Lodi News-Sentinel

DNA solves 52year-old cold case

- By Colleen Shalby

Fifty-two years after the body of a woman was found near a Huntington Beach farm field, Jane Doe and the man who authoritie­s say beat, raped and slashed her throat have been identified.

The cold case from 1968 was Orange County’s oldest unsolved homicide. Three boys found the body of a young woman in a drainage ditch near Newland Street and Yorktown Avenue on the afternoon of March 14, 1968.

She was wearing a floralprin­t blouse, purple pants, loafers and a costume ring with a large blue stone set in a silver band. No one knew who she was, and the only clue to her presumed killer was a cigarette butt found nearby.

The woman, estimated to be in her mid-20s, ultimately was buried in Newport Beach in an unmarked grave. A search for her identity went nowhere.

Now, five decades later, the woman and the man police say killed her have been identified through investigat­ive genetic genealogy — a method increasing­ly used in recent years to identify long-dead victims and assailants, such as Golden State Killer Joseph James DeAngelo Jr.

Huntington Beach police detectives say Anita Louise Piteau was the woman in the field. She was 26 when she was killed.

Piteau’s remains have been returned to her surviving family — two sisters, a brother and extended family who remained undeterred in their search for her — and a memorial service in her home state of Maine has been held in her honor, attended by investigat­ors who helped solve the case.

“I am extremely grateful and proud of the extraordin­ary efforts of the active and retired members of the Huntington Beach Police Department and the Orange County district attorney’s office in their tireless pursuit of justice for Anita and her family,” Huntington Beach Police Chief Rob Handy said.

“The fact they never stopped working this case for more than five decades is a tremendous testament to the two department­s and our law enforcemen­t profession. There is nothing more important to a victim and their family to know that law enforcemen­t will never give up.”

Over time, officials had called on the public to assist with the investigat­ion. With the help of technology, details began to emerge about the case.

In 2001, Piteau’s clothes were examined and processed for DNA. Then, in 2010, a partial DNA profile was obtained from the cigarette, which matched DNA obtained from Piteau’s sexual assault kit.

Nine years later, in 2019, detectives working with the Orange County district attorney’s office used investigat­ive genetic genealogy to map out the possible family tree of the killer. From that, officials identified Johnny Chrisco, who died in 2015 of cancer and is buried in Washington state.

“Nothing, not even the death of the killer himself, will deter the pursuit of justice,” Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said. “The death of a 26-year-old woman who was left in a farm field, raped, beaten and her neck slashed haunted generation­s of Huntington Beach police officers who refused to give up on identifyin­g Jane Doe and finding the person who robbed a young woman of a lifetime of memories.”

Even as investigat­ors narrowed their search for the killer, they worked to give a name to the woman who had been slain. In 2011, blood from her blouse produced a partial DNA profile that was entered into the national Combined DNA Index System, or CODIS, while her fingerprin­ts were entered into the CAL-ID system and the FBI database.

Detectives, prosecutor­s and forensic scientists began working earlier this year on a possible family tree for the woman, and with the help of genealogis­t Colleen Fitzpatric­k, who cofounded the DNA Doe Project, they were able to identify Piteau through DNA matches with her family.

Chrisco was not originally a suspect in the 1968 crime. Investigat­ors said he was discharged from the Army after three years “following a failed psychologi­cal exam that diagnosed him with having positive aggressive reaction, which was defined as having a pattern of being quick to anger, easy to feel unjustly treated, chronicall­y resentful, immature and impulsive.”

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