WY WY - Cheyenne, 'Laramie Co Baby John Doe', WhtMale Infant, UP10781, wrapped in blanket, Feb'88

Learn more about this case on DNASolves.

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Laramie County Sheriff’s Office Reopens Cold Case to Identify Infant From 1988 | Cowboy State Daily
April 12 2021
''A cold case file might be warming up in Cheyenne.

The Laramie County Sheriff’s Office is hoping to use new technology to identify an infant whose lifeless body was found in February of 1988.

Law enforcement is partnering with the DNA laboratory Othram to identify the baby boy, whose body was discovered by a couple walking near Happy Jack Road and McKinney Drive in Cheyenne on February 28, 1988.

The infant, described as caucasian with brown hair and blue eyes, weighing 6.5 pounds, was wrapped in a blanket.

An autopsy revealed that the child had air in his lungs at the time of his death, indicating that the had been born alive – so the death was ruled a homicide.

Despite pursuing all available leads at the time, including canvassing local hospitals and schools as well as the Air Force base, law enforcement was unable to locate the baby’s parents, and the case went cold.

But new technology could unveil the mystery – with help from the public.

The Sheriff’s Office is partnering with Othram, the world’s first private DNA laboratory built specifically to apply the power of modern parallel sequencing to forensic evidence.

According to their website, scientists at Othram are experts at recovery, enrichment, and analysis of human DNA, using only trace quantities of degraded or contaminated materials.

But that kind of technology doesn’t come cheap – so a DNASolves fund has been created to cover the costs of testing and research for the case.

The fund is hoping to raise $5,000 to pay for the cutting edge laboratory techniques and computational algorithms to extract the most value from DNA evidence.

If anyone has information that could aid this investigation, they are encouraged to contact Detective Sergeant Curtis Burch at the Laramie County Sheriff’s Office at 307-633-4763. Here is the live link to the DNASolves.com page –Who is Laramie County Baby John Doe (1988)?''
 
Who is Laramie County Baby John Doe (1988)?
''In 2021, the Laramie County Sheriff’s Office partnered with Othram to use Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing® and forensic genealogy to produce new leads in the case. If anyone has information that could aid this investigation, they are encouraged to contact Detective Sergeant Curtis Burch at the Laramie County Sheriff’s Office at 307-633-4763. A DNASolves fund has been created to cover the costs of testing and research for this case. The police agency case number is LCSO 88-691 and the case is logged in NamUs as UP10781.

About Othram Inc. Othram is the world’s first private DNA laboratory built specifically to apply the power of modern parallel sequencing to forensic evidence. Othram’s scientists are experts at recovery, enrichment, and analysis of human DNA from trace quantities of degraded or contaminated materials. Founded in 2018, and located in The Woodlands, Texas, our team works with academic researchers, forensic scientists, medical examiners, and law enforcement agencies to achieve results when other approaches have failed. Follow Othram on Twitter @OthramTech or visit Othram.com to learn how we can help you with your case. Visit dnasolves.com to learn how anyone can make a difference in helping solve the next cold case.''
rbbm.
 
2466UMWY
''Date of Discovery: February 28, 1988
Location of Discovery: Cheyenne, Laramie County, Wyoming
Estimated Date of Death: 12 hours prior
State of Remains: Recognizable face
Cause of Death: Unknown

Physical Description
Estimated Age: Infant
Race: White
Sex: Male
Height: Unknown
Weight: 6.5 lbs.
Hair Color: Brown
Eye Color: Brownish-blue
Distinguishing Marks/Features: Unknown

Identifiers
Dentals: Not available
Fingerprints: Not available
DNA: Sample submitted - Tests not complete

Clothing & Personal Items
Clothing: None.
Jewelry: None.
Additional Personal Items: A blanket (description unavailable).

Circumstances of Discovery
The body of an infant was found wrapped in a blanket in a culvert pipe, under the main access road to a rural residential area.''
 
As reported last Monday, the Laramie County Sheriff’s Department has partnered with Othram labs to reopen a 33-year-old murder investigation. Using the new technology of Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing, they are working to solve the case of a “Baby John Doe” who was found in west Cheyenne in 1988.

Rapid developments in DNA sequencing are opening cold cases all over the world. Just a year ago, a similar case was solved in Meriden, Connecticut. The newborn had been left under a tree two months before Baby John Doe was found in Cheyenne. When the DNA trail led police to his mother, she told them that “she’d been waiting 32 years for the day [when] police would be knocking on her door regarding this incident.” Her reaction revealed a simple truth: The solution that she found in a moment of panic neither resolved her problems, nor ended the matter.
Lange: Justice, healing and Baby John Doe
 
@othram, thank you for taking on Laramie County Baby John Doe's case. Has his case been fully funded? Are there any composite sketches or photos available? Best wishes for a quick solve!

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
NamUs #UP10781
ME/C Case Number LCSO 88-691 *
Male, White / Caucasian
Date Body Found February 28, 1988
Location Found Cheyenne, Wyoming
Estimated Age Range 0 Years
Estimated Age Group Infant
Estimated Age Range (Years)--
Estimated Year of Death 1988
Estimated PMI 12 Hours
Height Cannot Estimate
Weight 6 lbs, Estimated
Hair Color Brown
Eye Color Unknown
Eye Description Brownish-blue eyes
Clothing - blanket NOD - On the Body

Inventory of Remains All parts recovered
Condition of Remains Recognizable face

Circumstances of Recovery - A Caucasian male infant, 6.5 pounds, unclothed, brown hair, brownish blue eyes wrapped in a blanket was discovered in a culvert pipe, under main access road to residential area-rural.
 
@othram, thank you for taking on Laramie County Baby John Doe's case. Has his case been fully funded? Are there any composite sketches or photos available? Best wishes for a quick solve!

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
NamUs #UP10781
ME/C Case Number LCSO 88-691 *
Male, White / Caucasian
Date Body Found February 28, 1988
Location Found Cheyenne, Wyoming
Estimated Age Range 0 Years
Estimated Age Group Infant
Estimated Age Range (Years)--
Estimated Year of Death 1988
Estimated PMI 12 Hours
Height Cannot Estimate
Weight 6 lbs, Estimated
Hair Color Brown
Eye Color Unknown
Eye Description Brownish-blue eyes
Clothing - blanket NOD - On the Body

Inventory of Remains All parts recovered
Condition of Remains Recognizable face

Circumstances of Recovery - A Caucasian male infant, 6.5 pounds, unclothed, brown hair, brownish blue eyes wrapped in a blanket was discovered in a culvert pipe, under main access road to residential area-rural.
There are no sketches available, unfortunately. The case is funded and testing is in progress!
 
ArcGIS Web Application
The NCMEC map lists a male child, age 1-2, found in Big Horn County, WY in 1988. The case isn't on NamUs or the Doe Network, and I can't find any other info on him aside from a page on the unidentified wikia (Big Horn County John Doe).
He's older than this child, and was apparently found in October, but I'm wondering if this is the same child and/or the cases are connected somehow? Laramie and Big Horn counties are pretty far away from each other, but it's an odd coincidence.
 
ArcGIS Web Application
The NCMEC map lists a male child, age 1-2, found in Big Horn County, WY in 1988. The case isn't on NamUs or the Doe Network, and I can't find any other info on him aside from a page on the unidentified wikia (Big Horn County John Doe).
He's older than this child, and was apparently found in October, but I'm wondering if this is the same child and/or the cases are connected somehow? Laramie and Big Horn counties are pretty far away from each other, but it's an odd coincidence.

I doubt very much there's a connection. The two locations are more than 350 miles apart, depending on exactly which part of the county the child was found in.
 

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