FL FL - Sumter Co, 'Little Miss Panasoffkee', WhtFem 17-24, 470UFFL, Feb'71

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:bump: for new reconstruction

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I ended up here after binge-watching Unsolved Mysteries on Amazon. Interesting, this image looks more like the original images created back in the seventies, with the heavier jaw line. They just got the hair colour wrong.
 
I ended up here after binge-watching Unsolved Mysteries on Amazon. Interesting, this image looks more like the original images created back in the seventies, with the heavier jaw line. They just got the hair colour wrong.
Welcome to Websleuths, Aquakitty :welcome:!
 
:bump: for new reconstruction

fc11a571-c76b-469f-b8f6-15829eacc128.jpg

it's crazy... at first glance, i thought i was looking at my cousin Dimitra... similar faces... had to take a triple take.

I wonder if they could compare her DNA to like a genealogy site, AncestryDNA or something...

by the way I don't know if this was ever mentioned, but as I was reading her case file again, it said she was wearing a yellow gold ring with a stone on her left hand... it is quite possible she was engaged, but not married yet. In the Greek Orthodox religion, engaged couples wear their engagement rings on the left hand, and then when they are married they switch to the right hand. I just got married in October so I asked my priest and that's what he told me.. it's tradition after the wedding, ring goes on the right. However, I belong to a Greek Orthodox Moms group on FB and spoke about this very topic and most said after they had kids or while were pregnant, they switched back the left hand when it didn't fit them on the right ring finger.
 
it's crazy... at first glance, i thought i was looking at my cousin Dimitra... similar faces... had to take a triple take.

I wonder if they could compare her DNA to like a genealogy site, AncestryDNA or something...

by the way I don't know if this was ever mentioned, but as I was reading her case file again, it said she was wearing a yellow gold ring with a stone on her left hand... it is quite possible she was engaged, but not married yet. In the Greek Orthodox religion, engaged couples wear their engagement rings on the left hand, and then when they are married they switch to the right hand. I just got married in October so I asked my priest and that's what he told me.. it's tradition after the wedding, ring goes on the right. However, I belong to a Greek Orthodox Moms group on FB and spoke about this very topic and most said after they had kids or while were pregnant, they switched back the left hand when it didn't fit them on the right ring finger.
Can't use Ancestry, but GEDmatch & DNA Doe Project could be of help for sure.

Sent from my SM-G935W8 using Tapatalk
 
Hello. A good Samaritan from the Little Miss Panasoffkee Facebook group (Log into Facebook | Facebook) was kind enough to step up and organize a headstone fundraiser. After all of these years, she still does not have a headstone! Please consider donating a few dollars to help out with this great cause. Thank you!
 
What a long forum. I worked on this case a little today and looked at the journalism from in and around the date of her death. According to the reporting in the days that followed her discovery:

  • This woman was definitely thought to be a murder victim who was strangled with a belt (one article from Feb 22 1971 said she was found "with a belt tied around her neck" Sentinel Page 5)
  • She may have been pregnant
  • She was referred to as the "hippie-type"
  • She was believed to have been thrown over the side of the bridge
  • She had a gold cap on a tooth
  • The body was found by two young men hitchhikers who looked down from the bridge
  • She was barefoot (Feb 22 Sentinel)
  • She was dressed in "a Kelly green, long-sleeved blouse and green and cream plaid slacks" (Feb 22 Sentinel)
  • Her location is described as between "Wildwood and Bushnell" (Tampa Tribune/Feb 27 1971)
  • They were able to get a fingerprint
  • They have her dentals
 
Bumping Little Miss Lake Panasoffkee's thread with her DoeNetwork page (there are more pictures in the link)

470UFFL
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Reconstructions of the victim by the University of South Florida, Judy Reimer and Carl Koppelman; reconstructed images of victim's clothing.

