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Tag: Cold Case

  • Man arrested in cold case murder of Annapolis woman 36 years later – WTOP News

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    Police in Annapolis, Maryland, arrested a man Thursday and charged him in the cold case murder of a woman who was killed in 1989.

    Police in Annapolis, Maryland, said they have found the man responsible for the cold case murder of a woman 36 years ago.

    Garnet Elizabeth Griffith’s body was found on Kensington Way in Annapolis on Jan. 12, 1989, while officers were responding to a 911 call.

    Police said she suffered injuries consistent with a gunshot wound, according to a news release.

    After following new leads, the Annapolis Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Division, in collaboration with partner agencies, arrested William Cook Jr., on Thursday at his home in Annapolis.

    “The arrest in this case is a testament to the unwavering commitment of our detectives, both past and present, to seeking justice for every victim. I want to extend my deepest gratitude to the men and women of the Annapolis Police Department, past and present, who never gave up on this case,” Annapolis Police Chief Ed Jackson said in a news release.

    Cook, 53, is facing charges of first- and second-degree murder as well as first- and second-degree rape, according to online court documents. He’s being held without bond.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Valerie Bonk

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  • Human remains found in Canadian well identified as woman born in 1881

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    Canadian authorities have identified a person known as “The Woman in the Well” nearly two decades after her remains were found. 

    The woman, Alice Spence, was born in September 1881 and had moved to Canada from Minnesota in 1913, police said. 

    In June 2006, crews excavating a site in Sutherland, Saskatoon, found an old well and a barrel containing preserved human remains, according to a news release from the Saskatoon Police Service. The area was previously the site of the Shore Hotel, a boarding house that was demolished in 1927, according to a news release from the private genetic genealogy company Othram. 

    The woman had been partially dismembered, police believed, and was wrapped in a burlap sack and stuffed in the barrel, Othram said. Police found clothes, including a fitted jacket and long skirt, that dated to between 1910 and 1920, Othram said. A broken necklace and men’s clothing were also found. 

    An autopsy determined the woman had died under suspicious circumstances, but authorities were unable to identify her despite years of investigation. Police developed a DNA profile, but found no matches, and facial reconstruction images released to the public turned up no answers, Othram said. 

    In 2023, the Saskatoon Police Services submitted forensic evidence from the case to Othram. Othram’s scientists were able to develop a DNA extract from the skeletal evidence. They built a comprehensive DNA profile, Othram said, which was used to generate “new investigative leads” that were returned to the police service. 

    A breakthrough came in June this year, Saskatoon Police Service Sergeant Darren Funk said in a news conference. At an event in Ottawa, Funk heard the Toronto Police Service describe how they had used investigative genetic genealogy to solve a homicide. Investigative genetic genealogy uses the DNA of people who were related to the subject to help make an identification. 

    Funk connected with the Toronto Police Service and asked them to review the case of “The Woman in the Well.” The Toronto Police Service’s follow-up investigation led investigators to people who may have been the woman’s relatives. Police collected reference DNA samples from those subjects, and those samples were compared to the woman’s DNA profile. Authorities also used historical information and city archives to help make the identification. 

    Alice Spence was married to a man named Charles Spence and had a daughter, Idella, police said. Spence’s listing in a 1916 census was the last proof of life historians could find for her. 

    The family’s home in Sutherland was destroyed by a fire in 1918, police said. Other records show Charles and Idella Spence living with a housekeeper in 1921. Investigators believe that Alice’s death occurred sometime between 1916 and the fire in 1918. 

    Spence’s descendants, located through forensic genetic genealogy, were largely unaware of their relative and her death, police said. 

    The police service said it believes this is the oldest investigation in Canada to be solved with the assistance of investigative genetic genealogy. Saskatoon Police Service Chief Cameron McBride called it a “testament to the determination and innovation of investigators throughout all these years.” 

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  • ‘Yogurt Shop Murders’ investigators lay out how they solved killings of four teen girls

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    New DNA and ballistics testing have linked a serial killer to the 1991 “Yogurt Shop Murders,” solving a case that has haunted Austin, Texas, for more than three decades.

    During a news conference on Monday, the Austin Police Department announced that genetic evidence linked Robert Eugene Brashers to the killing of four teenage girls inside a North Austin yogurt shop.

    “After 34 years, the Austin Police have made a significant breakthrough in one of the most devastating cases in our city’s history,” said Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis. “This unthinkable crime has weighed heavily on the hearts of our community, the families of the victims and our detectives who have tirelessly pursued justice.”

    DNA EVIDENCE CRACKS COLD CASE, CONNECTS DEAD SUSPECT TO MURDERS OF 4 TEENS AT AUSTIN YOGURT SHOP

    Photos of the “Yogurt Shop Murders” victims, who were killed in 1991. (FOX 7 Austin)

    Investigators say a major breakthrough in the case came in recent weeks, when advanced testing revealed that DNA found beneath 13-year-old Amy Ayers’ fingernails matched that of Brashers — a man previously connected to homicides in both Missouri and South Carolina.

    “I have never been so proud of my daughter in all of my life,” her father, Bob Ayers, told the Austin American-Statesman. Authorities believe Ayers managed to gather the DNA during a desperate struggle with her attacker.

    “Our whole family knew there was something about Amy that would help solve this,” Ayers said.

    He added, “This is over.”

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    Brashers, who died by suicide during a 1999 standoff with Missouri police, had already been tied to a string of violent crimes across the country.

    In 2018, officials in Missouri announced that DNA evidence connected Brashers to the 1990 strangulation of a woman in South Carolina, as well as the 1998 shootings of a mother and daughter in Missouri. He was also linked to the 1997 rape of a 14-year-old girl in Tennessee.

    ‘YOGURT SHOP MURDERS’: AUSTIN’S UNSOLVED COLD CASE CONTINUES TO RAISE QUESTIONS DECADES LATER

    Robert Brashers mug shot

    Robert Brashers’ mugshot. (Missouri State Highway Patrol)

    Then, in June, Jackson resubmitted ballistics data from a .380 caliber shell casing recovered at the yogurt shop to a federal database. The results matched an unsolved 1998 case in Kentucky. While Jackson declined to share details about the Kentucky case, he noted that it bore similarities to the Austin murders.

    In August, South Carolina investigators informed Austin detectives that new DNA testing on a sample from under Amy Ayers’ fingernail matched Brashers — confirming his connection to the 1990 South Carolina murder.

    “Amy’s final moments on this Earth were to solve this case for us,” Jackson told The Courier of Montgomery County. “It’s because of her fighting back.”

    Police are still piecing together why Brashers was in Austin the night of the murders, but noted he was stopped near El Paso just two days later. He told police he was driving a stolen truck from Georgia to visit his father in Arizona.

    A .380 caliber handgun found on Brashers during that stop was confiscated by police but later returned to his father — who may have given it back to him. Jackson said it was the same make and model Brashers used when he died by suicide during a 1999 standoff with Missouri police.

