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After 28 years, Margaret M. Anselmo's Killer is Identified
Spokane Police Department and Washington State Patrol Crime Lab Team with Othram to Identify the Suspect in the 1997 Assault & Murder of Margaret M. Anselmo
A traditional STR DNA profile was developed from evidence collected at the crime scene. This profile was entered into the FBI's CODIS database, but there was no match to a known person. Despite an exhaustive investigation, the person who killed Anselmo could not be identified and the case went cold.
This investigation led law enforcement to relatives of a likely suspect. To rapidly validate a key familial link and expedite the genealogical investigation, investigators turned to Othram’s KinSNP® Rapid Relationship Testing, which allows secure, private, and rapid pairwise DNA comparisons between crime-scene evidence and potential relatives.
This investigation led to the positive identification of the suspect, who is now known to be Brian James Anderson, born April 29, 1976. Brian died by suicide on July 8, 2009 in Pend Oreille County, Washington, and is buried in Newton Cemetery in Newport, Washington. At the time of Anselmo's murder, he was 20 years old. If he were still alive, the Spokane Police Department would seek to charge Anderson with first-degree murder and first-degree rape.
This case is a powerful reminder that time and persistence, combined with advances in forensic DNA testing and forensic genetic genealogy, can bring long-awaited answers even decades after a crime. If you would like to support efforts to solve more cases like this, consider contributing your DNA data to the DNASolves database which aids law enforcement in identifying suspects and giving families the answers they deserve. Brian Anderson's name never surfaced during prior investigations, making forensic genetic genealogy an important tool in helping to identify him as a suspect in the case.