HI HI - Wailuku Heights, Male, "Ed", 25-35, poss. Hispanic or European, likely moved to HI, Sept 1981

dotr

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  • #1
April 21 2020
Maui police seek public’s help with 1980s cold case
4-21-MAUI-COLD-CASE-courtesy-MAUI-POLICE-DEPARTMENT.jpg

''Police say his remains were discovered in september 1981 by hikers on The Cross in Wailuku Heights.

Sources told police at the time that the man went by the name Ed but no missing persons cases matching his description.

Police believe the man was between 25 and 35 years-old, and between 160 to 170 pounds.

He may have been of Hispanic or European ancestry.

He’s likely moved to Hawaii from the mainland since his teeth showed signs of exposure to fluoridated water.

If you have any information on who this could be call Maui police.''
 
  • #2
I couldn't find this John Doe in Namus or Doenetwork.
 
  • #3
The only other source I could find was on the website for Maui County (Maui County)
Of note:
-Additionally, a biological profile was developed which suggests “Ed” is most likely of Hispanic and European ancestry.
-In 2010 a DNA profile was developed and uploaded into several systems which has not resulted in a match at this time.
-Ed was described as being “Hapa Haole” (Caucasian mix) and having a medium-size goatee at the time of death
-Approximately 5’10” in height and possibly weighing between 160 to 170 pounds with shoulder-length brown hair

-
They claim he's on NamUs (spelled incorrectly), but I can't find a case with that number.
 
  • #4
Hm, I guess either they identified him since yesterday, or they have it set so it's not visible to the public.
 
  • #5
  • #6
  • #7
  • #8
I see it says the Namus case was created on the 21st, so it probably just hadn't been made public yet.
 
  • #9
Thanks for the link!
Noting that "Ed" had shoulder length hair and possibly a goatee.
The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)

''Race / EthnicityWhite / Caucasian, Hispanic / Latino
Adult - Pre 40
Height 5' 10"(70 inches) , Estimated
Weight 160-170 lbs, Estimated
Date Body Found September 7, 1981
Skeletal remains were found off a hiking trail towards "The Cross" in Wailuku, Hawaii on 09/07/1981. A witness indicated the individual may have went by the name "Ed".
Hair Color Brown
Head Hair Description Shoulder length
Facial Hair Description possible goatee ''
 
  • #10
Maui police seek the identity of ‘Ed’
Part of murder trial, body found in ’81

missing-man-4-23-20.jpg

The FBI produced a facial approximation from skeletal remains found by hikers headed to the cross near Wailuku Heights on Kapilau Ridge in September 1981. The remains of “Ed” had been at the site one to three months. Police are seeking to identify the individual. Photo courtesy of the Maui Police Department

Nearly four decades after a man’s skeletal remains were found near the St. Anthony cross above Wailuku Heights, police are renewing efforts to identify him.

On Tuesday, police released photographs of a facial approximation in clay that was created this year by the FBI using the skull found in 1981.

“Hopefully, we can identify who he is and get him back to his family,” police Lt. Nelson Hamilton said Wednesday.

He was reviewing old murder cases as part of cold case investigations when he came across a case involving the remains, which had never been identified, even when a man went to trial for murder in September 1992.

According to stories published in The Maui News about the 2nd Circuit Court trial, the body was found unclothed and covered with a poncho, with a .32-caliber revolver in a plastic bag near his right arm.

Shannon Brown, who was living with his family in Haiku at the time, was indicted on a charge of second-degree murder 11 years later when he was 29 and an Army sergeant.

At his trial, Brown testified that he shot the man only known as Ed in July or August 1981 on a trail near the cross after Ed had pulled a gun out of his backpack and threatened to rape Brown. Brown said he knocked the gun out of Ed’s hand, and it fell to the ground before the two men wrestled and crawled toward the gun. Brown testified that he reached the gun first and fired.

The bullet went through Ed’s skull.

A jury acquitted Brown of the murder charge.

Police said an examination determined that the remains had been in the location near the cross for one to three months and were of a man about 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing between 160 to 170 pounds with shoulder-length brown hair. The man likely had moved to Hawaii from the Mainland because his teeth exhibited signs of exposure to fluoridated water, police said. Possibly six to 12 months before his death, the man may have had teeth extractions, police said. He was estimated to possibly be between ages 25 and 35.

