Identified! CA - Ludlow, WhtFem UP2517, 17-22, buried, Nov'80 - Pamela Duffey & William Lane *arrest*

Exclusions as of 8 March 2021

MP5959 Rose Cole 07/01/1973 Alameda CA
MP7870 Rebecca Dunn 05/10/1979 Clark NV
MP2362 Rachael Garden 03/22/1980 Rockingham NH
MP32348 Patricia Gomez 12/26/1979 Marin CA
MP3881 Alma Root 01/01/1980 Placer CA
MP4571 Lucinda Schaefer 06/24/1979 Los Angeles CA
MP2065 Diane Schulte 03/25/1977 Canyon ID
MP51384 Julie Soracco 08/01/1977 El Dorado CA

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
 
Two unidentified bodies discovered buried in 1980 in a remote part of the Mojave Desert in San Bernardino County have been identified and linked to an incarcerated Mississippi man, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department announced Wednesday, April 21.

The body of a woman who was only previously known as “Jane Doe 10” was recently identified as Pamela Dianne Duffey, who was born on April 6, 1959. The body of a man only previously known as “John Doe 29” was identified in April as being William Everette Lane, who was born on May 23, 1960, the Sheriff’s Department said.

Duffey was estimated to be between 20 and 21 years of age at the time of her death while Lane was estimated to be between 19 and 20 years old, according to Jodi Miller, spokeswoman for the Sheriff’s Department. Information related to an estimated date of death was not immediately available.

Both are believed to be one of the various victims of convicted murderer Howard Neal, 68, of Mississippi. He is currently incarcerated in Mississippi for the 1981 rape and murder of his 13-year-old niece and her 12-year-old friend as well as the murder of his brother, the Sheriff’s Department said.
1980 cold case cracked after bodies buried in San Bernardino County desert are ID’d, linked to Mississippi killer – San Bernardino Sun
 
DATE OF RELEASE: April 21, 2021

INCIDENT: PC 187/Murder

LOCATION: 5 miles E/O Ludlow, CA .3 miles S/O Hwy 66

VICTIM: John Doe 29/Jane Doe 10 – identified in December of 2020 as William Everette Lane, dob: 05/23/1960; Pamela Dianne Duffey, dob: 04-06-1959

SUSPECT: Howard M. Neal, age 68, incarcerated in Mississippi for Murder

SUMMARY:
In November of 1980, an archaeologist discovered a shallow grave in an isolated desert area which contained the bodies of two unidentified homicide victims, a male, and a female. Neither victim was wearing any clothing, nor was there any form of identification found within the gravesite.

Investigators from the Specialized Investigations Division, Homicide Detail, initiated an investigation into the murder of the two victims. An autopsy was performed, which indicated the two victims died as a result of a combination of gunshot wounds and blunt force trauma. Investigators began the process of identifying the two victims. For several months and subsequent years, all attempts to identify the victims met with negative results. Every available resource that was in place at the time of this investigation was used to identify the victims.

During the investigation, investigators developed information identifying a person of interest by the name of Howard Neal, originally from Mississippi. Investigators learned Neal had been a resident in the town of Ludlow around the time the victims were killed and buried in the shallow grave. Neal lived in Ludlow with his wife and their young daughter. It was learned that Neal and his family left Ludlow shortly after the victims were murdered and buried.

After leaving Ludlow, Neal and his family traveled to Mississippi. He stayed in Mississippi for a short time and, while there, murdered his brother, then raped and killed both his 13-year-old niece and her 12-year-old friend. Shortly after those murders, Neal and his family left Mississippi and began traveling west across the United States. The homicide victims in Mississippi were discovered in February of 1981. By March of 1981, Neal ended up in Stockton, California. On March 6th, 1981, Neal was arrested for petty theft and taken into custody by the Stockton Police Department. While in custody in Stockton, investigators discovered there was an outstanding warrant out of Mississippi for the triple murders he had committed. Neal was subsequently extradited back to Mississippi, and in February of 1982, Neal stood trial for the Mississippi murders. He was tried and convicted and sentenced to death. Approximately eight years after sentencing, Neal’s attorney filed an appeal based on Neal’s mental status. Testing was conducted, which indicated Neal’s IQ was low enough to indicate he was borderline mentally challenged. Based on these findings, the Mississippi Court of Appeals commuted his death sentence to three life terms, which he is currently serving.

