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April 11, 2019
Left: Terrance Miller. Photo is believed to have been taken around the time of Jody Loomis' murder. Right: Victim Jody Loomis. (KIRO 7)
https://mynorthwest.com/1342662/mill-creek-cold-case-murder-arrest-1972/
"On August 23, 1972, Loomis, 20, was riding a bicycle from her Mill Creek-area home on Winesap Road to a pasture where her horse was boarded, but never made it to the field.
Detectives said later that day, two people found Loomis near death in a heavily wooded area east of the Bothell-Everett Highway, in what is now Mill Creek. She died on the way to the hospital.
Police said Loomis, who was found wearing only panties, socks and “waffle stomper” boots, was sexually assaulted and shot in the head.
In January 2008, the sheriff’s office cold case unit sent a number of items to the Washington State Patrol crime lab for testing. Among those items were the boots Loomis had been wearing when she was murdered. The lab found sperm on one of her boots and a partial DNA profile was developed.
Eventually, Miller was identified as a suspect with the help of a lab and a genetic genealogist.
Authorities said the DNA data taken from crime scene evidence was uploaded to GEDmatch, a public genetic genealogy website, and several promising matches were found for a few of the suspect’s family members."

Left: Terrance Miller. Photo is believed to have been taken around the time of Jody Loomis' murder. Right: Victim Jody Loomis. (KIRO 7)
https://mynorthwest.com/1342662/mill-creek-cold-case-murder-arrest-1972/
"On August 23, 1972, Loomis, 20, was riding a bicycle from her Mill Creek-area home on Winesap Road to a pasture where her horse was boarded, but never made it to the field.
Detectives said later that day, two people found Loomis near death in a heavily wooded area east of the Bothell-Everett Highway, in what is now Mill Creek. She died on the way to the hospital.
Police said Loomis, who was found wearing only panties, socks and “waffle stomper” boots, was sexually assaulted and shot in the head.
In January 2008, the sheriff’s office cold case unit sent a number of items to the Washington State Patrol crime lab for testing. Among those items were the boots Loomis had been wearing when she was murdered. The lab found sperm on one of her boots and a partial DNA profile was developed.
Eventually, Miller was identified as a suspect with the help of a lab and a genetic genealogist.
Authorities said the DNA data taken from crime scene evidence was uploaded to GEDmatch, a public genetic genealogy website, and several promising matches were found for a few of the suspect’s family members."