Two teenage brothers, ages 17 and 15, have been charged with murdering Clayton girl

, whose body was found in a recycling container outside of a house on East Clayton Avenue.

The boys, who have been identified by multiple sources as Dante and Justin Robinson, have been charged with murder, conspiracy to commit murder, disposing of a body, tampering with evidence and theft. The younger boy was also charged with luring.

Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton said the teens lured the 12-year-old girl to their East Clayton Avenue home where she was killed. An autopsy conducted Tuesday morning revealed Autumn died from "blunt force trauma, consistent with strangulation," Dalton said. He added that there was no evidence of sexual assault.

Her death has been ruled a homicide.

Dalton said the boys' mother informed law enforcement about information one of her son's posted on his Facebook account. Dalton would not elaborate or say which son posted it. Additional information led members of the Gloucester County Prosecutor's Office to where Autumn's body was found.

Stories on Autumn Pasquale

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Dalton said that information led to a search warrant for the East Clayton Avenue home — the house next door to where her body was dumped.

The owner of the home is listed on property records as Anita Robinson.

Inside the small white bungalow, police found some of Autumn's belongings including the white BMX bike Autumn was last seen on when she left her West High Street home Saturday afternoon around 12:30 p.m.

Dalton said the boys wanted parts from Autumn's bike and that she was lured into the house.

Authorities also found other physical evidence that led to the arrest of the two juveniles, Dalton said. He added that there was no evidence that the boys had previously known Autumn.

Dalton said the two boys were accompanied by their attorney Tuesday afternoon when they turned themselves in.

"Today we mourn the loss of a young girl named Autumn Pasquale whose life was tragically cut short before it really began," Dalton said. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to her parents and her family."

"It's my hope the arrest today provides a measure of closure (for the family) that the individuals responsible for their daughter's death will be held accountable," Dalton said.

The boys father told The Star-Ledger of Newark earlier Tuesday that he was interviewed about his sons' involvement in Autumn's disappearance.

Alonzo Robinson said his sons were known for stealing bikes in the neighborhood and police told him they found bike parts stockpiled in the basement. He said one of the boys had been previously charged for theft.

"I think someone wanted the girl's bicycle," Robinson said. "Maybe she wanted her bike and resisted, and one of them snatched her off a bike."

He said he has been divorced from his wife, Anita C. Saunders, for seven years, and has not had contact with his five children during that time.

Authorities were not clear if the boys would be charged as adults.

Autumn was

around 9:30 after she didn't return to her High Street home as expected. She did not specify where she was going.

The last bit of communication received was a text message Autumn sent at 2:27 p.m., Dalton said during a press conference Monday afternoon, however he did not say who the text was sent to.

During an impromptu press conference outside the First Presbyterian Church on Delsea Drive, Autumn's uncle Paul Spadafore addressed the crowd.

"We are all distraught, we we (the family) all just spoke and said out of evil will come goodness," Spadafore said. "And there is evil everywhere, even in the small town of Clayton."

Spadafore called Autumn a "precious, precious child."

"Our little angel Autumn has reached out to the world in a special way."

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