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Suspect named in 1973 killings after genealogy analysis | Daily Mail Online
Investigators solved a double slaying that occurred more than 45 years ago after using a public genealogy database to match DNA from the crime scene with the genetic profile of the now-deceased suspect, a Montana sheriff said Monday.
Linda and Clifford Bernhardt, both 24, were found dead in their Billings-area home in November 1973 in a case that would stymie investigators for more than four decades.
It was Linda’s mother who discovered her slain daughter and son-in-law in a gruesome scene at their home.
Clifford was found face-down in a pool of blood in the master bedroom, and Linda in another bedroom.
Now the decades old case appears to be the latest cold case to have been solved by using a genealogy database which is marketed to the public as a way of understanding their heritage and tracking down lost relatives. Police are now accessing the DNA data to track down crime suspects.
The database led investigators to Cecil Stan Caldwell, a longtime city of Billings employee who was once a co-worker of Linda Bernhardt, Yellowstone County Sheriff Mike Linder said. They believe that he is behind the brutal murders of the couple.
The case had remained cold until 2004, when DNA was discovered on evidence gathered at the crime scene. Over the course of the 45-year investigation, law enforcement eliminated 80 people as possible suspects, through DNA testing.
Yellowstone County Sheriff announces closure in Linda and Clifford Bernhardt cold case
Investigators solved a double slaying that occurred more than 45 years ago after using a public genealogy database to match DNA from the crime scene with the genetic profile of the now-deceased suspect, a Montana sheriff said Monday.
Linda and Clifford Bernhardt, both 24, were found dead in their Billings-area home in November 1973 in a case that would stymie investigators for more than four decades.
It was Linda’s mother who discovered her slain daughter and son-in-law in a gruesome scene at their home.
Clifford was found face-down in a pool of blood in the master bedroom, and Linda in another bedroom.
Now the decades old case appears to be the latest cold case to have been solved by using a genealogy database which is marketed to the public as a way of understanding their heritage and tracking down lost relatives. Police are now accessing the DNA data to track down crime suspects.
The database led investigators to Cecil Stan Caldwell, a longtime city of Billings employee who was once a co-worker of Linda Bernhardt, Yellowstone County Sheriff Mike Linder said. They believe that he is behind the brutal murders of the couple.
The case had remained cold until 2004, when DNA was discovered on evidence gathered at the crime scene. Over the course of the 45-year investigation, law enforcement eliminated 80 people as possible suspects, through DNA testing.
Yellowstone County Sheriff announces closure in Linda and Clifford Bernhardt cold case