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    "Yogurt Shop Murders" suspects (Credit: FOX 7 Austin)

    Authorities investigate suspects in the “Yogurt Shop Murders” case. (FOX 7 Austin)

    On Dec. 6, 1991, firefighters responding to a fire at the I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt store made a horrifying discovery: the bodies of Eliza Thomas, 17; sisters Jennifer, 17, and Sarah Harbison, 15; and Sarah’s best friend Amy Ayers, 13. 

    All had been shot in the head. Authorities believe the girls were bound, that some were sexually assaulted, and that the fire was intentionally set to destroy evidence.

    The investigation faced major hurdles early on, as fire and water damage compromised much of the physical evidence. Thousands of tips poured in, but most led nowhere and no suspect was ever conclusively tied to the crime. The case eventually went cold.

    For the families, decades of uncertainty became its own form of torture. Pam Ayers, Amy’s mother, told the Statesman that she is still trying to process the new revelations.

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    Victims' memorial

    Tributes lay on a memorial Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, for four teenage girls who were killed in a yogurt shop in 1991 in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Paul J. Weber)

    “I can’t say I am happy,” she said. “I’m not there. I am kind of numb. Knowing it is a serial killer, I am not sure that makes it worse, but I would have never thought it would be a serial killer. That is hard for me to process.”

    While Brashers is long deceased, police say the investigation is ongoing. Detectives are working with agencies in other states to trace his movements and determine whether he is connected to additional unsolved crimes.

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    Austin Mayor Kirk Watson said he hopes the breakthrough may help the city move forward.

    “My hopefulness is that we can turn a page as a community and hopefully the final page on this horror that marked a very different time in Austin’s history,” Watson said. “We can take heart in our growth and progress and strength as a city. And we can go to sleep knowing that while the threat of this kind of evil may never pass in this world, we are far, far better able to prevent it before it happens and solve it when it does.”

    Authorities are urging anyone with information about Brashers to come forward.

    Stepheny Price covers crime, including missing persons, homicides and migrant crime. Send story tips to stepheny.price@fox.com.

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  • Arrest made in 2010 triple-shooting in Castroville that killed 18-year-old

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    More than 15 years after a triple-shooting in Monterey County left a man dead, authorities have announced an arrest in the case.

    On the morning of Aug. 15, 2010, deputies were called to the 11000 block of Jackson Street in the community of Castroville following reports of a juvenile male possibly suffering a heart attack. When deputies arrived, they found three victims with gunshot wounds.

    Deputies administered first aid, while firefighters and paramedics responded. Two victims were taken to local hospitals. A third victim, 18-year-old Salvatore Dentice, was pronounced deceased at the scene.

    In an update Wednesday, deputies said there were able to identify 41-year-old Stephen Vasquez as a suspect in the shooting and arrest him in connection with the case. Additional details about his arrest were not immediately available.

    stephen-vasquez-cold-case-arrest-092525.jpg

    Stephen Vasquez, who is accused in a triple shooting in Castroville on Aug. 15, 2010 that left an 18-year-old man dead.

    Monterey County Sheriff’s Office


    “Today’s arrest is a testament to collaboration, persistence of our detectives, and the unwavering commitment of this office to pursue justice – no matter how much time has passed,” Sheriff Tina Nieto said. “Cold cases leave lasting impacts on families and our community, and while nothing can erase the pain of loss, we hope this step provides a measure of healing.”

    Jail records show Vasquez being held at the Monterey County Jail on suspicion of homicide and two counts of attempted homicide.

    Anyone with additional information is asked to contact Detective Richard Geng of the sheriff’s office at 831-253-6029 or Sgt. James Day at 831-597-0065. Tips can also be sent anonymously on the sheriff’s office website.

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    Tim Fang

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  • $10,000 reward offered for suspect in deadly 2019 East Palo Alto shooting

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    Police in East Palo Alto announced a reward Wednesday as they search for a man suspected in a deadly 2019 shooting.

    According to officers, Victor Gomez-Rios was found shot in his vehicle on the 1800 block of East Bayshore Road on Sep 7, 2019. Over the course of the investigation, detectives identified Juan Carlos Solis as the man suspected of killing Gomez-Rios.

    Police said the group Mothers Against Murder has partnered with the department to offer a $10,000 reward for information leading to Solis’ arrest and conviction.

    juan-carlos-solis-east-palo-alto-091025-01.jpg

    Juan Carlos Solis, suspect in the killing of Victor Gomez-Rios in East Palo Alto on Sep. 7, 2019.

    East Palo Alto Police Department


    Anyone with information about the case is asked to call or text the department’s tip line at 650-409-6792, email epa@tipnow.org or to call the department’s non-emergency line at 650-321-1112. Officers urged anyone who spots Solis to call 911.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Missing Sartell man’s remains found in submerged car, authorities confirm

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    Authorities say the remains found in a vehicle that was recovered from the Mississippi River last month in Sartell, Minnesota, have now been identified. 

    Roy Benn went missing on Sept. 25, 1967.

    Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension


    The Benton County Sheriff’s Office says the remains have been identified as Roy Benn, who was reported missing nearly six decades ago. 

    Benn, of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota, was 59 when he disappeared, and it took almost that same amount of time to find him. He had last been seen around 4 a.m. in Sartell on Sept. 25, 1967, driving a blue 1963 Buick Electra. 

    Investigators worked for several years after Benn disappeared to find him, conducting various interviews and searches, but were never successful. Fifty-seven years later, they are closer than ever to an answer.

    The discovery comes after someone fishing on the river spotted what looked like a car on their sonar. A dive team searched the area and found a car about 20 feet deep in the river a few days later, on Aug. 13, according to the Stearns County Sheriff’s Office.

    Brody Loch, a fisherman from Watkins, Minnesota, who found the car, said, “It was 100% luck.”  

    A tow company was brought in to remove the car, which was the Sartell Police Department said was “intact but severely deteriorated, had been underwater for decades and was filled with river sediment.”

    Shortly after finding the vehicle, authorities were able to use the VIN to confirm it belonged to Benn.

    The Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office is still working to determine Benn’s cause and manner of death.

    Benn was declared dead in 1975. 


    Note: The video above originally aired on Aug. 14, 2025.

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    Riley Moser

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  • Navy diver is linked to multiple cold case rape cases in 4 states, California officials say

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    A Navy diver who died nearly three decades ago has been linked to half a dozen home invasion and rape cases across four states after a yearslong investigation, California officials said Thursday. 

    All of the attacks were cold cases dating back to the 1980s and 90s, where women were sexually assaulted by a home intruder. The intruder terrorized the women, sometimes calling their homes or threatening to kill them if they reported the incidents to police, the district attorney’s office said. 

    The Ventura County District Attorney’s Office said that Sean Patrick McNulty was connected to the crimes. McNulty died by suicide in Michigan in 1997, after becoming a suspect in a 1993 Indiana rape case. 

