This person is mentioned at length in the May 2018 MEDICAL EXAMINERS COMMISSION MEETING for Florida (thereby confirming the unsourced information which was previously discussed here):
"Doug Culbertson informed the Commission of a success story from District 17 (Broward County).The decedent was found in a parking lot in the city of Fort Lauderdale on April 30, 2003, in an advanced state of decomposition. One fingerprint was obtained from the decedent and was run through the FCIC/NCIC systems with no results. The Fort Lauderdale Police Department investigated local missing persons reports and entered the available information into the NCIC teletype system. A note was found among the decedent’s effects, written in a foreign language that was later determined to be the Serbo-Croatian dialect. The information obtained from the note at the time did not reportedly generate any leads on the decedent’s identification.
In 2010, the decedent’s information was entered in to the Unidentified Persons section of the NAMUS website by Broward Medical Examiner Investigator Wendy Crane. A copy of the note was also uploaded onto the site with permissions set for the public to be able to view it.
In 2017, a phone call was received from a family member of
Zulejha Visnjic, who had reportedly not been heard from since early 2003. Ms. Visnjic, who resided in the Hollywood area, told family that she was going to Canada to visit and/ or reside with family there. The family member stated that he had viewed the details of the unidentified persons case and the note on the NAMUS website. Reportedly, the handwriting was familiar, and it specifically referenced names of family members. Additionally, he stated that the decedent had immigrated to this country from Bosnia.
The fingerprint that was obtained from the decedent in 2003 was sent to US-VISIT to be run against US immigration records, but no identification resulted. US-VISIT fingerprint analyst reported that the decedent likely immigrated prior to the automated system, and her fingerprint hardcopy could not be located. A decision was made to make contact with the decedent’s daughter, Zana, to obtain a sample for DNA comparison. Investigator Crane contacted Carrie Sutherland of NAMUS for assistance in obtaining a buccal swab from Zana, who resided in Indiana. The NAMUS manager in the Midwest region was able to coordinate the submission of Zana Visnjic’s DNA to UNT lab for comparison with the remains in this case.
On February 28, 2018, communication was received that Zana Visnjic was confirmed to be a maternal relative of the remains, which were identified as
Zulejha Visnjic. Investigator Crane contacted Ms. Zana Visnjic to advise her of the DNA results and unfortunately confirm her mother’s death.