A 24-year-old Baltimore native who vanished from his family in the late 1970s has been identified thanks to a DNA project.
Investigators are looking to identify the young girl whose skull was found in a Seabrook business in the 1990s.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A national nonprofit is asking for the public’s help ...
Investigators are turning to the public in hopes of identifying the young girl whose skull surfaced in a Seabrook tattoo shop decades ago.
Geneseo John Doe has been identified after 60 years using technology that was not available in 1966. The DNA Doe Project (DDP) has identified Geneseo John Doe as Ronald Joe Cole. Cole was 19 years old ...
Authorities have identified the woman as Virginia Irene Nelson, known as “Ginny” to her family. She was 46 years old when she was struck and killed along Pacific Coast Highway in January 1982.
Investigators are working to identify the skull of a young girl that was found at a local business in Seabrook, New Hampshire ...
DNA Doe Project seeks to identify "Little Lost Seabrook Doe" using genetic genealogy and public DNA database uploads.
DNA Doe Project explains how it helped identify “Geneseo John Doe” as Ronald Joe Cole using investigative genetic genealogy and public DNA databases.
A body that was found on the side of a Maryland highway in 1981 has been identified as a Baltimore man, according to the nonprofit organization DNA Doe Project.
After their own efforts proved unsuccessful, authorities contacted the DNA Doe Project to help — and last month, the remains were identified as belonging to Lisa Marie Vernon, who had been missing ...