Investigators in the Ludlow murders attempted to interview Neal, but each attempt to do so was denied by his attorney, who was representing him for the Mississippi murder trial and his appeals. His attorney informed investigators in California they did not have to look any further for a suspect in the Ludlow murders. Until August of 2017, Neal had not been interviewed by San Bernardino County investigators.

During the months and subsequent years following the Ludlow murders, DNA technology advanced tremendously. The remains of the Ludlow victims were sent to a lab in an effort to extract DNA. After several attempts by different labs, samples were finally obtained. Those samples were entered into the National DNA database in hopes that a match would be made and possibly identify the Ludlow victims. There was no match made, and the victims remained unidentified for over 40 years.

In August of 2017, Senior District Attorney Investigator Steve Shumway and San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Investigator Gerrit Tesselaar assumed the investigation of the Ludlow homicides. Shumway and Tesselaar traveled to Mississippi to interview Howard Neal. The focus of the interview was to see if Neal could help investigators by providing them with information regarding the victim’s identities. He provided very little information; he believed the female victim may have been from Arkansas and had left her young daughter behind before she left to hitchhike across the county. He also indicated the female had what appeared to be a deformed arm. He could not remember anything about the male victim other than he looked like what he described as a “hippie.” He told investigators he picked the couple up while they were hitchhiking on the freeway. He then brought the two to his residence, where he became involved in an argument with the male. The argument stemmed because of Neal attempting to make physical advances toward the female. Neal told investigators the argument became so intense; he felt the male would probably kill him if he did not kill him first. Neal then shot and killed the male. After doing so, Neal continued his advances toward the female. Investigators believe Neal sexually assaulted her then killed her. Neal then transported the victims to an isolated desert area south of Highway 66, dug a shallow grave, and disposed of the bodies.

IDENTIFICATION OF THE FEMALE VICTIM

Christine Marie Salley (dob: 09-17-79), a resident of the State of Virginia, always knew she had been adopted and wanted to find her biological parents. In April of 2018, she hired a private investigator to assist her in locating her parents. The private investigator submitted Salley’s DNA. DNA from the female victim had already been uploaded into the GEDmatch DNA files after the victims’ DNA was extracted from her remains. After Salley’s DNA was submitted to the GEDmatch database on December 11, 2020, a match indicated a parent/child relationship between Salley and the female Ludlow victim. Investigators contacted Salley, and she provided them with her birth mother’s information. She told investigators that her biological mother was Pamela Dianne Duffey. The information was included in the adoption paperwork Salley obtained through the private investigator. To confirm the match, investigators collected another DNA sample from Salley and submitted it to the California Department of Justice Lan in Richmond, CA. Both samples were analyzed by DOJ, and in April of 2021, tests confirmed the samples matched and positively identified the victim as Pamela Dianne Duffy.

IDENTIFICATION OF THE MALE VICTIM

Christine Salle also told investigators she learned her mother, before going missing, was associated with a male subject known only as “Digger Lane.” Salley had information that Digger was serving time in a Virginia prison, and when he was released from prison, her mother was to meet him and travel across the United States. The travel plan specifics were unknown. Investigators were unable to locate any persons in any database with the name of Digger Lane. They only knew that he was incarcerated somewhere in Virginia and was possibly being released from custody in late 1979 or early 1980.