    The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office Forensic Services Bureau oversaw the testing of two rape kits collected in the county in 1982 and 1983. DNA from the tests were uploaded to the Combined DNA Index System, a database managed by the FBI that can be used to compare DNA profiles and find matches. In March 2024, investigators determined the DNA from the two cases matched, the district attorney’s office said. 

    A booking photo of Sean Patrick McNulty in 1978.

    Ventura County District Attorney’s Office


    The DNA was also found to match rapes in Michigan in 1994 and 1995, and a rape in Ohio in 1997. McNulty had not been named as a suspect in any of those cases. After Ventura County investigators reached out to law enforcement in Michigan and Ohio, the agencies launched a joint investigation and worked with an investigative genealogist from the Columbus Police Department. 

    The genealogist’s research allowed police to identify McNulty as a potential suspect in all five cases. His body had been cremated, leaving police unable to obtain a DNA sample from his remains, but investigators found the records from the 1997 Indiana rape case, where he had been named a suspect. Investigators from that case were able to find a biological sample collected from McNulty. 

    That sample was then compared against the DNA sample from the other cases. Scientists determined that McNulty’s DNA matched the biological samples found in all five cases. 

    Police have worked to contact McNulty’s victims and notify them of his identification and death. So far, only one victim has been located. The district attorney’s office said the woman told investigators she had “waited 40 years” to receive closure. 

    The victim in the 1997 Indiana case, where McNulty was a suspect, also said that she was “grateful after all these years” that investigators “didn’t give up” on the case. 

    McNulty was born in Burlingame, California and spent most of his life in Ventura County. He was arrested in the area in 1978 for placing obscene phone calls to women. He served as a diver in the Navy from 1979 to 1992. 

    McNulty was married in 1988 and divorced his wife prior to his death, the district attorney’s office said. His ex-wife is still alive but did not cooperate with Ventura County investigators. 

    An investigation into other crimes that McNulty may have committed is ongoing, the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office said.

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  • Cold case breakthrough in Maryland reunites siblings who’ve been separated for more than 70 years – WTOP News

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    The woman at the center of what police in Howard County have for decades simply called “The Jane Doe Case” has finally been identified, and that breakthrough has reunited two of her children.

    The woman at the center of what police in Howard County, Maryland, have for decades simply called “The Jane Doe Case” has finally been identified, and that breakthrough has reunited two of her children, who hadn’t seen each other for more than 70 years.

    Sarah Belle Sharkey, whose name at birth was Sadie Belle Murray, was found unconscious and beaten in a Woodstock field in July 1971 and died in the hospital from her injuries two months later.

    Until Thursday, the identity of the victim in the Howard County Police Department’s oldest cold case homicide remained a mystery. While the question of who killed Sharkey remains, her identification brought closure to two people who had been searching for it for a lifetime.

    This breakthrough was made with the help of genetic genealogy, which uses DNA and existing ancestry databases to establish familial relationships and build family trees. After submitting Sharkey’s DNA to a private company in October, investigators found out Charles Sharkey was a direct familial match. He was initially thought to be a distant cousin of the victim.

    Then, Howard County detectives were able to locate Charles’ sister, Mildred Cantwell.

    Sarah Belle gave birth to Charles and Mildred many years before her death, and both children were placed in orphanages at a young age. They hadn’t seen each other in more than 70 years, and while they had vague memories about being taken to orphanages, neither knew what happened to their mother or siblings.

    Sarah Belle Sharkey, whose name at birth was Sadie Belle Murray, was found unconscious and beaten in a Woodstock field in July 1971 and died in the hospital from her injuries two months later.(Courtesy Howard County Police Department)

    “Learning about my mother was closure for me,” 81-year-old Mildred, who now lives in Springfield, Illinois, said in a news release. “I always wondered … and I am glad to have that closure. Being reunited with my brother is awesome. He’s the only thing in that family that I remember. The closure is worth everything because I always wondered what happened to her.”

    Charles and Mildred now talk nearly every day and are planning to meet in person in the coming months, according to Howard County Police Chief Gregory Der.

    “It’s something that I thought would have never happened,” Charles, who’s now 79 and lives in Cleveland, said. “I thought I’d never connect again with my family. I tried there for a while, even traveling to Pennsylvania where we were born and Cleveland where we were adopted. I got nowhere. There was nothing.”

    While investigators now know Sarah Belle’s identity, there’s still a lot they don’t know about her and what happened to her. Police believe she was living in Pennsylvania, and aren’t sure why she was found in Howard County.

    “The work doesn’t stop here, this is really now where much of the work begins,” Howard County police spokesperson Sherry Llewellyn said at a news conference.

    Anyone with information about Sarah Belle Sharkey or what may have happened to her should call the Howard County Police Department at 410-313-7867.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Thomas Robertson

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  • Breakthrough in twin DNA analysis leads to historic conviction in 1987 Virginia rape case – WTOP News

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    A Prince William County jury has convicted a Florida man in a 1987 rape and abduction at a Woodbridge, Virgina, gas station in a case marking the first time a U.S. court has successfully identified a suspect despite the challenge of identical twin DNA.

    This article was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partner InsideNoVa.com. Sign up for InsideNoVa.com’s free email subscription today.

    A Prince William County jury on Aug. 21 convicted a Florida man in a 1987 rape and abduction at a Woodbridge gas station in a case marking the first time a U.S. court has successfully identified a suspect despite the challenge of identical twin DNA.

    Russell Marubbio, 54, of Putnam County, Fla., was arrested in the case on June 23, 2023, and initially released on bond over the objection of prosecutors, Prince William County Commonwealth’s Attorney Amy Ashworth’s office said in a Friday news release.

    Following his conviction, Marubbio’s bond was revoked, and he was remanded to the custody of the sheriff.

    Thorough detective work, advanced DNA technology and genetic genealogy analysis led to Marubbio as a suspect decades after the Dec. 19, 1987, attack at a Chevron gas station at 13452 Jefferson Davis Highway, now called Richmond Highway.

    The victim, a 50-year-old woman working as a clerk, was attacked while using an outdoor restroom. Prosecutors said the suspect entered the bathroom, assaulted her with a knife, taped her head and hands and raped her.

    The next day at Potomac Hospital (now Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center), Dr. Rodolfo Lopez collected a Physical Evidence Recovery Kit, known as a PERK, from the victim, the release said.

    The PERK was submitted to the Virginia Department of Forensic Science, and a male DNA profile was developed. However, no match for the DNA was found at the time and the case went cold.

    In 2019, Prince William County Police Master Det. Giannina Pinedo, a 22-year veteran investigator specializing in violent crimes, transferred to the cold case unit and began reexamining unsolved cases.

    She enlisted the assistance of fellow detective Colleen Grantham, who has 23 years of experience in sexual assaults, and together they reopened the case, Ashworth’s office said.

