More than two decades after a mutilated body was found in the woods of northern Alabama, police have identified the cold-case victim with cutting edge DNA technology.Â
The headless body, with hands and feet also removed seemingly to prevent identification, was discovered on April 15, 1997, along a creek in Union Grove, Alabama. Officials at the time were only able to conclude the victim was a White male and that he died by homicide, according to a press release from the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office.Â
“Investigators from the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office and the State Bureau of Investigation worked tirelessly to identify the individual and followed up on numerous leads; but were still unsuccessful in making a positive identification,” the sheriff’s office said. The case eventually went cold.Â
However, police announced a breakthrough Wednesday, identifying the remains as 20-year-old Jefferey Douglas Kimzey of Santa Barbara, California. The sheriff’s office also said there are persons of interest in the case and that investigators are actively pursuing leads.Â
NATALEE HOLLOWAY, SUSPECT JORDAN VAN DER SLOOT: TIMELINE OF ALABAMA TEEN’S DEATH
The turning point came in 2019 when Sheriff Phil Sims and then-Chief Investigator Keith Wilson partnered with Virginia-based Parabon NanoLabs, a DNA technology company. Scientists used a process called DNA phenotyping to analyze samples discovered at the crime scene and “reverse-engineer” DNA to make a prediction of the victim’s physical appearance.Â
In 2021, authorities released an image composed by Parabon NanoLabs of what the victim may have looked like, including that he was light-skinned with blue eyes with dark blond or light brown hair and that he likely had freckles, local news station WHNT reported.
FLORIDA JURY RECOMMENDS DEATH PENALTY FOR JOSEPH ZIELER IN CASE OF 1990 DOUBLE HOMICIDE
Parabon NanoLabs continued its work, using genetic markers called single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to search for possible…
Read the full article here