Of Johnson County’s many cold cases, the tragic death of Angel Baby Doe affected area law enforcement officials harder than ...
The identification was made through forensic investigative genetic genealogy. The cause and manner of death remain undetermined.
Nashville police use forensic genetic genealogy to identify remains found decades ago, solving multiple unidentified remains ...
On the morning of September 6, 1986, a farmer driving a combine through his cornfield in Summerfield, Illinois, made a startling discovery. It was the body of a young woman. Authorities were unable to ...
‘Missing in Nevada Day’ seeks to name unidentified bodies found over the years ...
After nearly 39 years of mystery, the Dubois County Prosecutor’s Office has announced a major breakthrough in the 1987 cold ...
A passerby found the remains of a woman who police dubbed the "Vandy Jane Doe" after the clothes she was found in had a ...
This video examines a Jane Doe case that remains unsolved after 48 years, outlining what is known, investigative efforts, and why identification has remained elusive, presented with care and respect.
Police say the previously unidentified infant was found dead at the Monastery Immaculate Conception in the Dubois County town of Ferdinand back in 1987.
DNA genealogy solves a decades-old Boca Raton cold case, identifying the victim as Virginia woman Patricia "Patsy" Ritchie, with the help of Othram technology.
Prosecutors may use the same high-tech DNA that linked accused serial killer Rex Heuermann to seven butchered sex workers to ID another Gilgo Beach body that has stumped investigators for decades.