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Relative's DNA Solves A 1993 Murder Cold Case (washingtonpost.com)

A 44-year-old living in Maine has just been arrested and charged with committing a murder when he was 18, the Washington Post reports: The April 1993 slaying of Sophie Sergie, an Alaska Native, was one of the state's most notorious cold cases until Friday, when authorities announced that DNA genealogical mapping helped triangulate a genetic match... Police recovered the suspect's DNA from Sergie's body. At the time, the district court filing said, DNA processing technology had not been introduced in Alaska. A DNA profile confirming the suspect as male was uploaded in 2000, but it did not match anyone in the FBI's database. The case went dormant for years...

Then the alleged "Golden State Killer" was captured [after searching commercial online genealogy databases for relatives who matched DNA found at a crime scene]. The publicity of the feat, state troopers said, sparked the idea for investigators in the Sergie case. Why not try the same? A forensic genealogist prepared a report on Dec. 18, comparing the suspect's genetic material from the crime scene to likely relatives. A woman's DNA profile emerged in the search. Investigators found their link: She was an aunt of Downs's.

Downs had been a student at the college where the murder took place. He's also been charged with sexual assault -- and with being a fugitive from justice for the last 25 years.

2 of 118 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Is it a crime to be on the run? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you've actually been charged with a crime and got a court date but didn't show up, that's illegal. If you haven't been charged with a crime, then not showing up is definitely not illegal.

    dom

  2. Re:Is it a crime to be on the run? by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's because charges can be brought anonymously. A John Doe was charged with the crime, and remained fugitive for 25 years. At the end of that interval, a specific person was identified as the John Doe. In this case he did not incriminate himself, he was incriminated by genetic information.