I just happened on this thread by reading new posts. It's pretty well buried, unfortunately.
Corline is a very unusual name. Very few in the US. I found a website that lists the usage as a first name. There were only six women in the US with that name. None had a surname beginning with S though. Or even with a P if the romantic in me sees the two getting married. It also shows what states the name appears, with most in California and New Mexico and the rest basically in Missouri and Illinois.
At first I wondered if perhaps they spelled her name wrong when using the stamping machine but kept it anyway because they didn't want to spend more money and it should actually be Coraline, which is much more common. I'm still going with Corline, though.There was a woman born in Michigan in 1939 whose name was Corline S. Stienbrenner but her ethnicity is listed as white.
Here's a link.
Corline S Stienbrenner in the 1940 Census | Ancestry®
Here's the site regarding name usage.
Corline - Names Encyclopedia
It's so hard to tell how old that token is. They've been around since the 1910s and still going strong into the 1980s and beyond. I'd hazard a guess that the token may not be referring to the UID specifically but may be a memento from her mother. I can just see some young woman going to a carnival or country fair with her boyfriend who keeps telling her he loves her and she won't commit and giggling they create this token where she says she 'likes' him. I also wonder if it was meant to be one of those infinity sayings, like you see written on a plate rim like 'a rose is a rose is a rose'. So it was supposed to be Corline S likes Steve P. loves Corline S likes Steve P....
The deceased is identified as African American. Just wondering why they are using a wig with long straight black hair unless there was evidence to suggest her hair was long. There are a couple of AA women missing who are identified as wearing wigs. Although I believe they've been excluded.
They make no mention at all of dentals. Does that mean she was edentulous? Did she have any teeth at all?
I think the size XL found on a fragment of cloth really tells us nothing about her size. The manufacturer Anvil has been around for a while. Online references for Anvil clothing made in the 1990s are for t-shirts. Can we assume that the fragment of cloth may be the collar of a t-shirt with the size tag still attached? Most of the offerings on eBay for vintage Anvil clothing are for t-shirts with band logos. Souvenir t-shirts sold at concerts are usually larger sizes which don't help for classifying a person's size.
The location of the remains is pretty rural. Does that suggest someone familiar with the area dumped the body there? I'm sure killers have driven out of state to dump a body, though, as recent events have shown.