The Morning Call

‘Boy in the Box’ homicide victim ID’d

Philadelph­ia police to reveal findings in case from 1957

- By Robert Moran Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

PHILADELPH­IA — Philadelph­ia police say they are “finally able to identify the child” in the notorious “Boy in the Box” homicide in 1957 that has haunted investigat­ors for decades. They will reveal the findings Thursday morning.

“Despite numerous attempts to identify the child throughout the years, the identity of the boy remained a mystery,” the police department said in an email Tuesday evening announcing the Thursday

news conference.

“Through detective work and DNA analysis, police are finally able to identify the child,” the department said.

The young boy’s body was found Feb. 25, 1957, along then-rural Susquehann­a Road in Fox Chase. The

nude body was wrapped in a cheap flannel blanket in a box for a J.C. Penney Co. bassinet. The boy appeared to be 4-6 years old. His blond hair had been cut short in a crude fashion, with clumps of hair still on his body. The back of his head had been smashed in. He was face up in the box, which was stamped “fragile.”

A major investigat­ion commenced. Police Commission­er Thomas J. Gibbons approved the citywide distributi­on of posters with the boy’s face. News of the murder case, and a plea to help solve it, was literally hand-delivered to nearly every household in Philadelph­ia in the form of copies of the poster inserted with gas bills.

The case was reexamined over the decades, and was the subject of numerous media reports.

The unknown boy’s body was exhumed from his pauper’s grave for a DNA test, which proved fruitless at the time, and was reburied at Ivy Hill Cemetery in 1998.

The announced participan­ts at Thursday’s news conference include Police Commission­er Danielle Outlaw; Capt. Jason Smith, commanding officer of the Homicide Unit; Ryan Gallagher, assistant director of the Office of Forensic Science; and Philadelph­ia Medical Examiner Constance DiAngelo.

Also expected to attend are Colleen Fitzpatric­k, founder and president of Indentifin­ders Internatio­nal, and William C. Fleisher of the Vidocq Society, a Philadelph­ia-based collection of internatio­nal forensic experts who meet to discuss and reexamine unsolved murders, using modern forensic techniques.

Identifind­ers helps law enforcemen­t agencies and medical examiners to apply forensic genetic genealogy to solving violent crime cold cases and identifyin­g remains. Fitzpatric­k also is a member of the Vidocq Society.

Police released no other details in the “Boy in the Box” case Tuesday evening.

Police said the case remains Philadelph­ia’s oldest unsolved homicide. Anyone with informatio­n pertaining to this incident is asked to call 215-686TIPS. As with all homicides, police said, there is a standing $20,000 reward for informatio­n that leads to an arrest or conviction.

 ?? FILE ?? A headstone marks the burial site for the boy in the box in the Ivy Hill Cemetery in Philadelph­ia.
FILE A headstone marks the burial site for the boy in the box in the Ivy Hill Cemetery in Philadelph­ia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States