AL AL - Darrell Moneyham, 38, Birmingham, 6 July 1999

Kat

Kind words do not cost much
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  • #1
Darrell's Doe Network page:

http://doenetwork.org/cases/3852dmal.html

Darrell's Charley Project page:

http://www.charleyproject.org/cases/m/moneyham_darrell.html

Darrell's NamUs profile:

Dental: NA
DNA: NA
Fingerprints: NA

case report:
Moneyham was last seen on July 6, 1999, in the Birmingham area of Alabama. He left to go to the store for a minute and he never came back. Moneyham's wife reported him missing in July 1999

Darrell had some legal problems and it's not out of the realm of possibility that he left on his own. I hope this is the case and that he is safe. (I had a relative that walked out the door and never returned as well and wasn't located until after his death over 40 years later).

Come home soon.

Picture from Charley Project link embedded in this post above:
 

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  • #2
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  • #5
Identified by @othram as Jefferson County John Doe 2002

Jefferson County John Doe (2002) is now Identified

In March 2002, a worker conducting an environmental survey discovered skeletal remains in a thicket off a paved alley, across the street from Carraway Methodist Medical Center in Birmingham, Alabama. The remains were found with a pair of Levi’s 550 Relaxed Fit denim jeans (size 32Wx30L), a thin reddish leather belt with a silver metal buckle, Arizona Jean Company underwear, a medium silk shirt with an aqua and maroon geometric design, and white socks—but no shoes. Coins found in the jeans pocket dated from 1970 to 1999. A news report at the time noted that the man was missing several teeth and wore a partial dental plate. Despite these details, traditional identification methods failed to determine his identity, leaving the case unsolved.

RIP Darrell Moneyham
 
  • #6
I believe this person may be connected to this thread, based on location, dates, and clothing. If so, how do we combine?

 
  • #7
STATEMENT FROM OTHRAM:

"Families generally know when they're missing someone, and they usually offer to help by providing their DNA sample so that confirmation testing can be done, like in this case," said Kristen Mittelman, Chief Development Officer for Othram, the company that analyzed the DNA. "That means we can give the family the answers they're looking for and it also means the person can have a proper burial, a death certificate and law enforcement can continue investigating what happened."
 

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