Identified! SC - Spartanburg, Startex Mill village, WhtFem 40-55, UP9422, wrapped in plastic, earring, Nov'11 Jolene Lynn White

  • #81
"DNA Doe Project identifies Jane Doe found in South Carolina in 2011
Homicide victim ‘Ms. Startex’ identified as Jolene Lynn White"


1757513440290.webp
 
  • #82
"DNA Doe Project identifies Jane Doe found in South Carolina in 2011
Homicide victim ‘Ms. Startex’ identified as Jolene Lynn White"


View attachment 613742

Startex, SC – Fourteen years after her remains were discovered in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, a Jane Doe known as Ms. Startex has been identified as Jolene Lynn White. White was born in New York in 1976 but had been living in the nearby town of Cowpens when she disappeared in 2005, six years before her body was found.

On October 26, 2011, a group of teenagers searching for scrap metal found skeletal human remains in a wooded area along a highway in Startex, South Carolina. Authorities determined that the remains belonged to a 40-55 year-old Caucasian woman and investigators found evidence that she had been murdered before her body was hidden under debris.



In 2020, the Spartanburg County Coroner’s Office brought the case to the DNA Doe Project, whose expert volunteer investigative genetic genealogists work pro bono to identify Jane and John Does. A DNA profile was generated from the woman’s remains and uploaded to GEDmatch and FamilyTreeDNA, but the team immediately ran into challenges. Ms. Startex only had distant DNA matches but it was obvious that she had roots in Puerto Rico, where endogamy can complicate genetic genealogy research.

“The genealogy in this case was very complex,” said team leader Rebecca Somerhalder. “Our team built out family trees for hundreds of Puerto Rican DNA matches, but figuring out how they were connected to Ms. Startex was tricky because they were all very distant relatives.”

Over years of research, the team on this case built out a family tree for the unidentified woman that grew to contain nearly 50,000 people. Then, in April 2025, a new DNA match appeared on FamilyTreeDNA. Before long, the team had identified the biological parents of Ms. Startex as a couple from Orange County, New York. The father, as expected, was originally from Puerto Rico, while the mother had deep roots in the area.

However, none of their known children were missing and it became clear that Ms. Startex must’ve been adopted. Investigators spoke with the family and discovered that, after the death of their mother, two of the children had been adopted by a family who later moved to South Carolina. Upon speaking with their adoptive family, they learned that one of them – Jolene Lynn White – had been missing for two decades. Follow up DNA testing confirmed that Jolene was, in fact, the woman formerly known only as Ms. Startex.

“This identification was only possible because of a dedicated and collaborative team,” said researcher Janel Daniels. “It also goes to show that one DNA match can make a huge difference – anyone who uploads their DNA to GEDmatch.com, DNAJustice.org or FamilyTreeDNA.com might help solve a cold case without even realizing.”

The DNA Doe Project is grateful to the groups and individuals who helped solve this case: the Spartanburg County Coroner’s Office, who entrusted the case to the DNA Doe Project; Astrea Forensics for DNA extraction; HudsonAlpha Discovery for sequencing; Kevin Lord for bioinformatics; GEDmatch Pro and FamilyTreeDNA for providing their databases; our generous donors who joined our mission and contributed to this case; and the DNA Doe Project’s dedicated teams of volunteer investigative genetic genealogists who work tirelessly to bring all our Jane and John Does home.

Description
On October 26, 2011 teenagers searching for scrap metal found human remains in a wooded area along Highway 290 behind a home in the Startex Mill Village, Spartanburg, South Carolina. The remains were skeletonized and not recognizable. Dr. Suzanne Able, a forensic anthropologist from the Charleston County Coroner’s Office called to examine the remains, determined the deceased was a 40-55 year-old White / Caucasian female who stood 5’5” tall. She had short reddish-brown hair. Her ears had been pierced at least once, and a gold stem with a red stone earring was found by the side of the head. Investigators called to the scene found evidence that she was killed before her body was hidden under debris.
 
  • #83
  • #84
She would have only been about 29 when she died, so the estimate of 40-55 was pretty off.

RIP Jolene
 
  • #85
She would have only been about 29 when she died, so the estimate of 40-55 was pretty off.

RIP Jolene
And that is a high school photo taken more than 10 years prior to her death. I have a second photo of her with her hair pulled back and her mouth nearly closed that compares a little better to the drawing, but even so, all I had was a skull, a hair description, and an age 40-55 age estimate.
 
  • #86
  • #87
According to her page, she was killed and hidden under debris. Now the police must answer: who was Jolene’s killer? From what I understand, she wasn’t found far from home.

Jolene has such a radiant smile
 
  • #88
According to original reporting, teens discovered White's remains after they lifted the overturned couch and found her skeleton under a tarp. The skeleton was discovered 25 feet into the wooded area and about 75 feet behind the nearest home


White's remains were found with no hair or clothes.

Clevenger said White was last seen in August 2003. Clevenger said her family did not file a missing persons report. Before her identification, coroners called her "Jane Doe Startex.

Under the couch, White's body was also covered with asphalt, shingles, and tin. According to the Coroner's Office, the body was placed there for years and buried under the metal intentionally.




