I actively questioned anyone who would listen to me since I first learned about
Connie Smith in 1961 when my family moved to Northwestern Connecticut. I was in high school. LEOs were busy with law enforcement and crimes, but still actively investigated any tips and leads on the
Smith case. A letter to CT State Police alerting them to a case in Coconino County Sheriff of the of a young girl remains found near the Grand Canyon. This letter began the linking of Connecticut’s
Connie Smith to Little Miss X case in Arizona.
Since the Internet was way in the future, and many time-consuming miles to visits large libraries were not available to me. My search was hit or miss for a long time until someone opened their files to me in the late 1990’s. Which opened my eyes to Websleuth. I first met
Silvia Pettem, a Colorado historian, and researcher looking into a
Boulder Jane Doe case. She contacted me hoping
Connie was her Jane Doe. No match there.
(Her team in Internet researchers solved the
Boulder Jane Doe after ten years of search work.)
I became friends with Connie’s brother, Nels Smith, unfortunately, he and his wife were killed in a traffic accident a few months before I was to visit with him in Wyoming last year.
I'm sorry if this is a stupid question but if they did find this doe's remains how would they even know it's this doe and not another doe they lost? They don't have DNA on file so it's not like they could retest the remains and match it back to the original sample
If a doe’s remains are located, while looking for Little Miss X, there are dental records in the sheriff’s file for comparison and assist preliminary identification of the remains to be Miss X.