Police said information obtained in the original investigation through a credible source determined that the man went by the name Ed and was described as being hapa haole or of Caucasian mix with a medium-sized goatee. He was described as a “rapid talker” who talked a lot.

At the time, there were no reported missing people matching Ed’s description in Maui County. Police investigated several reports of missing people from other Hawaii locations and the Mainland, excluding all through dental records or because they had been located.

In 1988, an FBI sketch done for the Maui Police Department was publicized several times but didn’t result in any credible leads identifying Ed, police said.

A DNA profile developed and uploaded into several systems in 2010 also hasn’t resulted in a match, according to police.

A biological profile suggests Ed is most likely of Hispanic and European ancestry, police said.

After reviewing the case, Hamilton said he began making inquiries and learned that the skull was still in evidence.

About a year and a half to two years ago, police sent the skull to the FBI and received the facial approximation in January.

“It was something we felt should be done,” Hamilton said. “We want to make sure that the family gets him back.”

Anyone who has information about the identity of “Ed” or who may have a relative matching his description who was reported missing around 1981 is asked to call Hamilton at 244-6441 or Maui Crime Stoppers at 242-6966.

Maui police seek the identity of ‘Ed’
 
  • #11
  • #12
Revisiting Edward Sprinkle Dubbs, missing from CT.
Edward Sprenkle Dubbs – The Charley Project

Dubbs disappeared early in June 1981. Hawaii Ed was found in September.

View attachment 293191 View attachment 293192 View attachment 293193 View attachment 293195 View attachment 293196 View attachment 293197
I think Ed had been frequenting the area he died for a few months before Edward disappeared. If I remember correctly, he was someone that Shannon Brown smoked marijuana with in that area.
 
  • #13
Edward Dubbs was a high ranking executive in a company, somehow it does not go too well with pot smoking, kind of transient "Ed".
Also, Dubbs was in a longterm relationship (he wanted to break up, though) with his boyfriend who reported no domestic violence or aberrant sexual behavior. That also wont go well with "Ed", who allegedly tried to rape his murderer.
Lastly, I think "Ed" was much younger than Edward.

The clay does resemble Edward, though and midlife crisis or sudden onset mental health issues could drive a successful, grounded guy to leave his job and boyfriend (who came to pick him up) from one to the next second and run to Hawaii to smoke pot all day and hang out in dubious bars... but it would be really strange.
 
  • #14
NamUs #UP68367 / Doe Network 3428UMHI

Screen Shot 2023-01-17 at 11.31.34 PM.png


Demographics
Sex: Male
Race/Ethnicity: White / Caucasian, Hispanic / Latino
Estimated Age Group: Adult - Pre 40 (News reports say pre-30)
Estimated Age Range (Years): N/A
Estimated Year of Death: 1981
Estimated PMI: N/A (News reports say up to 2 months)
Height: 5'10" (70 inches), Estimated
Weight: 160-170 lbs, Estimated
Cause of Death: Homicide by gunshot wound to the head

Circumstances
Type: Unidentified Deceased
Date Body Found: September 7, 1981
NamUs Case Created: April 21, 2020
ME/C QA Reviewed: N/A
Location Found: Wailuku, Hawaii
County: Maui County
Circumstances of Recovery: At around 12:30 p.m. on September 7, 1981, a family hiking on a ridge over the Iao Valley discovered mostly skeletal human remains near a trail to "The Cross" in Wailuku. The body was nude, and was found underneath a green plastic military-type poncho which had been used as a makeshift tent.

Due to the condition of the remains, authorities were not able to immediately determine whether the victim was male or female. They were, however, able to determine that the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the head. A handgun found near the body was believed to be the weapon used in the victim's death.

At the time of discovery, authorities did not believe foul play was involved in the victim's death, later determined to be a man. The investigation went cold for several years, until police received an anonymous tip in 1987 which led them to a man named Shannon Brown.