Date of Discovery: February 19, 1971
Location of Discovery: Lake Panasoffkee, Sumter County, Florida
Estimated Date of Death: 2 weeks to 30 days prior
State of Remains: Not recognizable - Decomposing/putrefaction
Cause of Death: Homicide by ligature strangulation

Physical Description
Estimated Age: 17-24 years old
Race: White
Gender: Female
Height: 5'0" to 5'5"
Weight: 110-120 lbs.
Hair Color: Brown, long and straight.
Eye Color: Possibly brown
Distinguishing Marks/Features: Orthopedic surgery had been performed on her right ankle due to instability in the ankle. The procedure, known as a "Watson-Jones" technique, involved drilling two small holes in the ankle bone and winding a tendon through them. The surgery probably occurred between 1967 and 1970. She had given birth to at least one child, possibly more. Periostitis (inflammation of tissue around a bone) was found on her lower right leg in the process of healing. Harris lines were observed on her bones, indicating she experienced an illness and/or malnutrition that affected her growth earlier in life. Perimortem fractures were also observed on ribs one and three.

Identifiers
Dentals: Available. Extensive dental work, including several silver fillings and a porcelain crown on one of her top middle teeth.
Fingerprints: Not available.
DNA: Available.

Clothing & Personal Items
Clothing: A shawl with a green and white print; plaid green pants; a solid green shirt
Jewelry: A white gold ladies Baylor wrist watch on her left hand, a yellow gold ring with a clear stone on her left ring finger and a small/thin gold necklace.
Additional Personal Items: Unknown

Circumstances of Discovery
The victim's decomposed body was spotted in Lake Panasoffkee by two hitchhikers crossing the Panasoffkee bridge on February 19, 1971. Police were notified and it was quickly determined that the girl had been strangled by a man's size 36 belt, which was still around her throat. Authorities believe she was murdered else where and dumped off the bridge.

The victim came to the United States within ten months and two years prior to her death (previously believed to be one or three months before). It has been determined that she was of Greek descent and could have arrived in the U.S. directly from there just prior to her death. It is also possible that she could have come from or been directly related to Greek residents of Lavrion, Greece, based on dental testing.

The woman's remains were exhumed in 1986 for additional examination after she was buried in in the Oak Grove Cemetery in Wildwood, Florida and was later featured on an episode of Unsolved Mysteries. She is known as "Little Miss Lake Panasoffkee."

Investigating Agency(s)
Agency Name: Sumter County Sheriff’s Office
Agency Contact Person: Detective Darren Norris
Agency Phone Number: 1-352-569-1600
Agency E-Mail: dnorris(at)sumtercountysheriff.org
Agency Case Number: 71-0291

Agency Name: District 5 Medical Examiner
Agency Contact Person: N/A
Agency Phone Number: 1-352-326-5961
Agency E-Mail: dona.faber(at)marioncountyfl.org
Agency Case Number: A-10-71

NCIC Case Number: U276515052
NamUs Case Number: 6040
NCMEC Case Number: 1202391

Information Source(s)
NamUs
University of South Florida
NCMEC
Wikipedia
Hellbeasts - A Blog about Crime and Injustice
Daily Sun
Unsolved Mysteries
 
I believe that she's most likely Konstantina(? I'm sorry if I didn't spell that correctly), the dates and her appearance line up way too much and I'd be very surprised if it's just a coincidence. I know that they said she had given birth to at least one child but I'm not sure how reliable the test they use to determine whether or not someone had given birth in their life is because the same type of test (I believe) is what they used to say that Julie Doe had given birth to at least one child even though she was a transgender woman and couldn't have given birth.
 
I believe that she's most likely Konstantina(? I'm sorry if I didn't spell that correctly), the dates and her appearance line up way too much and I'd be very surprised if it's just a coincidence. I know that they said she had given birth to at least one child but I'm not sure how reliable the test they use to determine whether or not someone had given birth in their life is because the same type of test (I believe) is what they used to say that Julie Doe had given birth to at least one child even though she was a transgender woman and couldn't have given birth.

We had another case just last week where they said the decedent had never given birth, but was identified as the mother of three kids.
 
Doctors can't always tell whether a woman has ever given birth, not even while the woman is still alive. Right in the middle of a gynecological exam I once had a doctor ask me how many babies I'd had. I've never even been pregnant. He seemed surprised by this news and said I had some cervical scarring consistent with childbirth. So I think it's a myth that a gynecologist can tell whether or not a living woman has given birth, much less a deceased woman. There are apparently other reasons why a woman might have scarring to the cervix or pelvic bones that could make it look like she'd had a child.
 

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