Cubby
fly the W!
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2007
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Debbie's brother Jack posted here over two years ago that detectives had visited his mother in FL (six years earlier) to collect a dna sample. So, eight years ago they got a dna sample from Debbie's mother and since then we do know that the cold case unit in DuPage co. was disbanded and started back up again, maybe three years ago. Jack did state that he had talked to a detective and could not discuss the case on WS.
The fact that they needed a dna sample from Debbie's mom still bothers me....was evidence lost, no longer usable or never collected at the scene. Its been eight years since they collected the dna sample from her. And we don't even know if the same detectives are working the case that were eight years ago. The detective assigned to the case over two years ago had not even looked at the files yet and he was in court for another case at the time. DuPage Co. cold case website has only nine unsolved cases...Debbie's is the oldest. There are three from the 70's, three from the 80's and two from the 90's.
I do believe Debbie's case can be solved with todays technology being so much better than it was in 1966. But I am very concerned about the amount of time that is put into this case. It has been 46 years since Debbie was brutally murdered and I think her family deserves to know who was responsible for her death.
Last I emailed with the detective he had reviewed the file. Of course he could not share inside information with me, but I was confident it was being worked.
AFAIK, the detectives working the case two years ago are not the same that were working it 8 years ago.
I agree, her family deserves an answer. And I agree current technology can solve this case. As for the dna collected. I don't think evidence was lost, I just don't know how quickly forensics on cold cases is processed. Current cases would take priority and older samples take longer to obtain a viable dna sample/strand. We have to remember any dna is over 40 years old. They have limited samples to work with and in some UID cases, it has taken as long as 5 years to develop a viable strand (or whatever the scientific word is) with decades old UID's.