    “With the cooperation of the victim, detectives Pinedo and Grantham initiated efforts to identify the perpetrator,” the release said.

    Pinedo and Grantham collaborated with Prince William County Police Crime Scene Investigator Andrea Feldman, who resubmitted physical evidence seized in 1987 to the Department of Forensic Science for modern DNA testing.

    Detectives also sent cuttings of stains from the victim’s underwear to Marshall University Forensic Science Center in West Virginia for genetic genealogy analysis.

    The analysis results indicated a match to identical twins, one of them Russell Anthony Marubbio of Palatka, Florida.

    With the assistance of Florida special agents, detectives obtained buccal swabs from both brothers to compare their individual DNA to the profile developed from the evidence.

    While their individual DNA matched the DNA on the items seized at the time of the crime, the analysis could not differentiate between the two identical twins, the release said.

    In August 2022, detectives utilized the advanced DNA analysis services of Reston-based Parabon NanoLabs and its laboratory partners “to resolve the challenge posed by identical twin suspects,” the release said.

    Parabon, which has helped solve several high-profile cold cases in Virginia the past several years, provided a solution. The lab identified rare “somatic mutations” that can arise after identical twins split in early development, creating subtle genetic differences.

    “Through deep whole-genome sequencing and specialized bioinformatics analysis, Parabon identified unique somatic mutations in each twin and compared them directly to the DNA recovered from the crime scene,” the release said.

    The advanced analysis conclusively identified Russell Marubbio as the twin whose DNA was present at the crime scene.

    “This landmark case marks the first successful admission and application of this specific technique in a U.S. court to overcome challenges in DNA identification of identical twins,” Ashworth said.

    Ashworth said the nearly 40-year-old rape case “had long been forgotten about by everyone except the victim, who has had to live with the fear and pain of having been raped, and without any closure on this case until now.”

    “This conviction demonstrates the commitment of both our office and the Prince William County Police Department to ensuring that, no matter how much time has passed, we will fight together to seek justice for victims,” Ashworth said.

    A sentencing hearing is scheduled for Nov. 7 before Prince William Circuit Court Judge Kimberly A. Irving, who presided over the trial.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • Cold-case killer sentenced to 22 years in prison for 2001 murder of Montgomery Co. mother – WTOP News

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    Eugene Gligor will serve 22 years in prison for the cold-case killing of a Montgomery County, Maryland, mother.

    Leslie Preer, 50, was found dead inside her Chevy Chase home in 2001. (Courtesy Montgomery County police)

    It took investigators two decades to solve the cold-case murder of a mother attacked inside her Montgomery County, Maryland, home in May 2001.

    Family members of the murder victim, Leslie Preer, shouted, “Yes,” inside the courtroom Thursday as the 30-year sentence was handed down.

    A judge sentenced now 45-year-old Eugene Gligor to 30 years in prison with all but 22 suspended. He will serve five years of supervised probation after his release from prison.

    The sentence closes out a cold case that went unsolved for 23 years until forensic genetic genealogy testing linked Gligor to the crime scene inside the Chevy Chase house where the Preers lived.

    Killer says, ‘Leslie always was very kind to me’

    Gligor had dated Preer’s daughter Lauren when she was a teenager. The two broke up years before the homicide.

    A total of seven family members, including Lauren, read victim impact statements during Thursday’s hearing.

    Gligor apologized and took responsibility for the murder, claiming he had been drinking alcohol and using cocaine at the time.

    Leslie always was very kind to me,” Gligor told the courtroom. 

    An autopsy later found that Leslie been strangled and her head was “battered onto the foyer floor.” Graphic photos shown in court during the sentencing hearing showed the bloody scene and pointed to signs of a struggle.

    Investigators reexamined the cold case in 2024 using DNA samples found at the family’s home. That led police to identify Gligor as a potential suspect — and DNA collected from a water bottle he threw away helped confirm he was at the crime scene.

    One week later, he was taken into custody. Gligor was initially charged with first-degree murder and faced the potential of life in prison.

    But prosecutors later said there was no evidence to suggest the homicide was premeditated, which would be required for a first-degree murder conviction.

    Gligor pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in May.

    The Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office had asked for a 30-year sentence, which is above the sentencing guidelines of 10 to 18 years for second-degree murder.

    WTOP’s Dan Ronan contributed to this report. 

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • San Francisco 2015 cold case double homicide solved with arrest of suspect in Pittsburg

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    More than 10 years after two people were shot dead in separate locations in San Francisco, police announced on Tuesday an arrest in the cold case.

    The shootings happened on Jan. 27, 2015, in the city’s Bayview/Hunters Point neighborhood. Maria Lourdes Soza, 32, was hit by a stray bullet in front of her three children outside her home at Revere Avenue and Ingalls Street during a rolling gun battle between two vehicles, her family said. She later died at a hospital.

    Maria Lourdes Soza

    GoFundMe / Family photo


    Minutes after the first shooting, a woman covered in blood entered The Old Clam House restaurant on Bayshore Boulevard, less than two miles northwest of the first shooting scene. The woman had also been shot and was seeking help; a man who was in her vehicle had also been shot multiple times. The man, identified as 38-year-old Donte Glenn of San Francisco, did not survive.

    San Francisco Bayview homicide scene

    A view above Revere Avenue and Ingalls Street in San Francisco on January 27, 2015, where a 32-year-old mother of three was hit by a stray bullet.

    KPIX


    The San Francisco Police Department said multiple witnesses saw two cars with occupants shooting at each other in the area. Months later, police released surveillance video of a black pickup truck, possibly a Dodge Ram, to generate leads in the case.

    In a press release on Tuesday, police said that in August 2024, homicide cold case investigators took over the case and eventually developed probable cause to believe 34-year-old Anthony Tyree was responsible for the murder of both victims.

    On August 13 of this year, investigators obtained an arrest warrant for Tyree, and on Monday at approximately 3:00 a.m., detectives, along with the assistance of SWAT officers, served a search warrant at Tyree’s home in Pittsburg, police said. Officers arrested Tyree and seized an AR-15 short-barreled “ghost gun” rifle he had in his home, police and the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office said.

    In a press statement, the DA’s Office said that Tyree was a passenger in a Dodge pickup when he and another passenger opened fire on a black Infinity as they sped down Ingalls Street. The bullets hit and wounded the driver of the Infinity, and hit and killed passenger Glenn, while a stray bullet hit Soza standing outside of her home, the DA’s Office said, citing court documents. 

    Tyree is charged with two counts of murder, with special allegations of intentionally using a firearm and committing a drive-by murder. He was also charged with attempted murder and being a felon in possession of a firearm and was scheduled to be arraigned on Tuesday.

    Police said the case was still an open and active investigation, and anyone with information was asked to contact the department at 415-575-4444 or send a text to TIP411 and begin the message with SFPD.

