The Capital

DNA presents breakthrou­gh in 1970 killing

Suspect ID’d in cold case of Glen Burnie student’s death

- By Luke Parker

After 52 years, law enforcemen­t officers have identified a suspect in the 1970 killing of Pamela Lynn Conyers, a 16-year-old student at Glen Burnie High School who went to the Harundale Mall one October night and never returned home.

FBI investigat­ors have isolated Forrest Clyde Williams as a suspect using investigat­ive genetic genealogy, the practice of compiling DNA evidence, creating matches and generating a family tree to pinpoint a suspect.

Williams moved to Pasadena as a teenager, police said, where he attended Northeast High School. Police presented a local mugshot Friday from the suspect’s time in Anne Arundel County, saying he had only previously been arrested for “nothing big,” infraction­s like acting drunk and disorderly.

After working side jobs as a carpenter, he returned to Virginia, where he lived the rest of his life. Williams died in Salem, Virginia, in 2018. Other than an assault arrest a few years before he died, police said Williams didn’t have a criminal record.

Anne Arundel County Police Chief Amal Awad and Special Agent Tom Sobockinsk­i with the FBI’s Baltimore Field Office announced the cold case update in a news conference Friday. Police said if Williams still was alive, he would have been charged in Conyers’ death.

“Pamela was never forgotten,” Awad said Friday, “nor will she ever be forgotten.”

Shortly after attending a homecoming bonfire at Glen Burnie High School on Oct. 16, 1970, Conyers took her parents’ 1967 Dodge Monaco to run an errand to Harundale Mall. When she didn’t come home, her

Naval Academy, which is directly adjacent to bars in downtown Annapolis.

An anonymous student survey accompanyi­ng the report shows increases in all types of unwanted sexual contact — from touching to rape — at all the schools. And it cites alcohol as a key factor.

The military services and the academies have struggled for years to combat sexual assault and harassment, with a myriad of prevention, education and treatment programs every year. But despite reams of research, recommenda­tions and a shift to more independen­t prosecutio­ns, the numbers continue to grow.

The increases have triggered outrage on Capitol Hill and a steady stream of legislatio­n. But as yet, the changes have not appeared to make a dent in the problem, although officials argue that improved treatment programs have encouraged more victims to report the crimes.

According to U.S. officials, 155 students reported assaults during the 2022 school year, compared with 131 the previous year. Of those, students at the U.S. Naval Academy reported 61 — nearly double the school’s total for the previous year, when there were 33, which was by far the lowest of all the academies for that year.

Cadets at the Air Force Academy in Colorado reported 52, the same as the previous year, and those at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in New York reported 42, a slight decrease from last year’s 46.

Not all of the assaults included in the report happened while the students were enrolled in the academies. Because students at the academies are encouraged to report assaults, they sometimes will come forward to talk about events that happened in the years before they started school there.

As a result, 16 students reported an assault in the 2021-22 school year that occurred prior to joining the military.

Another 35 cases involved civilians, activeduty service members and prep school students who allegedly were assaulted by someone who was a student.

Altogether, the total number of reported assaults with any connection to a student was 206 — about 28% higher than last year’s total of 161.

U.S. officials provided details about the findings on the condition of anonymity because the report had not yet been publicly released. The report was expected to be released later Friday.

The COVID-19 pandemic led to a brief dip in cases at the academies during the shortened 2019-20 school year, when in-person classes were canceled and students were sent home in the spring to finish the semester online.

At the start of the 202021 school year, students faced a number of restrictio­ns due to the ongoing pandemic. But those were reduced a bit over time, and bars and restaurant­s reopened. By the end of that year, the numbers began to increase again, and officials said it’s hard to tell what, if any, impact COVID-19 had on the 2021 school year.

The Pentagon puts out two reports every year on the number of sexual assaults reported by military academy students and by U.S. service members. But because sexual assault is such an underrepor­ted crime, the department also conducts anonymous surveys every two years to get a clearer picture of the problem among both the students and the active duty population. Pentagon leaders believe the survey provides a more accurate depiction of the assaults and the contributi­ng factors.

Based on the surveys, students at the academies are also less likely to report an assault than service members who are out of school.

Students may worry more about the impact on their military career or even on the career of their attacker.

According to the latest survey of academy students, 21.4% of women said they experience­d unwanted sexual contact in the 2022 school year, compared with about 16% in 2018, the last year the survey was done, due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns. For men, the rate went from 2.6% in 2018 to 4.4% in 2022.

Based on the survey, attacks against women were most often by a male who was usually in the same class year and more than half the time knew them from school or other activities.

Attacks on men were more often — 55% of the time — by a female who was in the same class year and knew them.

Alcohol use was involved in well more than half of the cases reported in the survey, with a high of 65% at the Naval Academy.

The report recommends additional alcohol use policies.

The report also found that sophomores and junior men were most at risk. And women are still far more likely to actually report an assault than men.

Pentagon leaders have for years pushed public campaigns urging students to report any attacks, and they argue that an increase in assault reports suggests that students feel more comfortabl­e coming forward to seek help.

According to the report, the rates of unwanted sexual contact reported in the survey are “at or above civilian rates” based on 2014 and 2018 statistics from the American Associatio­n of Universiti­es. No other more recent statistics were available, so it’s difficult to accurately compare the military academies with other non-military universiti­es.

 ?? JEFFREY F. BILL/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Anne Arundel County Police Chief Amal Awad said that, with the help of investigat­ive genetic genealogy, a suspect in the killing of Pamela Lynn Conyers has been identified as Forrest Clyde Williams. Williams died in 2018.
JEFFREY F. BILL/CAPITAL GAZETTE Anne Arundel County Police Chief Amal Awad said that, with the help of investigat­ive genetic genealogy, a suspect in the killing of Pamela Lynn Conyers has been identified as Forrest Clyde Williams. Williams died in 2018.

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