North Carolina investigators used DNA and forensic genealogy to identify a woman who had been strangled to death and dumped on the side of a freeway more than three decades ago.
The body of Lisa Coburn Kesler, 20, of Jacksonville, Georgia, was found along the side of I-40 East near New Hope Church Road exit in September 1990.
Police pursued hundreds of leads but hit a dead end.
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Over the years, investigators created a bust of the victim by applying forensic facial reconstruction techniques to a model of her skull and generated a digital illustration of her face that was circulated on social media, the Orange County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.
DNA was still in its infancy and couldn’t easily be used at the time to help crack the case.
“Throughout the decades, some of our finest investigators kept plugging away. When you can’t close a case, it gets under your skin. You set the file aside for a while, but you keep coming back to it,” Sheriff Charles Blackwood said.
Investigator Dylan Hendricks took over the case in June 2020. He sent a degraded hair fragment to Astrea Forensics for DNA extraction and the lab produced a profile of the victim.
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Forensic genealogist Leslie Kaufman was then enlisted to try to identify family members using genealogy databases like GEDmatch and FamilyTreeDNA.
She got a hit on paternal cousins, mapped out a family tree and investigators began interviewing relatives. Kesler’s name quickly emerged as a relative who vanished three decades earlier.
“Essentially, there was a Lisa-shaped hole on a branch of the family tree right where the DNA told us Lisa should be, and no one knew where she was,” Hendricks said.
A maternal relative provided a DNA sample, which confirmed Kesler’s identity. The chief medical examiner has now amended her death…
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