Kentucky law enforcement agencies are increasingly using forensic genealogy to identify crime victims and suspects.
Kentucky officials have several identified homicide victims and suspects by matching their DNA to potential relatives.
"Who was Judy Doe?" That question had haunted sheriff's investigators in Lake County, Fla., since a body was discovered there in 1984. The answer, officials announced on Jan. 29, was Rebecca Sue Hill, ...
This episode of Arizona Crime Uncovered follows the story of two Jane Does who were both found dead in Mohave County decades ago.
Police found the man on Dec. 4, 1991, in the Boston Harbor near Thompson Island. An autopsy performed by the at the time ruled his death a homicide. After 33 years, the victim was identified as ...
ALTOONA — Lake County Sheriff's Office detectives have determined the identity of the young woman whose remains were found ...
The victim of a 1991 homicide has been identified as Toussaint Gonsalves using investigative genetic genealogy, police said.
Three decades ago, the body of an unknown man with a stab wound was found in Boston Harbor. Genetic genealogy helped police ...
After 40 years, deputies said they have identified a Florida cold case victim who would have been a teenager when she went ...
Advances in DNA technology in the past three decades led Everett police to a Las Vegas man who was Maryann Daniels' neighbor when she was killed in 1989.
In the early 1980s, one of Rebecca's family members mistakenly identified human remains found in Little Rock as belonging to her, according to the release.
John Ramsey drove from his Moab, Utah, home to meet with police in Boulder, Colo., where JonBenét was murdered in 1996.