70-year-old woman allegedly uses 16-inch blade hidden in her cane to stab man to death

Renee DiPietro, 70, is accused of stabbing a man to death with a 16-inch blade that was concealed in a walking cane. (Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office)

A 70-year-old Philadelphia woman who stabbed a man to death with a 16-inch blade hidden in her cane earlier this year can stand trial, a judge ruled.

The Mercury newspaper reported Friday that Montgomery County District Court Judge Todd N. Barnes determined that prosecutors presented sufficient evidence during the preliminary hearing to move the case forward to trial. An initial trial date will be scheduled Nov. 8.

Renee DiPietro is charged with third-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter and possession of an instrument of crime with intent, according to court records.

Testimony from a Montgomery County detective and surveillance footage from a nearby business that captured the alleged stabbing were key to the case moving forward. DiPietro’s defense attorney tried to get the murder charge tossed for lack of evidence to no avail, The Mercury noted.

As Law&Crime previously reported, officers from the Lower Marion Township Police Department were called around 1:30 a.m. on June 10 for a stabbing at the intersection of Cricket Avenue and Cricket Terrace, an arrest affidavit obtained by Law & Crime said. They found a victim, Michael Thomas Sides, 31, bleeding profusely from his upper torso. He was rushed to the hospital where he died about an hour later.

Dan Rogers, one of Sides’ friends, told detectives Sides was “sucker punched” earlier in the night by a mutual friend later identified as Jason DiPietro, the affidavit says. Sides said he was “going to seek [him] out.” During the altercation, the victim was preventing Jason DiPietro from getting into a white car when his parents Renee and Michael DiPietro, got out out of the car, according to the affidavit.

Rogers saw Renee DiPietro “lunge” toward the victim, causing him to fall to the ground bleeding with what appeared to be a black cane that fell apart, the affidavit said. She then struck the victim while he was on the ground, detectives wrote.

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