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    Carlos E. Castañeda

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  • Authorities seek help in solving 1974 cold case murder of San Francisco man visiting Florida

    Authorities seek help in solving 1974 cold case murder of San Francisco man visiting Florida

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    Fifty years after a man from San Francisco, California was killed during a trip to Florida, authorities are asking for the public’s help in solving the cold case murder.

    According to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE), the 1974 murder of James Norris is believed to be one of the oldest active homicide investigations in the state.

    “We’re working for the family of Mr. Norris so they can find out what happened to their loved one,” FDLE Special Agent Supervisor Mike Kennedy said in a statement. “Even though it’s been 50 years, we do have persons of interest and they should be held accountable for their actions even if it is 50 years later.”

    james-norris-richard-gunning-cold-case-102424.jpg
    James Norris (aka Richard Gunning) of San Francisco, who was killed during a trip to Florida in 1974.

    Florida Department of Law Enforcement


    Norris, who was traveling under the alias Richard Gunning, flew into Miami on Oct. 4, 1974. Investigators said Norris traveled to Florida with a large amount of cash with the intention of buying Colombian-grade cannabis that was not available in California.

    On that day, Norris and an associate traveled more than 300 miles north to the community of Crystal River in Citrus County to purchase cannabis from an organization operating in the area.

    During the trip, Norris mailed a postcard from his family from the town of Inglis, which was the last time he contacted them.

    Kennedy said Norris was reported missing soon after.

    On April 16, 1976, a bulldozer operator located skeletal remains in a wooded area off U.S. Highway 19 in Dixie County in Northern Florida. The remains were unidentified for more than 30 years until DNA testing confirmed the remains were Norris.

    His family claimed his remains in April 2011.

    Investigators believe people living in Miami, Panama City, Steinhatchee and Citrus County may have information about the case. Norris had associates in the San Francisco Bay Area, San Diego, Nashville, Memphis and Des Moines, Iowa who may also have information.

    The investigaton has uncovered names of members of the organization Norris was believed to be purchasing cannabis from.

    “Over the years that we’ve investigated this we’ve gotten a lot of the pieces of the puzzle. Someone could be holding a piece of the puzzle that they may not realize fits into the big picture,” Kennedy said.

    Anyone with information about Norris’ murder is asked to contact FDLE Tallahassee at (800) 342-0820.

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  • Search for missing Maine teen leads to discovery of human remains, but they aren’t hers

    Search for missing Maine teen leads to discovery of human remains, but they aren’t hers

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    JIM KEITHLEY VISITED THE SCENE FOR AN UPDATE ON THE CASE. “ONE STREET OVER AND UP AN HILL FROM WHERE KIM MOREAU LIVED, HER FATHER WITH THE HELP OF PSYCHIC ON SATURDAY JUST BEFORE NOON, DISCOVERED A SET OF REMAINS IN THE WOODS BEHIND WHAT WAS AN OLD BOWLING ALLEY ON ELM STREET.” “SHE HAD A VERY STRONG FEELING THAT THERE WAS SOMETHING UP HERE BUT SHE WASN’T SURE WHAT IT WAS.” “ABOUT TEN MINUTES.” “SHE TURNED AROUND, SHE CAME DOWN AND SAID – DICK YOU NEED TO GET DOWN HERE NOW.” DICK MOREAU TOOK US DOWN TO THE EXACT SPOT. STATE POLICE WERE CALLED, THE REMAINS WERE RECOVERED AND TAKEN TO THE MEDICAL EXAMINER’S OFFICE TO BE IDENTIFIED. MOREAU LEARNED THE DISAPPOINTING NEWS – IT’S NOT KIM – THE REMAINS WERE THAT OF A MALE. “YES, IT’S A DISAPPOINTED JIM, BUT WE GOT TO REMEMBER AND LOOK AT IT FROM OUR POINT OF VIEW – WE’RE ONE OF THE FAMILIES THAT HAS A MISSING LOVED ONE, WE WILL HAVE A FAMILY THAT’S GOING TO GET CLOSURE NOW. IT ISN’T US, BUT ONE OF THESE TIMES IT’S GOT TO BE.” KIM WENT MISSING IN MAY OF 1986 – HER SISTER SAID KIM LEFT THE FAMILY HOME ON JEWELL STREET, AND SAID SHE WAS GOING OUT FOR HOUR…SHE WAS NEVER SEEN AGAIN. AROUND THAT SAME TIME A MAN NAMED HAROLD SIMPSON WENT MISSING. HE WAS 28, FROM LIVERMORE FALLS. HE WAS LAST SEEN FISHING WITH A FRIEND, IN AUGUST 1986 – THREE MONTHS AFTER KIM DISAPPEARED. POLICE HAVE NOT MADE ANY CONNECTION TO THE SKELETON REMAINS FOUND OVER THE WEEKEND. FOR DICK MOREAU – THE SEARCH FOR KIM CONTINUES. “ALL WE WANT IS TO GET KIM HOME, GIVE HER A PROPER BURIAL AND LET ME TAKE DOWN ALL THESE POSTERS SO MY FAMILY, AND MYSELF WILL FINALLY GET SOME RELIEF.” “MOREAU SAYS HE’S GOING TO ASK POLICE TO COME BACK HERE WITH SEARCH DOGS BECAUSE HE WONDERS – IF THERE WAS ONE SET OF REMAINS, MAYBE THERE ARE MORE. HE ISN’T GIVING

    Search for missing Maine teen leads to discovery of human remains, but they aren’t hers

    A Maine man who has been searching for his missing daughter for nearly 40 years found human remains with the help of a psychic, but they were not those of his daughter.Dick Moreau said he discovered the remains Saturday in a wooded area of Jay, Maine, behind what was once a bowling alley.”(The psychic) had a very strong feeling that there was something up there, but she wasn’t sure what it was,” Moreau said. “Then in about 10 minutes, she turned around, she came down and said: ‘Dick, you’ve got to get up here now!’”Jay is around 70 miles from Portland, Maine, and around 31 miles from Lewiston, Maine.Maine State Police investigators were called to the scene, and the remains were recovered and taken to the office of the chief medical examiner for identification.Moreau later learned the remains were those of a male and not those of his daughter, Kim Moreau.”Yes, it’s a disappointment in some ways, but we’ve got to remember and look at it from our point of view. We’re one of the families that has a missing loved one. We will have a family that’s going to get closure now,” Moreau said. “So it isn’t us, but one of these times, it’s got to be.”Kim Moreau went missing in May 1986 after leaving her family home on Jewell Street, saying she was going out for an hour. She was never seen again. The site where Dick Moreau found the remains is one street over and up a hill from the family’s home.Around the same time, Harold Simpson, a 28-year-old from Livermore Falls, also went missing. He was last seen fishing with a friend in August 1986, three months after Kim disappeared.Police have not made any connection between Simpson and the remains that were found.For Dick Moreau, the search for Kim Moreau continues.”All we want is to get Kim home, give her a proper burial and let me take down all these posters so my family and myself will finally get some relief,” he said.Moreau plans to ask police to return to the area with search dogs, hoping that if one set of remains was found, there might be more. He remains determined to find his daughter.

