Her body was found off Route 9 in Old Bridge on Sunday. An autopsy confirmed it was her on Monday morning.
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Parze, from New Jersey, was last seen Oct. 30 after she dropped her family off at their house and then headed to her place, not far away.
During a news conference on Monday, Monmouth County prosecutors announced that her on-again, off-again boyfriend - 29-year-old John Ozbilgen - was responsible for Parze's death.
Ozbilgen was considered a person of interest. He died by suicide after the investigation into Parze's disappearance allegedly uncovered images of child pornography on his phone.
Among items recovered from Ozbilgen's home was a note to his parents that said what they "heard in the news was true," except for the charges of child pornography.
He did not write where Parze's remains might have been placed. Officials say they could not release that information until they had found her remains.
"We had concluded and confirmed that he was responsible for her death, but the note reaffirmed it," said Christopher Gramiccioni, Monmouth County Prosecutor.
Her cause of death will be determined by the medical examiner.
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Ozbilgen had been held for 11 days before a judge released him granting bail. He had been charged with third-degree child pornography.
Prosecutor said 10 images of babies and young girls showed those children being abused and tortured by adult men, and that those images were discovered on the unemployed stockbroker's phone by detectives investigating Parze's disappearance.
"We further learned that there was a pending domestic violence case from September 23, 2019, involving Ms. Parze, in which the defendant was alleged to have struck Stephanie Parze in the head and threatened her before she took off running down the street," Assistant Prosecutor Caitlyn Sidley said. "Detectives learned that this defendant was texting and Facebook messaging Stephanie Parze the night before her disappearance."
Parze's heartbroken family attended the press conference on Monday and thanked the searchers and officials who took part in the efforts to find her.
"It goes without saying that our family is devastated, our friends, our family, our community, and our lives will never be the same, but Stephanie is coming home at last where she belongs," said Ed Parze, Stephanie's father.
Ed Parze added that he and his wife plan to start the Stephanie Parze Foundation to draw attention to abused women and missing persons cases.