In 1992, prosecutors charged Shannon Brown, 29, with murder in the death of Wailuku John Doe. Brown was 18 at the time of the murder and was a sergeant in the Army when charges were filed. He was extradited from New York, where he was stationed at Fort Drum, back to Maui for trial and held on $50,000 bail. He pleaded not guilty and went to trial in July 1992, over a decade after John Doe's body was found. Brown never denied he shot the man, but claimed that he killed him during a struggle after the man tried to sexually assault him.

At trial, Deputy Prosecutor Joseph Barbaro told the jury that statements made by Brown and members of his family to police would show that Brown killed the man in a dispute over marijuana. When Brown's sister, Lynette, was interviewed by investigators in November 1987, she said that Brown confessed to her that he shot a man over Iao Valley before he left Hawaii to join the Army in December 1981. She also claimed that Brown told her he killed the man because he owed someone money and would have been killed had he not killed the man.

According to Barbaro, Brown's cousin, Stacey Borge, told police in an interview in 1988 that Brown took Borge up to the ridge in 1981 and asked Borge to help bury the man's body, but Borge said he declined. Barbaro also said that Borge told authorities Brown had confessed to shooting the man in the head.

The prosecution also said that when detectives interviewed Brown in 1987, he gave conflicting statements about the incident, althogh he told them that the man was killed in a dispute over marijuana.

Brown's attorney, Philip Lowenthal, told the jury that his client did not dispute that he shot and killed the man, but said that his client did so in self-defense. Lowenthal also said that both Brown's sister and cousin had been coerced into giving false statements when they were first questioned by police. When called to the witness stand, both Borge and Lynette Brown recanted their statements, telling the jury that they made up the story after police continued to pressure them into implicating Shannon Brown. Lowenthal also said the Brown lied to investigators about the murder when he was first interviewed because he was too embarrassed to admit the man tried to sexually assault him.

When Brown himself took the witness stand at trial, he told the jury that he met the man, described as a "loner" who hung around Iao Valley and was known only as "Ed," and went up to the ridge to smoke marijuana with him. Brown said that after they smoked, the man pulled out a handgun in a plastic bag and proceeded to take off his clothes. According to Brown, the man then told Brown "he wants my 🤬🤬🤬."

Brown, believing the man was about to sexually assault him, began to struggle with the man, eventually gaining possession of the gun. Brown says he then shot the man in self-defense. In a moment of panic, according to Brown, he attempted to bury the body in a shallow depression on the ridge, removed the man's belongings, and fled.

After just three hours of deliberation, the jury acquitted Shannon Brown of murder in John Doe's death.
Inventory of Remains: N/A
Condition of Remains: Not recognizable - Near complete or complete skeleton

Physical Description
Hair Color: Brown
Head Hair Description: Shoulder length
Facial Hair Description: Possibly had a goatee
Eye Color: Unknown
Distinctive Physical Features: No information entered

Clothing and Accessories
- Green plastic military-type poncho erected like a tent (Near the Body)
- Handgun (Near the Body)

News Coverage
"Body Is Found," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 8 September 1981, A3.
Body Is Found_ (1).jpg

Police said a hiker found the body at about 12:30 p.m. near a trail leading to a white cross erected on the hills overlooking Wailuku.

Police said the body was in such a condition that they have been unable to determine its sex.

It appeared to be nude and was covered in a green plastic military type poncho, police said.


"Maui death still under probe," Honolulu Star-Advertiser, 9 September 1981, A8.
Maui death still under probe_.jpg

Maui police investigators said yesterday an autopsy performed on a body found Monday near Wailuku indicated the death was caused by a gunshot wound, but the death still is under investigation.

[...]

The body, described by investigators as "mostly skeletal remains," was found by a family hiking along a ridge above Iao Valley Monday morning. The body was under a poncho set up like a tent.

Police said a handgun was found near the body, and they indicated it was believed to be the weapon used in the death.

[Detective Capt. James] Lawrence said the autopsy indicated the death may have occurred up to two months before the body was found.

"We do not believe the death was due to foul play," Lawrence said. "But we are still are investigating."


"Shooting Case," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 9 September 1981, A16.
Shooting Case_.jpg

An autopsy has shown that a person whose badly decomposed body was found in the Iao Valley area Sunday apparently was shot in the head.

