What does that even mean? I watched the video but it only says "investigators now have a DNA profile". They don't elaborate
So you think her parent/s may have been in prison before?
It just means that have her DNA sequences/patterns or whatever, right? But they've been having that if they've ruled out missing girls already through DNA???
http://www.bostonglobe.com/2015/07/22/deerisland/hdYNasQYyQsxh3FbjmrhSO/story.html#Her DNA was recently sent to the University of North Texas, which he said specializes in familial mitochondrial DNA, the advanced technique of matching a person’s DNA to their close family members instead of simply identifying two identical samples.
The process, which takes several months, could match the child to a close adult relative who may be in a national database like the FBI’s Combined DNA Index System, or CODIS.
Special Texas lab joins Deer Island investigation
http://www.bostonglobe.com/2015/07/22/deerisland/hdYNasQYyQsxh3FbjmrhSO/story.html#
Let me restate - I don't think it was a case of "afraid to go to the doctor" - I think it was the case of an accidental or unexpected natural death where the caregivers didn't dare go to the authorities for fear of what else might be uncovered. That might be immigration, an illegal adoption, an outstanding arrest warrant, someone who's withheld the child from the other parent, prostitution, or even some sort of fringe group.
I hate to be Debbie Downer - but unless the child's DNA gets a partial match with someone in the criminal databases, I'm really starting to think we'll never find out who she is.
Can LE solve the case without publicity? Just investigating? Or do they need a tip that tells them who Baby Doe is? If so, how long can you keep releasing updates? It's been a month and I definitely feel like LE is running out of new things to talk about, and the case has faded from the national media (since LE thinks she's a local, maybe that doesn't matter as much). How long will the billboards stay up for? How long can we go where the average person in Massachusetts, nearby states, or anywhere in the country will hear about Baby Doe on a regular basis? I think soon enough, the investigation is going to turn into "Maybe we'll get a tip from another police department telling us that someone reported that they hadn't seen a little girl in a while".
It just means that have her DNA sequences/patterns or whatever, right? But they've been having that if they've ruled out missing girls already through DNA???
https://identifyus.org/en/cases/14004
The following people have been ruled out as being this decedent:
First Name Last Name Year of Birth State LKA
Shoshana Black 1994 Massachusetts
Gibbs Cassidy 2010 California
Aliya Lunsford 2008 West Virginia
Paula A. Ramerez - Figuroa 2013 California
ayla reynolds 2010 Maine
Her DNA not being a match to anyone on NCMEC makes me think that she was never reported as missing![]()
Her DNA not being a match to anyone on NCMEC makes me think that she was never reported as missing![]()
What is the likelihood that she is related to a criminal that has DNA is CODIS?
I wonder how many of the general population is related to a criminal that would have DNA saved in a database like this... Only some crimes would require DNA submission....
One of the problems is that there are so many DNA samples around that there are starting to be false positives on family relations. The DNA class I took a while back said that the odds are one in a million that a stranger off the street would share 12 of the areas they look at for identification--but that means in an area the size of Greater Boston, with a population around 7 million, there are 6 or 7 other people out there who could be potentially identified as relatives. In areas with a more homogeneous gene pool, such as the upper midwest where so many people are of northern European ancestry, the rate goes even higher. And most of those people will not in fact be relatives, or rather are related so far back up the family tree that it's meaningless.
So the odds pretty good that she's related to someone in the criminal database, but it would require hundreds of hours of followup to determine whether anybody is actually related to her and they are likely saving it for a last resort sort of thing.
p.s. I assumed you meant a family-relations search of the state prison inmate databases. For Codis, they have better techniques.