The DDP has just announced a new case, I am trying to locate a thread here, but I think it was not created, their fourth case from Florida
Baker Co John Doe 1995 - DNA Doe Project Cases
Baker Co John Doe 1995 - DNA Doe Project Cases
Always good to see cases from states with huge numbers, this looks like that county's only case too.The DDP has just announced a new case, I am trying to locate a thread here, but I think it was not created, their fourth case from Florida
Baker Co John Doe 1995 - DNA Doe Project Cases
The DDP has just announced a new case, I am trying to locate a thread here, but I think it was not created, their fourth case from Florida
Baker Co John Doe 1995 - DNA Doe Project Cases
Seven missing areA few aren't mentioned, like Wendy Stephens and Karen Knippers
Good find! It was definitely removed, can’t find it any longerI'm not very familiar with Canada's equivalent of NamUs, but is Trinity Bellwood JD's profile already down?
First solve of 2022! I had good feeling about her case.NEW identification
Ada Jane Doe (Kent County Jane Doe) identified as Stephanie Renee Judson
https://www.fox17online.com/news/local-news/kent/1997-ada-township-homicide-victim-identified
Grand Rapids woman killed in 1997 homicide identified
KENT COUNTY, MI – Police identified a woman killed in a 1997 homicide.
The remains of Stephanie Renee Judson were found July 31, 1997 in a roadside park east of Ada, the Kent County Sheriff’s Office said. A maintenance worker found her remains, and the medical examiner ruled the death a homicide.
Judson, 31, was originally from Benton Harbor and moved to Grand Rapids in the late 1980s, police said.
She was identified through DNA testing with the DNA Doe Project. Police had worked for years to try to identify the remains.
Police previously used a clay model to try to figure out Judson’s identity and thought the victim was a black woman between 18 and 25 years old, between 5-feet, 2-inches and 5-feet, 8-inches tall.
The investigation into Judson’s death is continuing.
Anyone with information about Judson is asked to call Detective Dustin Cook at 616-632-6136 or anonymously call Silent Observer at 616-774-2345.
First solve of 2022! I had good feeling about her case.
I am glad he has his name back, this is one of my pet cases.New article about all DDP’s ongoing Phoenix cases, there is also information on last month identification of Baseline John Doe, he is confirmed to be identified, his identity was not released:
Murdered Phoenix Man Identified After Nearly 40 Years — But There's Hundreds More Waiting
The 1983 Baseline John Doe, depicted in a police sketch here, was identified on November 5, 2021.
DNA Doe Project
On September 11, 1983, the murder victim was found in a field near Baseline Road and South Central Avenue. He was bludgeoned to death.
The victim was likely 50 years old when he was killed in a drunken altercation, based on matching details reported in the FBI's Supplemental Homicide Report.
The Phoenix Police Department, teaming up with the Maricopa County Medical Examiner’s Office and the California-based nonprofit DNA Doe Project, identified the victim last month.
Loved ones had been searching for answers for decades.
“This man had a family who missed him,” said Cairenn Binder, the genealogist who led the DNA Doe Project team that closed the timeworn case. “He was a clever man who had experienced mental illness and misfortune in his life”
I wonder if that Eric Hendershott is the same detective working in Ohio who was in charge of the Twinsburg JD case. If so, nice to see him volunteering with (presumably) more cases, and learning the technique!I am fascinated how fast Stephanie was identified (in less than a week)! It is also interesting that both she and Monique have families in Mississippi, I just wonder if extended family trees from can help in other cases as well.
from the DDP website:
Ada Bones Jane Doe 1997 - DNA Doe Project Cases
The Kent County Sheriff’s Office contacted DDP in 2020 to attempt to create a DNA profile from Judson’s bones. Initial lab work failed to produce a workable DNA sample, but in April, 2021 samples were combined and enriched at HudsonAlpha Discovery Labs, and a successful DNA profile was obtained. After uploading this profile to GEDmatch, it took DNA Doe Project’s volunteer genealogists only a week to come up with a likely candidate. The identity of the Jane Doe was confirmed with a buccal swab from a family member.
Team leader Eric Hendershott said, “We were fortunate in this case we had some decent matches. Stephanie’s top match ended up being a second cousin.”
Once the top match was identified, the team built family trees to make their way to the right branch of the family. Hendershott explained, “The team pretty quickly narrowed things down to a particular county in Mississippi. From there, we were able to tie together some descendants of common ancestors who relocated to Benton Harbor, MI. We then were able to identify Stephanie as a potential candidate.”