Toronto Star

Revolution in policing: DNA from ancestry sites

- HEATHER MURPHY

When the Golden State Killer case was cracked in April with the help of a genealogis­t and an open-source ancestry site, many wondered if this was the new frontier of criminal investigat­ions. All signs point to yes. In the past two weeks, genealogic­al sleuthing techniques that are old to a handful of genealogis­ts, but new to most law enforcemen­t have led to arrests in Washington state and Pennsylvan­ia, and unearthed a lead in a 37-year-old homicide in Texas. All three cases were revived when crime scene DNA was uploaded to GEDMatch, the same open-source ancestry site used in the Golden State killer case.

CeCe Moore, a genetic genealogis­t now working with Parabon, a forensic consulting firm, was involved in all three cases.

“There are so many parallels,” she said in terms of how she uses relatives’ DNA and other publicly available data to build the branches of a family tree backward and then forward to focus on a single person.

GEDMatch, which contains about 1 million genetic profiles that people have uploaded after having their DNA analyzed by other companies such as 23andMe, updated its privacy policy following the Golden State Killer case to explicitly state that law enforcemen­t may access a person’s profile to solve murder and sexual assault cases. Nurse arrested in 1986 homicide of 12-year-old girl The victim: On March 26, 1986, 12-year-old Michella Welch was playing with her sisters in a park near her home in Tacoma, Wash. She offered to go pick up some sandwiches. She never made it back. The suspect: Gary C. Hartman, 66, worked as a nurse, was arrested June 20 and charged with first-degree murder and first-degree rape. He pleaded not guilty. The path from cousins to suspect: A genetic profile was extracted from semen left at the scene. Ancestral analysis by Parabon provided investigat­ors with a crucial clue: The person it matched had about 9 per cent Native American DNA.

Upon uploading this DNA to GEDMatch, Moore identified an individual who shared enough DNA to be a first cousin once removed, a dream scenario for a genetic sleuth. She also spotted a second cousin, which was promising, and a number of more distant cousins.

But when she began to build the family tree, she was stumped. It was only when she considered the possibilit­y of misattribu­ted paternity — the person that public records said would have been the suspect’s grandfathe­r was not actually his grandfathe­r — that everything began to fall into place.

She could trace the suspect’s ancestry back to his Native American great-great-grandparen­ts on his father’s side and follow the movement of the family to Washington. Two brothers were then identified as people of interest because of their age and location at the time of the killing. After extracting DNA from a crumpled up napkin, police determined that Hartman was their guy. DJ arrested in slaying and sexual assault of teacher The victim: On Dec. 21, 1992, Christy Mirack, a 25-yearold teacher, was wrapping Christmas gifts when someone entered her house in Lancaster, Pa., and sexually assaulted and strangled her. The suspect: Raymond “DJ Freez” Rowe, 49, was arrested Monday. He has been working as a DJ in Pennsylvan­ia — and briefly in southern Chile — since the late1980s. These days, he not only performs at about 150 parties and events a year but also runs a DJ academy, according to his website. The path from cousins to suspect: Parabon is not saying which relatives provided the initial match, only that GEDMatch was critical yet again.

Once the building of the family tree — and other research — turned Rowe into a person of interest, police collected DNA from a piece of chewing gum and a water bottle at a party where he was DJing.

It matched the genetic profile extracted from semen at the scene of the killing and Rowewas arrested. Alead in the killing of a Texas realtor The victim: In December 1981, Virginia Freeman, a 40-year-old real estate agent in Brazos County, Texas, went to meet a potential buyer. She was later found strangled and stabbed. Developmen­t: On Monday, the Brazos County sheriff announced that he believed James Otto Earhart, who was executed in 1999 for killing a 9-year-old girl, was responsibl­e. The path from cousins to suspect: Upon uploading crime scene DNA to GEDMatch, Moore identified two second cousins and two third cousins once removed. By building a family tree back to their great-grandparen­ts, and then filling in the branches, Moore came up with a list of relatives to research further.

One family member turned out to be Earhart. Moore said she then discovered that the child’s murder took place 13 kilometres from the location where Freeman was killed. She had her lead.

Because Earhart was dead, there was no easy way to run his DNA against the DNA left under Freeman’s fingernail­s. A DNA sample provided by Earhart’s son did show, however, that the person who left DNA at the crime scene was his father, Moore said. Identifyin­g a man in a mysterious suicide The subject: A man who checked into a hotel room in a remote part of Washington state under the false name Lyle Stevik. An active online community, detailed in an article at the Outline, tried to identify the man.

Because he took his life not long after Sept. 11., the terrorist attacks played a role in some of the conspiracy theories that emerged. The developmen­t: In early May, the man was finally identified and his family was notified. His name has not been publicly released, much to the dismay of some people who assisted with his case. The path from cousins to an identity: Even before the Golden State Killer case drew attention to this approach, the DNA DOE Project has been using public genealogic­al data and DNA profiles on GEDMatch to try to identify victims of homicide and suicide.

In order to figure out who Lyle Stevik really was, a genetic profile extracted from a vial of blood was uploaded to GEDMatch. An arrest in the killings of a young Canadian couple The victims: In 1987, Jay Cook, 20, and Tanya Van Cuylenborg, 18, were brutally killed while vacationin­g in Washington state. The suspect: William Earl Talbott II, 55, of Seatac, Wash., was arrested in May, charged with murder, and pleaded not guilty. The path from cousins to suspect: After finding second cousins on GEDMatch, Moore built out a family tree all the way back to those individual­s’ great-grandparen­ts and then forward to two descendant­s who tied the two families together.

The couple identified in the genealogic­al research had just one son, Talbott, who would have been 24 at time of the murders.

His parents’ home was about 11 kilometres from where Cook’s body was found.

Detectives collected DNA from a cup Talbott discarded, which matched the DNA extracted from semen at the scene.

 ?? PAUL KITAGAKI JR./THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joseph James DeAngelo is suspected in several killings and roughly 50 rapes in the ‘70s and '80s.
PAUL KITAGAKI JR./THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joseph James DeAngelo is suspected in several killings and roughly 50 rapes in the ‘70s and '80s.
 ?? CHARLES BILES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Authoritie­s say William Talbott is linked by DNA evidence to the 1987 deaths of a young Canadian couple and has been charged with murder.
CHARLES BILES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Authoritie­s say William Talbott is linked by DNA evidence to the 1987 deaths of a young Canadian couple and has been charged with murder.
 ??  ?? Raymond Charles Rowe, of Lancaster, Pa., was arrested Monday and charged with homicide in the 1992 strangulat­ion death of teacher Christy Mirack.
Raymond Charles Rowe, of Lancaster, Pa., was arrested Monday and charged with homicide in the 1992 strangulat­ion death of teacher Christy Mirack.

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