So, one of them was identified because of a tattoo?
New York City seems to have very little interest in any of its cold cases. Hardly anybody, UID or missing, is in Namus. I've never had a response to a query to a NYPD case.
I take that back. I did have one person take the time to tell me they were sorry but they're too busy dealing with today's crimes to have time for questions like mine.
For over a century New York has buried their indigent, unclaimed and unidentified in mass graves in Potter’s Fields on Hart Island.How sad that it seems this case isn't being investigated at all. No modern attempts to identify them. I guess the unidentified victims were either cremated or buried, possibly in unmarked graves. I don't think anyone investigating cared to put the work in to identify them back then. It would be hard to identify them now. I wonder if there could have been victims who were never found. I imagine not every bag of body parts thrown in the Hudson has washed up.
I’ll second that!And just my opinion as someone who lives in NYC, they're not dealing with today's crimes either.
I can’t believe nothing was ever written about these dismembered bodies. I even checked NJ since they actually go back to the 1970s and I found nothing tooI'm still looking but have found Nothing regarding these cases in newspapers.com or newspaperarchives for either NY or NJ during the time period. There are quite a few stories on dismemberment cases however none appear to be specifically identified as related to this series of murders. There was a man, Waldo Grant, charged in January 1977 with the murder of 4 of his lovers. One of his victims was dismembered. I've included an article below.
The article ends with "Grant also volunteered information about additional murders, police said." I do wonder given the time frame, and what appears to be the "end" of the murder series referenced in the thread as through 1976, if perhaps he was involved. I will see what else I can find on him in particular and share.
From newspapers.com - Daily News (New York, New York) 12 Jan 77, pg 278
View attachment 335814
For over a century New York has buried their indigent, unclaimed and unidentified in mass graves in Potter’s Fields on Hart Island.
Now believed to contain the interred remains of over 1 million individuals, Hart Island recently made national news when drone photography showed massive trenches being dug for the coffins of Covid-19 victims.
Not surprisingly Hart Island has a long history of being an epidemic burial ground, including those dying from AIDS.
NY artist Melinda Hunt created the non-profit The Hart Island Project. with the intent of making information and access available to family members and the public.
The website invites the public to visit the cemetery virtually and search the data for those interred in the mass graves since 1980.
These murders occurred in the 1970’s, and unfortunately I have no idea if it is possible to search data for any remains prior 1980.