of Jones’ corpse.  

On September 18, Schroeder was arraigned on an indictment before Acting Supreme Court  Justice Steven A. Pilewski for the following charges:  

  • concealment of a human corpse, a Class E felony
  • criminal possession of a controlled substance in the third degree, a Class B felony
  • criminal possession of a controlled substance in the fourth degree, a Class C felony
  • criminal possession of a controlled substance in the seventh degree, a Class A  misdemeanor  

“This case is immensely troubling. Ms. Jones and her family deserve a full investigation,” said Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney. “We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners to ensure  that the victim and her family receive justice.”

Pilewski ordered Schroeder held on $500,000 cash, $1 million bond or $5,000,000 partially secured bond during the pendency of the case. Schroeder is due back in court on October 16 and faces up to nine years in prison if convicted on the top count.