IMO our Doe has not yet been identified. Harris County is good about posting press releases and communicating when someone has been identified.
^^rsbm
You're probably right, and since I'm used to seeing shelves and shelves of the unidentified/unclaimed in morgues across the country, I'm shocked that this John Doe was buried by the county, less than a year after his January 2022 death at the hospital.
So what happens if let's say somebody from a foreign land comes forward to make an inquiry?
Does Harris County now keep John Doe's (unauthorized) DNA and/or specimens on file for comparison, and if a match, go unearth the decedent (probably at the expense of the family), so the family can repatriate him home?
For example, in Philadelphia, as of April 1, 2017, the Medical Examiner's Office (MEO) toxicology lab began retaining blood samples for DNA testing indefinitely. If the decedent’s date of death was before April 1, 2017, a blood sample of their DNA was held for one year from the date of death.
In the event that a blood sample is unavailable, the lab will hold a tissue sample for one year from the date of death.
Also, obtaining DNA or a specimen on a person whose body was handled by the MEO requires permission from the deceased person’s
next of kin, and selected laboratory to perform the testing. If next of kin is unavailable or refuses to consent to the release of a specimen, a court order is required to release any samples.
I've not been successful in finding regulatory information from Harris County.
I dunno... I'm foreign-born and to me, being buried by the county less than a year after my death seems unauthorized, expensive, inefficient, and disrespectful to me. JMO.
ETA: In my experience, I agree that Texas is very responsive but there's no guarantee the public will be informed.
Last June 2022 when I contacted Michael Nance, the Regional Program Specialist for Texas (Region 4) to submit Julian Marcelino Perez Mendez (MP-90997) for our John Doe, he responded the next day and provided that NamUs staff would review the submitted information as well as notify the investigating agencies for their consideration, if the agencies had not been previously notified.
He also wrote and I'm quoting:
"Please note, identifications are only made and/or confirmed by investigating agencies. The results of comparisons may or may not be made available to the public for investigatory and privacy reasons."