Of course, there's a way to not allow this methodology to have a negative effect on one....Respectfully, I'm aware it's legal but the doctrine is not without limits as also opined by the defense.
Of course, there's a way to not allow this methodology to have a negative effect on one....Respectfully, I'm aware it's legal but the doctrine is not without limits as also opined by the defense.
This has been confirmed as an IGG case, there's also a second, older thread:
Oh, Akron - Rachael Johnson, 24, killed March 29, 1991. Unsolved.
Trucker charged in cold case Kansas City murders, police say could be more
Police announced that two murders committed in 1996 and 1998 were committed by the same man, and said there could be more.www.courttv.com
"detective availability may have delayed things,”Trucker charged in cold case Kansas City murders, police say could be more
Police announced that two murders committed in 1996 and 1998 were committed by the same man, and said there could be more.www.courttv.com
"detective availability may have delayed things,”
They investigated for over 20 yrs after getting a DNA match before arresting him? They waited almost 2 years before bringing him in for questioning, once they discovered his DNA was a match.
I wonder how many more women he killed in that 20 years?
DNA helps identify killer 30 years after Florida woman found strangled to death
A woman's cold case murder has been solved after 30 years, owing to a breakthrough that led to a man believed to be her killer, authorities said. The woman, Roslin Kruse, was just 23 at the time of her death, according to the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office, which handled her case in Florida.
Kruse was last seen alive on Nov. 1, 1993, in Tampa, the sheriff's office said in a news release Friday. She was found dead that same day on the shoulder of a road in Gibsonton, which is about 10 miles south of the city center. A subsequent autopsy determined her cause of death was strangulation.
Despite identifying her, authorities did not solve Kruse's case until recently, when DNA profiling allowed them to match a sample taken from her body to the child of her suspected killer, who died more than a decade ago. The Hillsborough sheriff said authorities are "confident" that Michael Rizzo was responsible for Kruse's death.
DNA helps identify killer 30 years after Florida woman found strangled to death
Don't know if it was the case with this specific case, but some places don't seem to go to trial without a victim ID. Just seems like that's rewarding the ones who go after vulnerable people or conceal or damage the body beyond recognition.I'm confused. LE found witnesses who saw her get into the killer's car, tracked the car to a residence where she was seen entering with the killer. She was found deceased on the side of the road less than a half-mile from where she was last seen with the killer. The killer even admitted she was with him just before she died. He also failed a poly. With all this, they couldn't make an arrest or find some additional evidence? Was it a picky prosecutor?
Glad they did finally identify the killer, but how many more people did he kill in the following years?
Don't know if it was the case with this specific case, but some places don't seem to go to trial without a victim ID. Just seems like that's rewarding the ones who go after vulnerable people or conceal or damage the body beyond recognition.
MOO
Despite identifying her, authorities did not solve Kruse's case until recently, when DNA profiling allowed them to match a sample taken from her body to the child of her suspected killer, who died more than a decade ago. The Hillsborough sheriff said authorities are "confident" that Michael Rizzo was responsible for Kruse's death.
The family has answers and the law enforcement can stop working on the case and invest their limited resources elsewhere. This is why we work on all these cases, regardless of age.Another killer escapes justice but maybe Krista Martin's loved ones finally have some answers. May they experience some peace.
We do as well. It provides hope to everyone else that is still waiting for answers.I really appreciate these articles and the families getting a chance to tell the world about their loved ones who were murdered. Peace now to you Teresa and your dear Mother and family.After 37 years, DNA points to a neighbor in Florida woman's 1986 murder
A Florida sheriff said DNA evidence helped identify the late Donald Douglas as the murderer of Lakeland resident Teresa Scalf in 1986.www.usatoday.com