With the assistance of Virginia State Police investigators, who researched their databases, along with the estimated times of Digger’s arrest, incarceration, and release date(s), we're able to pinpoint one subject that matched the criteria. The subject was identified as William Everette Lane. There was no information to indicate that William Everette Lane ever used the alias of “Digger.” His arrest reports included a listed home address in Jacksonville, Florida. Based on that address, investigators were able to locate several family members, including Lane’s biological mother. Investigators collected DNA from Lane’s mother, and the sample was sent to the California Department of Justice Lab for comparison. In April of 2021, the male homicide victim from Ludlow was positively identified as William Everette Lane.

With the assistance of the County of San Bernardino Victim/Witness Advocate, the process of returning the Ludlow victim’s remains to their families for proper burials has begun.


Refer: Sergeant Jonathan Woods or Investigators Steve Shumway and Gerrit Tesselaar

Station: Specialized Investigations Division – Homicide Detail

Phone No. (909) 387-3589

Case No. DR# 1064564 H# 1980-377


JOHN McMAHON, Sheriff-Coroner
San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner Department
https://local.nixle.com/alert/8671874/
 
SBS-L-COLD-CASE-crop-0422.jpg

Two unidentified bodies discovered in 1980 in a remote part of the Mojave Desert have been identified and linked to an incarcerated Mississippi man after a more than 40-year investigation, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department announced Wednesday, April 21. Pictured is victim Pamela Dianne Duffey. (Courtesy of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department)

Both are believed to be one of the various victims of convicted murderer Howard Neal, 68, of Mississippi. He is currently incarcerated in Mississippi for the 1981 rape and murder of his 13-year-old niece and her 12-year-old friend as well as the murder of his brother, the Sheriff’s Department said.
1980 cold case cracked after bodies buried in San Bernardino County desert are ID’d, linked to Mississippi killer – San Bernardino Sun

Neal v. State

Neal sentenced to life without parole
 
Well, it looks like he's already been serving since 1982... Good to know he wasn't roaming around freely all this time, then.

On the other hand, this was an unexpected, but pleasant, start of the day! I did not see these identifications coming, but they had been unidentified for over 40 years, so it was about time :)

user36071-1619048406-media2_eef3ef_171_240_PrsMe_.png
user36071-1619048406-media3_606368_171_240_PrsMe_.png
 
The Sheriff's Department said testing later indicated his IQ was low enough to indicate he was borderline mentally challenged and an appeal led to him being resentenced to life terms which Neal, 68, is now serving.

The attorney handling Neal’s trial and appeals refused to let the California investigators interview him but informed them they did not have to look any further for a suspect in the Ludlow killings, the department said.

Investigators finally interviewed Neal in 2017. The department said he told them he picked up the couple while they were hitchhiking, took them to his home and shot the male victim during an argument over Neal’s physical advances toward the woman.

“Investigators believe Neal sexually assaulted her then killed her,” the department statement said.
Murder victims found in Mojave Desert in 1980 identified
 
A few standout questions for me:

1.) How was the photo of Pamela obtained? Did adoption records back then included a photo of the parent?
2.) Was Pamela or Lane ever reported missing? I could not find any listing for them. Does she have any other living relatives today who should know about this?
3.) Any search or whereabouts of the biological father?
4.) How did the daughter learn that Pamela was associated with Lane if she did not even know who she was? Was the investigator really able to track down and interview people who knew her based on her name alone?
 
Last edited:
A few standout questions for me:

1.) How was the photo of Pamela obtained? Did adoption records back then included a photo of the parent?
2.) Was Pamela or Lane ever reported missing? I could not find any listing for them. Does she have any other living relatives today who should know about this?
3.) Any search or whereabouts of the biological father?
4.) How did the daughter learn that Pamela was associated with Lane if she did not even know who she was? Was the investigator really able to track down and interview people who knew her based on her name alone?

I would imagine that once given the name and DOB of Pamela, LE tracked down her family - siblings/parents etc. That's probably where the picture comes from. It's likely the daughter spoke with Pamela's friends/siblings/etc and found out about Lane that way.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
159
Guests online
4,182
Total visitors
4,341

Forum statistics

Threads
593,156
Messages
17,981,810
Members
229,038
Latest member
EagleTwoCharlie
Back
Top