    A Maine man who has been searching for his missing daughter for nearly 40 years found human remains with the help of a psychic, but they were not those of his daughter.

    Dick Moreau said he discovered the remains Saturday in a wooded area of Jay, Maine, behind what was once a bowling alley.

    “(The psychic) had a very strong feeling that there was something up there, but she wasn’t sure what it was,” Moreau said. “Then in about 10 minutes, she turned around, she came down and said: ‘Dick, you’ve got to get up here now!’”

    Jay is around 70 miles from Portland, Maine, and around 31 miles from Lewiston, Maine.

    Maine State Police investigators were called to the scene, and the remains were recovered and taken to the office of the chief medical examiner for identification.

    Moreau later learned the remains were those of a male and not those of his daughter, Kim Moreau.

    “Yes, it’s a disappointment in some ways, but we’ve got to remember and look at it from our point of view. We’re one of the families that has a missing loved one. We will have a family that’s going to get closure now,” Moreau said. “So it isn’t us, but one of these times, it’s got to be.”

    Kim Moreau went missing in May 1986 after leaving her family home on Jewell Street, saying she was going out for an hour. She was never seen again. The site where Dick Moreau found the remains is one street over and up a hill from the family’s home.

    Around the same time, Harold Simpson, a 28-year-old from Livermore Falls, also went missing. He was last seen fishing with a friend in August 1986, three months after Kim disappeared.

    Police have not made any connection between Simpson and the remains that were found.

    For Dick Moreau, the search for Kim Moreau continues.

    “All we want is to get Kim home, give her a proper burial and let me take down all these posters so my family and myself will finally get some relief,” he said.

    Moreau plans to ask police to return to the area with search dogs, hoping that if one set of remains was found, there might be more. He remains determined to find his daughter.

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  • Search for missing Maine teen leads to discovery of human remains, but they aren’t hers

    Search for missing Maine teen leads to discovery of human remains, but they aren’t hers

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    JIM KEITHLEY VISITED THE SCENE FOR AN UPDATE ON THE CASE. “ONE STREET OVER AND UP AN HILL FROM WHERE KIM MOREAU LIVED, HER FATHER WITH THE HELP OF PSYCHIC ON SATURDAY JUST BEFORE NOON, DISCOVERED A SET OF REMAINS IN THE WOODS BEHIND WHAT WAS AN OLD BOWLING ALLEY ON ELM STREET.” “SHE HAD A VERY STRONG FEELING THAT THERE WAS SOMETHING UP HERE BUT SHE WASN’T SURE WHAT IT WAS.” “ABOUT TEN MINUTES.” “SHE TURNED AROUND, SHE CAME DOWN AND SAID – DICK YOU NEED TO GET DOWN HERE NOW.” DICK MOREAU TOOK US DOWN TO THE EXACT SPOT. STATE POLICE WERE CALLED, THE REMAINS WERE RECOVERED AND TAKEN TO THE MEDICAL EXAMINER’S OFFICE TO BE IDENTIFIED. MOREAU LEARNED THE DISAPPOINTING NEWS – IT’S NOT KIM – THE REMAINS WERE THAT OF A MALE. “YES, IT’S A DISAPPOINTED JIM, BUT WE GOT TO REMEMBER AND LOOK AT IT FROM OUR POINT OF VIEW – WE’RE ONE OF THE FAMILIES THAT HAS A MISSING LOVED ONE, WE WILL HAVE A FAMILY THAT’S GOING TO GET CLOSURE NOW. IT ISN’T US, BUT ONE OF THESE TIMES IT’S GOT TO BE.” KIM WENT MISSING IN MAY OF 1986 – HER SISTER SAID KIM LEFT THE FAMILY HOME ON JEWELL STREET, AND SAID SHE WAS GOING OUT FOR HOUR…SHE WAS NEVER SEEN AGAIN. AROUND THAT SAME TIME A MAN NAMED HAROLD SIMPSON WENT MISSING. HE WAS 28, FROM LIVERMORE FALLS. HE WAS LAST SEEN FISHING WITH A FRIEND, IN AUGUST 1986 – THREE MONTHS AFTER KIM DISAPPEARED. POLICE HAVE NOT MADE ANY CONNECTION TO THE SKELETON REMAINS FOUND OVER THE WEEKEND. FOR DICK MOREAU – THE SEARCH FOR KIM CONTINUES. “ALL WE WANT IS TO GET KIM HOME, GIVE HER A PROPER BURIAL AND LET ME TAKE DOWN ALL THESE POSTERS SO MY FAMILY, AND MYSELF WILL FINALLY GET SOME RELIEF.” “MOREAU SAYS HE’S GOING TO ASK POLICE TO COME BACK HERE WITH SEARCH DOGS BECAUSE HE WONDERS – IF THERE WAS ONE SET OF REMAINS, MAYBE THERE ARE MORE. HE ISN’T GIVING

    Search for missing Maine teen leads to discovery of human remains, but they aren’t hers

    A Maine man who has been searching for his missing daughter for nearly 40 years found human remains with the help of a psychic, but they were not those of his daughter.Dick Moreau said he discovered the remains Saturday in a wooded area of Jay, Maine, behind what was once a bowling alley.”(The psychic) had a very strong feeling that there was something up there, but she wasn’t sure what it was,” Moreau said. “Then in about 10 minutes, she turned around, she came down and said: ‘Dick, you’ve got to get up here now!’”Jay is around 70 miles from Portland, Maine, and around 31 miles from Lewiston, Maine.Maine State Police investigators were called to the scene, and the remains were recovered and taken to the office of the chief medical examiner for identification.Moreau later learned the remains were those of a male and not those of his daughter, Kim Moreau.”Yes, it’s a disappointment in some ways, but we’ve got to remember and look at it from our point of view. We’re one of the families that has a missing loved one. We will have a family that’s going to get closure now,” Moreau said. “So it isn’t us, but one of these times, it’s got to be.”Kim Moreau went missing in May 1986 after leaving her family home on Jewell Street, saying she was going out for an hour. She was never seen again. The site where Dick Moreau found the remains is one street over and up a hill from the family’s home.Around the same time, Harold Simpson, a 28-year-old from Livermore Falls, also went missing. He was last seen fishing with a friend in August 1986, three months after Kim disappeared.Police have not made any connection between Simpson and the remains that were found.For Dick Moreau, the search for Kim Moreau continues.”All we want is to get Kim home, give her a proper burial and let me take down all these posters so my family and myself will finally get some relief,” he said.Moreau plans to ask police to return to the area with search dogs, hoping that if one set of remains was found, there might be more. He remains determined to find his daughter.

