Investigators are turning to the public in hopes of identifying the young girl whose skull surfaced in a Seabrook tattoo shop decades ago.
Forensic anthropologists determined the skull belonged to a girl between 7 and 9 years old who likely died two to 10 years before it was discovered.
San Luis Obispo County investigators have solved a decades-old cold case, using forensic genealogy to identify a suspect in the 1983 murder of Dorothy "Toby" Tate. “Our job is to speak for the victims ...
The identification was made through forensic investigative genetic genealogy. The cause and manner of death remain undetermined.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -A former Cleveland State University professor is accused of mishandling data from two child studies and ...
The National Institutes of Health failed to protect brain scans that an international group of fringe researchers used to ...
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 say the remains, seized from a Seabrook tattoo shop in 1994, likely belonged to a young girl with ancestral ties to Greece. The post Genealogists release image in attempt to identify ...
Artificial intelligence is no longer a side project in policing, it is rapidly becoming the engine that drives how detectives ...
Authorities have begun a search for relatives of the unidentified skull, dubbed "Joanne Doe." The skull was originally ...
If you unwrapped an online ancestry DNA test for Christmas, you might be feeling curious — even excited — about discovering your cultural heritage and family tree. But did the accompanying card warn ...
Ahead of the 250th anniversary of the United States, the initiative invites everyone to discover, preserve, and share their ...