Lodi News-Sentinel

Detectives used genealogic­al websites to identify Golden State Killer suspect

- By Richard Winton, Joseph Serna and Paige St. John

SACRAMENTO — The break that authoritie­s said led them to the man accused of being the Golden State Killer came when they linked DNA evidence from the slayings to genetic informatio­n contained on a consumer genealogic­al website, authoritie­s said Thursday.

Investigat­ors knew the killer only through a string of DNA recorded in several of the dozen murder scenes. Shaun Hampton, a spokesman for the Sacramento County Sheriff ’s Department, said officials had struggled for years to figure out who that DNA belonged to. Recently, they tapped genealogic­al databases that the public uses to search for relatives and ancestors, he said.

Law enforcemen­t sources told the Los Angeles Times that informatio­n from that websites dramatical­ly reduced the size of their search. Eventually they narrowed the investigat­ion to several families listed in the database, with a pool of about 100 men who fit the age profile of the killer, said the sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Hampton declined to name the site used or provide details about exactly how authoritie­s made the match.

The trail eventually led them to Joseph James DeAngelo, a 72-year-old former police officer living in Citrus Heights, a suburb of Sacramento. The sources said the detectives then retraced his life, looking for connection­s between the numerous crimes across California and where he was during those times.

Private companies that provide ancestry searches from DNA samples submitted by paying participan­ts usually also guarantee privacy for their users. However, customers are alerted to potential matches and can use the service to connect with possible relatives. Sacramento County district attorney’s spokeswoma­n Shelly Orio said more details about the DNA evidence would be laid out today during a court hearing.

Several popular DNA sites — Ancestry.com, 23andme and MyHeritage — all denied that law enforcemen­t officials formally reached out to them about the Golden State Killer case.

Authoritie­s say the Golden State Killer slipped in through backdoors and windows in the dark. First he struck in the foothills east of Sacramento, raping at least 46 women, before he began killing and headed south.

From 1978 to 1986, he killed 12 people in attacks ranging from the Sacramento County city of Rancho Cordova to the Orange County cities of Irvine and Dana Point. In Ventura, he tied up a couple with a drapery cord and raped the wife before fatally bludgeonin­g them with a fireplace log. In Goleta, he bound a doctor and his wife, a clinical psychologi­st, and shot them both.

 ?? FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGAT­ION/COURTESY PHOTOGRAPH ?? Between 1976 and 1986, the violent and elusive individual known as the East Area Rapist and later as the Original Night Stalker and the Golden State Killer, committed 12 homicides, 45 rapes, and more than 120 residentia­l burglaries in multiple...
FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGAT­ION/COURTESY PHOTOGRAPH Between 1976 and 1986, the violent and elusive individual known as the East Area Rapist and later as the Original Night Stalker and the Golden State Killer, committed 12 homicides, 45 rapes, and more than 120 residentia­l burglaries in multiple...

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