    A Maine man who has been searching for his missing daughter for nearly 40 years found human remains with the help of a psychic, but they were not those of his daughter.

    Dick Moreau said he discovered the remains Saturday in a wooded area of Jay, Maine, behind what was once a bowling alley.

    “(The psychic) had a very strong feeling that there was something up there, but she wasn’t sure what it was,” Moreau said. “Then in about 10 minutes, she turned around, she came down and said: ‘Dick, you’ve got to get up here now!’”

    Jay is around 70 miles from Portland, Maine, and around 31 miles from Lewiston, Maine.

    Maine State Police investigators were called to the scene, and the remains were recovered and taken to the office of the chief medical examiner for identification.

    Moreau later learned the remains were those of a male and not those of his daughter, Kim Moreau.

    “Yes, it’s a disappointment in some ways, but we’ve got to remember and look at it from our point of view. We’re one of the families that has a missing loved one. We will have a family that’s going to get closure now,” Moreau said. “So it isn’t us, but one of these times, it’s got to be.”

    Kim Moreau went missing in May 1986 after leaving her family home on Jewell Street, saying she was going out for an hour. She was never seen again. The site where Dick Moreau found the remains is one street over and up a hill from the family’s home.

    Around the same time, Harold Simpson, a 28-year-old from Livermore Falls, also went missing. He was last seen fishing with a friend in August 1986, three months after Kim disappeared.

    Police have not made any connection between Simpson and the remains that were found.

    For Dick Moreau, the search for Kim Moreau continues.

    “All we want is to get Kim home, give her a proper burial and let me take down all these posters so my family and myself will finally get some relief,” he said.

    Moreau plans to ask police to return to the area with search dogs, hoping that if one set of remains was found, there might be more. He remains determined to find his daughter.

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  • The Brighton Ax Murder

    The Brighton Ax Murder

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    The Brighton Ax Murder – CBS News


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    A young mother is killed in her bed, her toddler unharmed. Unsolved for 40 years, how the unusual crime scene helped close the case. “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

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  • ‘100% intentional’: Former Army service member details night he fatally stabbed a Fairfax Co. mother – WTOP News

    ‘100% intentional’: Former Army service member details night he fatally stabbed a Fairfax Co. mother – WTOP News

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    A former Army service member who confessed to a Fairfax County, Virginia, cold-case told detectives knew that he was going to kill someone when he left the barracks that night in 1994. He just didn’t know who.

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    Former Army service member details night he fatally stabbed a Fairfax Co. mother

    A former Army service member who confessed to a Fairfax County, Virginia, cold-case told detectives that he knew that he was going to kill someone when he left the barracks that night in 1994. He just didn’t know who.

    Nearly 30 years ago, Robin Lawrence, 37, was killed after being stabbed 49 times in her Springfield home while her 2-year-old daughter was in the next room.

    Her killer remained a mystery until DNA led police to investigate Stephan Smerk, 52, of New York in September 2023.

    Officers went to Smerk’s home to ask for a DNA sample. Shortly after police visited his home, Smerk called police and turned himself in.

    “It was 100% intentional,” Smerk told detectives in a videotaped confession. WTOP obtained a copy of the video from court.

    Smerk pleaded guilty to first-degree murder earlier this month.

    Nearly 30 years with no answers come to a close

    The software engineer was honorably discharged from the military and had no prior criminal record, according to police. He’s married to an attorney and has two kids of his own.

    “I honestly believe that if it wasn’t for my wife and my kids, I probably would be a serial killer,” he said.

    When asked by detectives if he had anything to say to Lawrence’s family, he fell silent.

    “I don’t have animosity to the family. I don’t feel anything for the family,” he said.

    Why was Lawrence targeted that night?

    At the time of the killing, Smerk was an active-duty Army soldier based at what is now Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall near Arlington National Cemetery.

    He drank a couple of beers and took ephedra pills — an over-the-counter pill that’s since been banned. His friends went clubbing in D.C. but Smerk drove to a familiar neighborhood in West Springfield instead.

    “It was like this overbearing fog in my head that I needed to kill somebody, I just had to kill somebody,” Smerk said.

    Smerk said he’d never seen Lawrence, her husband or daughter. He didn’t know the couple had a child until he entered the home. He also didn’t know the family was African American.

    He picked the house next door to one where his friends had been staying, and parked in the driveway.

    “I have no idea why I chose that. I just knew that I knew where that place was.”

    A knife was in his pocket, and he wore leather gloves and a ski mask.

    He smoked in the Lawrences’ backyard, discarding the cigarette butts there — something he told detectives he realized later was a mistake, as it potentially left his DNA behind.

    The Army service member got inside by jimmying open a sliding-glass door with a branch he found.

    Smerk said he noticed the toddler’s room but didn’t go inside. Then, he startled Lawrence out of bed.



    Lawrence begged for her life, Smerk said.

    “She was on her knees,” Smerk told detectives.

    When she reached for a phone to call for help, he cut the phone line.

    He told detectives he stabbed her with a tanto knife, cutting her throat and stabbing her from behind.

    “I did everything they taught me in the military, hand-to-hand combat. I stabbed her in the back of the neck.”

    He remembered seeing a scratch on his face in a mirror at the home.

    “She clawed at my face. I had a little bit of a scar here,” he said. “I was worried that maybe she had some DNA underneath her finger.”

    When leaving the house, Smerk said he didn’t speed away. He drove over a bridge and tossed the weapon into a body of water.

    Smerk returned to the barracks, washed up and threw away his clothes and shoes in a dumpster.

    Lawrence’s husband was out of town for business. After he had trouble getting ahold of his wife over the phone, he asked a friend to check on her.

    The mother’s body was found Nov. 20, 1994. Her daughter was uninjured, but was walking around in a soiled diaper when a friend came to check on them.

    ‘Influenced by demons’

    Smerk told detectives that he’d been diagnosed as psychotic and suffers from PTSD. He had seen a psychiatrist and been on medications to address his mental illness in the past.

    “I’m highly influenced by demons. I wouldn’t say I’m possessed but I’m influenced,” he said.

    At times, Smerk said he has felt remorse for the killing, which motivated his decision to turn himself into police.

    “I feel bad that I did it because I knew someday my personal freedom would be affected,” he said, at one point asking detectives about whether Virginia uses the death penalty.

    Police were able to connect Smerk to the killing through work with Reston-based Parabon NanoLabs, a DNA technology company that’s solved several cold cases.

    A database of genealogy helped investigators build a family tree.

    Detectives traveled 400 miles to Smerk’s home in New York to ask for a DNA sample.

    After the detectives’ visit, he called his wife, who is an attorney, and told her about the killing and his plans to confess.

    “She was hysterically crying,” he said.

    Detectives said they were preparing to head home when Smerk called and told them, “I want to talk.”

