Albuquerque Journal

‘Boy under the billboard’ ID’d — his name was Bobby

- www.DianeDimon­d.com; e-mail to Diane@DianeDimon­d.com. Diane Dimond

Now we have a name. After two agonizing decades, the “Boy Under the Billboard” case I wrote about last year has finally been solved. But in determinin­g the identity of the strangled 10-year-old boy, abandoned under a highway billboard, sheriff’s detectives also unraveled a dark family mystery.

His name was Robert “Bobby” Whitt, a boy with a thick thatch of dark hair who was described as “a precious little boy, so sweet, so kind.” A child who loved to dance with his cousins and play video games and air hockey. His recently located family says Bobby adored his father and was the apple of his grandmothe­r’s eye.

The odyssey to figure out the identity of this discarded child involved hundreds of people. From the responding officer and laboratory technician­s who worked tirelessly on scant crime scene evidence to the staff at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the famous facial reconstruc­tion artist, Frank Bender, who took the child’s skull and recreated a chillingly accurate rendition of what Bobby looked like in life.

All were urged on by the dogged determinat­ion of Detective Major Tim Horne with the Orange County, N.C., Sheriff’s Department. In fact, it was Horne who first responded to the September 1998 report about skeletal remains at the intersecti­on of Interstate 85 and 40 near Mebane, N.C. He’d always kept the case file box under his desk where his legs would bump into it to remind him not to forget the otherwise forgotten boy.

After 29 years on the job Horne was set to retire without solving the mystery, but at his retirement party, no less!, he learned all the hard work was about to pay off. In a phone interview he called it his, “Holy crap moment.”

Barbara Rae-Venter, a genetic genealogis­t who helped identify the man police say is the culprit in the long unsolved Golden State Killer case, had been studying the dead boy’s DNA. Working with Parabon NanoLabs, it was discovered that one of the child’s parents was Caucasian, the other Asian. When Rae-Venter compared the child’s results to online DNA ancestry services, she discovered a relative living in Hawaii. Further investigat­ion led to close family members in Ohio, who revealed the boy’s name and said his father had been married to a South Korean woman named Myoung Hwa Cho.

“I’m a big football fan,” Horne told me. “It felt exactly like in a big game — when they throw the Hail Mary during the last seconds. You’re not expecting anyone will catch it. But when they do, there’s just euphoria, a wonderful satisfying feeling as the clock ran out on my career.” So where were Bobby’s parents? The family revealed that Bobby and his mom and dad had moved from Ohio to the Charlotte, N.C., area. In 1998, the father told them that Myoung had taken the child and gone back to South Korea. That was a lie.

Horne learned that four months before Bobby’s remains were found — and 200 miles away in Spartanbur­g, S.C., – the body of an unidentifi­ed Asian woman had been dumped along the same stretch of Interstate 85. Cause of death was suffocatio­n. A DNA comparison revealed she was Bobby’s mother. So where was Bobby’s father? It turns out John Russell Whitt is currently residing at a federal prison in Kentucky, where he was sent after pleading guilty to six counts of armed bank robbery. Whitt’s current release date is November 2037. Authoritie­s say Bobby’s father has confessed to both murders but jurisdicti­onal issues still need to be ironed out between North and South Carolina before a double murder indictment is sought.

“He dumped them on the side of the road like they were trash, and he has shown no remorse,” Ohio cousin Natalie Mosteller told reporters. “It breaks our hearts.” The family had gone to great lengths over the years to find Myoung and Bobby, hiring two law firms, private investigat­ors and scouring social media sites searching for clues.

Bobby’s skeletal remains have been stored on a lonely shelf at the Orange County, N.C., medical examiner’s office all these years. In South Carolina, DNA was extracted from his mother after her body was found and she was cremated. Her ashes have long been in storage.

Horne tells me Whitt relatives will pay for Bobby’s cremation and that he will personally return the ashes to the family in Ohio. “I just don’t want those ashes to be FedEx’d, you know?” he told me. When Horne takes that eight-hour drive to Ohio he says he’d be honored to also deliver Myoung’s crematory urn at the same time, if South Carolina officials agree. The plan is to bury the ashes next to their beloved grandmothe­r.

As our phone conversati­on came to an end, Horne wanted me to know one last thing. “This was a team effort — not a Tim effort. It sure felt good for all of us to cross that goal line at the very end.”

 ??  ?? CRIME AND JUSTICE
CRIME AND JUSTICE

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