Las Vegas Review-Journal

▶ COLD CASE

- Contact Ricardo Torres-cortez at rtorres@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow him on Twitter @rickytwrit­es.

put a name to the body.

“Now we’re only halfway there,” Boucher said. “Now, the pursuit for Tammy’s killer or killers begins.”

Boucher said police now know that Terrell was last seen alive in a Roswell restaurant a week prior, where she was accompanie­d by an unidentifi­ed man and an unknown woman after a state fair.

Terrell was “possibly planning to leave New Mexico for an unknown destinatio­n in California,” police said in a news release, which noted that she was identified Nov. 10.

Police did not name Terrell’s sisters or offer additional details on the murder investigat­ion.

Jane Doe

Terrell’s nude body was discovered facedown by two men who had pulled off state Route 146, according to Las Vegas Review-journal archives.

The few leads gathered — evidence that she was bashed on the head with a hammer and stabbed in the back, and that Terrell had a homemade “S” tattoo on her right forearm — did not advance the case.

The girl was 5 feet, 2 inches, weighed 103 pounds and had red hair and green eyes. She went nameless, as did a possible suspect or motive.

“I’ll never not work on it,” Williams told the Review-journal for a retirement story in 2006. “We’re basically the only family she’s got.”

In 2003, Terrell’s body was exhumed to compare dental records after a detective in Sparks uncovered the case of a missing girl who looked like her. It was not her.

Former Clark County Coroner Michael Murphy told the Review-journal in 2013 that his office had taken X-rays, fingerprin­ts and dental samples but hit a wall.

“Back in the day, that’s the way everybody did business,” Murphy said. “We’re talking about the science of the ’80s and ’90s versus today. We were very limited in the resources we could get.”

The case received additional attention in 2015, the 35th anniversar­y of Terrell’s death. Williams and Ebert, the detective who took over the investigat­ion, visited the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children that year, Boucher said.

Not forgotten

“Tammy’s sisters, I will tell you, were tremendous­ly grateful to finally know what happened to their sister 41 years ago,” Boucher said.

The captain compliment­ed Williams’ dedication.

“John’s been on the case for 41 years. I mean, he’s wanted to know who Tammy was for 41 years,” he said. “I’m sure there’s some satisfacti­on in that, but that’s only half the story, you know. We still need to find her killers and bring them to justice.”

Jackie Williams, who has been married to the retired detective for 48 years, said she was able to speak Terrell’s family.

“It was very exciting. I wanted to tell her that her sister was not forgotten, that we’ve always remembered her,” she said. “That was the important part for me.”

Her husband said he had never lost hope of identifyin­g Terrell.

“Someday, I knew, we would find out who she is. And now, someone will find out who did it,” he said.

“I’ll continue helping Detective Ebert anyway I possibly can.”

Anyone with informatio­n on the case may contact Henderson police at 702-267-4750. To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 702-385-5555 or crimestopp­ersofnv. com.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e ?? A photograph of 17-year-old Tammy Corrine Terrell from Roswell, N.M., is displayed during a Thursday news conference at which Henderson police provided details about a 1980 cold case homicide. Terrell’s body was found Oct. 5, 1980, near old Lake Mead Drive and Arroyo Grande Boulevard.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e A photograph of 17-year-old Tammy Corrine Terrell from Roswell, N.M., is displayed during a Thursday news conference at which Henderson police provided details about a 1980 cold case homicide. Terrell’s body was found Oct. 5, 1980, near old Lake Mead Drive and Arroyo Grande Boulevard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States