    Smerk’s sentencing hearing has been scheduled for March 7, 2025.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • The Hunt for Sarah Yarborough’s Killer

    The Hunt for Sarah Yarborough’s Killer

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    The Hunt for Sarah Yarborough’s Killer – CBS News


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    A high school student on her way to drill team practice is found murdered on campus. What it took to close the case after 30 years. “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales reports.

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  • Chicago-area woman identified as body found in Illinois cornfield in 1991

    Chicago-area woman identified as body found in Illinois cornfield in 1991

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    OTTAWA, Ill. — A person found dead in an Illinois cornfield in 1991 has been identified as a Chicago-area woman more than a decade after authorities began re-examining the cold case.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    An investigation relying on a posthumous DNA sample led to the identification of Paula Ann Lundgren last week. Now authorities hope they can piece together more details about her life and the circumstances of her death.

    Over the years, numerous authorities have tried to identify the woman.

    Her body was exhumed in 2013 to obtain DNA and employ investigative methods not in use in the early 1990s. And in 2019, a professor at Illinois Valley Community College used investigative genetic genealogy to produce a list of the woman’s possible living relatives.

    The LaSalle County coroner’s office went through the list for years trying to find a match before involving the FBI in February. In July there was a break in the case.

    “We have limited resources, so the FBI agreed to provide further assistance with the case that eventually led to a living relative,” Coroner Rich Ploch said Monday. “That person’s DNA was confirmed as a match to Paula.”

    Lundgren, who had lived primarily in the Chicago area, would have been 29 when a farmer found her body in September 1991 in a cornfield in northern Illinois’ LaSalle County, authorities said.

    The coroner’s office determined at the time that the woman had died from cocaine intoxication. Her unidentified body was eventually buried in an Ottawa cemetery with a headstone reading, “Somebody’s Daughter, Somebody’s Friend.”

    The LaSalle County sheriff’s office said now that Lundgren’s identity is known the agency hopes “new leads can be developed as to how she came to be in the cornfield.”

    Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Suspected homicide victim identified 31 years after human remains found by children in Indiana field

    Suspected homicide victim identified 31 years after human remains found by children in Indiana field

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    Tracing family trees to catch killers


    Inside the genetic genealogy being used to solve crimes

    13:49

    Human remains discovered 31 years ago south of Indianapolis have been identified as a man from South Carolina, authorities said.

    Relatives of Michael Benjamin Davis said they had lost contact with him in the late 1980s, the Johnson County coroner’s office said.

    In 1993, children found the remains in a field near Interstate 65 in what is now a golf course, in in Greenwood, Indiana, according to Othram, a lab that works with police to assist in human identification cases.

    davis-screenshot-2024-09-03-062003.jpg
      Michael Benjamin Davis 

    Othram


    The remains were taken to the University of North Texas where Othram said it was determined that the individual was a male under 30 years old who stood between 4’10” and 5’4″.

    “Despite extensive efforts by law enforcement investigators to identify the man, no matches were found, and the case went cold due to a lack of investigative leads,” Othram said.

    Decades later, DNA testing and genealogy work helped scientists determine the identity of the remains, the coroner’s office said in a written statement Sunday.

    “Although this case has long been suspected of having been a homicide, the cause and manner of death have been ruled undetermined unless more information is discovered,” the coroner’s office said.

    Davis was born in Richland County, South Carolina, in 1965, and would have been in his mid-20s at the time of his death. according to Othram.

    Davis’ family plans to travel to Indiana to collect the remains and speak to news media Thursday, the coroner’s office said.

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  • ‘It really doesn’t get more horrific than that’: DC man sentenced in 1979 murder of Maryland woman – WTOP News

    ‘It really doesn’t get more horrific than that’: DC man sentenced in 1979 murder of Maryland woman – WTOP News

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    A D.C. man was sentenced to life in prison on Friday for the rape and murder of a Maryland woman in a case that wasn’t solved for over four decades.

    A D.C. man was sentenced to life in prison on Friday for the rape and murder of a Maryland woman in a case that wasn’t solved for over four decades.

    Andre Taylor, 63, was found guilty in July of first-degree murder in the death of Vickie Lynn Belk in 1979.

    In a news release, Charles County Circuit Court Judge H. James West said Belk left behind “a tremendous legacy, and the family carries on a tremendous legacy.”

    “The crime is a horrific loss of a life — the violence was extreme. The amount of fear and terror that preceded the violence doesn’t exist in most cases,” West said, adding that the murder was “so heinous, I can’t think of a lesser sentence that would be appropriate.”

    The Belk family stands beside prosecutors and an investigator in front of the Charles County Circuit Court in La Plata, Maryland, on Aug. 23, 2024. (Courtesy Charles County State’s Attorney’s Office)

    Charles County State’s Attorney Tony Covington said the murder caused “generational trauma” because it took 45 years to solve. Covington also said he admires Belk’s family for having “so much grit, determination and grace” throughout the legal process.

    “[Belk’s] son grew up without a mother. Her parents had to bury their daughter. Her parents had to lay on their deathbed not knowing who killed their daughter. Her grandchildren never got a chance to meet their grandmother,” Covington said in a news release. “When you victimize someone like this and then murder them, it really doesn’t get more horrific than that.”

    Belk’s disappearance and murder

    At the time of her death, Belk, who was 28, was living in Suitland, Maryland, and worked at the Department of Agriculture. But, on Aug. 28, 1979, she was reported missing by her boyfriend after she didn’t come home from work.

    A day later, Belk’s body was found by a teenager along Route 277 in Charles County. She had a gunshot wound to the side of her head and was unclothed from the waist down, prosecutors said.

    Authorities began to investigate her murder immediately, but eventually, as Charles County detectives tried unsuccessfully to find new leads and clues, the case went cold.

    DNA’s breakthrough in the case

    In recent years that Detective Sgt. John Elliott of the Charles County Sheriff’s Office’s Criminal Investigations Division took another look at the case.

    Aided by advancements in forensic science, investigators submitted Belk’s clothing for more advanced DNA testing in 2022.

    The effort gathered enough DNA from the suspect to submit it to the FBI’s national DNA database, CODIS.

    There was a breakthrough in the case in November 2022 when the sheriff’s office was informed the DNA results came back with a match: Andre Taylor.

    Taylor was arrested and charged with Belk’s murder in June 2023. According to prosecutors, he denied murdering Belk when speaking with detectives but he “admitted to actions that amounted to … rape.”

    Authorities said there is no evidence Belk and Taylor knew each other prior to her murder.

    Belk’s family created the Vickie Belk Scholarship Foundation, which awards scholarships in her honor to graduating seniors at Oakland Baptist Church (OBC) in Alexandria, Virginia.

    “Through this scholarship, Vickie’s love for education and the youth of OBC continues,” the organization said, adding that the namesake gift has already aided roughly 100 graduates.

    WTOP’s Jack Moore contributed to this story.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Tadiwos Abedje

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