"Remains Unidentified," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 10 September 1981, A20.
Remains Unidentified_.jpg

The skeletal remains found Monday in Iao Valley have been determined to be that of a male under 30 years old but the victim's identity remains a mystery, Detective Capt. James Lawrence said today.

Edwin Tanji, "Slaying followed sex assault, defense says," Honolulu Advertiser, 21 July 1992, A4.
Slaying followed sex assault, defense says_.jpg

[Defense attorney Philip] Lowenthal said Brown never told anyone before of the sexual assault because he was too embarrassed to admit the situation. Brown was 18 when the incident occurred, he said.

In statements to police, Brown "said it was a fight over marijuana," Lowenthal said. "The business about being raped was not something he could ever tell anybody about."

[...]

The body was found by a family hiking on the ridge. [Deputy Prosecutor Joseph] Barbaro said the skeletal remains were under a green poncho and had not been clothed. The man was killed by a bullet to the head. A gun in a plastic bag, with one shot fired, was found at the scene.

[...]

When Brown was questioned by police in 1987, he gave two conflicting statements to police, Barbaro said. Barbaro also told the jury to expect Brown's sister, Lynette, to change the story she told to police.


Edwin Tanji, "Man says he lied when implicating kin in slaying," Honolulu Advertiser, 22 July 1992, A4.
Man says he lied when implicating kin in slaying_.jpg

A Haiku man said yesterday he lied to police in 1988 when he said his cousin asked him to help bury the body of a man shot to death on a ridge above Iao Valley.

[...]

"I lied. I told them (police) that because I was scared, so I lied to them," he said.

Reading portions of the statement, Deputy Prosecutor Joseph Barbaro said Borge told police that Brown took him up to the body in 1981 and asked Borge to help bury it.

Borge said he refused and didn't want anything to do with the body.

In the statement, Borge also told police that Brown said he shot the man in the head.

[...]

Investigator Glenn Padua, a Maul police detective in 1981, pointed to a hole in the skull found at the scene, saying it was a bullet hole.

Brown, now a sergeant in the Army, was pinpointed as a suspect in the death after police received an anonymous call in 1987 that led detectives to question members of Brown's family. Brown was indicted early this year.


Edwin Tanji, "Made up story, witness says," Honolulu Advertiser, 23 July 1992, A4.
Made up story, witness says_.jpg

The sister of a Haiku man charged with murder said yesterday she made up a story she told to police linking her brother to the shooting of a man whose decomposed body was found on a ridge above Iao Valley.

"I just pressured out being there and I told them I didn't know anything. And they kept pressuring me and pressuring me, so I just came out with my own story," said Lynette Brown.

[...]

Acting on a tip, police questioned Lynette Brown in November 1987. She gave detectives a statement in which she said her brother told her of shooting the man just before he left Hawaii to join the Army in December 1981.

She told police her brother told her he killed the man because someone else threatened him. She said Shannon told her he owed someone money and would have been killed if he hadn't killed the victim.

But testifying yesterday, she said she made up the statement to police.

"He never told me the whole story so I started making things up in my mind, just making it up," she said.


Edwin Tanji, "Man acquitted in 'self-defense' '81 killing," Honolulu Advertiser, 29 July 1992, A4.
Man acquitted in 'self-defense' '81 killing_.jpg

A Haiku man who said he had been threatened with sexual assault was acquitted yesterday of murder in the shooting death of an unidentified man 11 years ago on a ridge above Iao Valley.

Shannon Brown, 29, "is very grateful to the jury and his family for their support," his lawyer, Philip Lowenthal, said.

[...]

Brown, now an Army sergeant, admitted shooting the victim, known only as "Ed," sometime before the skeletal remains were found in September 1991 [should be 1981]. Brown was 18 at the time of the shooting.

Taking the witness stand Monday, Brown said he had been smoking marijuana with the man, who he knew only as "a loner" who hung out around Iao Valley.

After they went to the remote ridge, Brown said, the man pulled out a gun in a plastic bag, removed his clothing and told Brown "he wants my 🤬🤬🤬."

During a struggle, Brown said he was able to get hold of the gun and fired a shot that struck the man in the head. Brown said he panicked, tried to bury the body in a shallow depression, took all of the man's belongings and fled.
 

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