 
Last edited:
  • #89
She had a daughter, I wonder if the daughter lived with her when Jolene disappeared and what was she said about her mother being missing:

Clevenger said investigators worked the case and input White's DNA profile into the DNA Doe system in 2020. In April 2025, the DNA organization discovered that White's maternal half-niece entered DNA into the genealogy ancestry service, FamilyTreeDNA.
That DNA was a close match, which led them to White's family.

The Coroner's Office then interviewed different close matches to find the potential daughter of White. The Coroner's Office got a positive match after sending DNA samples of White's daughter to a University of North Texas Forensics lab.

Clevenger said the nonprofit did half of the heavy lifting in terms of finding possible family members.

"We wouldn't be here today had that match not come up with the half-niece. They rolled from there, and after that, it (the investigation) went 100 miles an hour," Clevenger said.

 
  • #90
Sep 11, 2025
'After 12 years of mystery, the woman known only as “Miss Startex” has been identified as Jolene Lynn White of Cowpens, thanks to groundbreaking DNA genealogy work.Her remains were discovered by teenagers in 2011 near Startex, South Carolina, but traditional forensic methods failed to identify her—until now. Spartanburg County Coroner Rusty Clevenger announced that with the help of the DNA Doe Project, a new match in the FTDNA database allowed researchers to identify her biological family. The team built a family tree with nearly 50,000 people before making the critical link.White is believed to have gone missing in 2003 but was never reported, slowing early efforts. Now, the case is officially classified as a homicide and is under active investigation by the Spartanburg County Sheriff's Office.Her mother, who had held out hope for years, now knows what happened to her daughter — a mix of heartbreak and closure.'
 
  • #91

Startex, SC – Fourteen years after her remains were discovered in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, a Jane Doe known as Ms. Startex has been identified as Jolene Lynn White. White was born in New York in 1976 but had been living in the nearby town of Cowpens when she disappeared in 2005, six years before her body was found.

On October 26, 2011, a group of teenagers searching for scrap metal found skeletal human remains in a wooded area along a highway in Startex, South Carolina. Authorities determined that the remains belonged to a 40-55 year-old Caucasian woman and investigators found evidence that she had been murdered before her body was hidden under debris.



In 2020, the Spartanburg County Coroner’s Office brought the case to the DNA Doe Project, whose expert volunteer investigative genetic genealogists work pro bono to identify Jane and John Does. A DNA profile was generated from the woman’s remains and uploaded to GEDmatch and FamilyTreeDNA, but the team immediately ran into challenges. Ms. Startex only had distant DNA matches but it was obvious that she had roots in Puerto Rico, where endogamy can complicate genetic genealogy research.

“The genealogy in this case was very complex,” said team leader Rebecca Somerhalder. “Our team built out family trees for hundreds of Puerto Rican DNA matches, but figuring out how they were connected to Ms. Startex was tricky because they were all very distant relatives.”

Over years of research, the team on this case built out a family tree for the unidentified woman that grew to contain nearly 50,000 people. Then, in April 2025, a new DNA match appeared on FamilyTreeDNA. Before long, the team had identified the biological parents of Ms. Startex as a couple from Orange County, New York. The father, as expected, was originally from Puerto Rico, while the mother had deep roots in the area.

However, none of their known children were missing and it became clear that Ms. Startex must’ve been adopted. Investigators spoke with the family and discovered that, after the death of their mother, two of the children had been adopted by a family who later moved to South Carolina. Upon speaking with their adoptive family, they learned that one of them – Jolene Lynn White – had been missing for two decades. Follow up DNA testing confirmed that Jolene was, in fact, the woman formerly known only as Ms. Startex.

“This identification was only possible because of a dedicated and collaborative team,” said researcher Janel Daniels. “It also goes to show that one DNA match can make a huge difference – anyone who uploads their DNA to GEDmatch.com, DNAJustice.org or FamilyTreeDNA.com might help solve a cold case without even realizing.”

The DNA Doe Project is grateful to the groups and individuals who helped solve this case: the Spartanburg County Coroner’s Office, who entrusted the case to the DNA Doe Project; Astrea Forensics for DNA extraction; HudsonAlpha Discovery for sequencing; Kevin Lord for bioinformatics; GEDmatch Pro and FamilyTreeDNA for providing their databases; our generous donors who joined our mission and contributed to this case; and the DNA Doe Project’s dedicated teams of volunteer investigative genetic genealogists who work tirelessly to bring all our Jane and John Does home.

Description
On October 26, 2011 teenagers searching for scrap metal found human remains in a wooded area along Highway 290 behind a home in the Startex Mill Village, Spartanburg, South Carolina. The remains were skeletonized and not recognizable. Dr. Suzanne Able, a forensic anthropologist from the Charleston County Coroner’s Office called to examine the remains, determined the deceased was a 40-55 year-old White / Caucasian female who stood 5’5” tall. She had short reddish-brown hair. Her ears had been pierced at least once, and a gold stem with a red stone earring was found by the side of the head. Investigators called to the scene found evidence that she was killed before her body was hidden under debris.
That's good news. It's nice to see dignity restored to a soul.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
122
Guests online
2,805
Total visitors
2,927

Forum statistics

Threads
632,090
Messages
18,621,899
Members
243,018
Latest member
MissLibra
Back
Top