Antelope Valley Press

DNA leads to arrest in 1982 killing

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SUNNYVALE (AP) — A Hawaii man has been arrested after DNA technology helped investigat­ors identify him as a suspect in the, 1992, slaying of a 15-year-old girl who was abducted in Northern California from a bus stop, raped and killed, authoritie­s said.

Karen Stitt was waiting for a bus, in Sunnyvale, when she disappeare­d in the early morning hours of Sept. 3, 1982. A delivery truck driver discovered her naked body among some bushes 100 yards away from the bus stop, the Mercury News reported, Tuesday.

Last week, Sunnyvale police arrested Gary Ramirez, 75, in Maui after they say his DNA matched the blood from Karen’s leather jacket and the four-foot cinder block wall where the killer left her after stabbing her 59 times, the newspaper reported.

Ramirez remains incarcerat­ed in a Maui jail awaiting an extraditio­n hearing, Wednesday, to bring him to California. It was not immediatel­y clear if he has retained an attorney who can speak on his behalf.

Santa Clara County cold case investigat­ors say they used DNA technology linked to family tree genealogy, the same investigat­ive process that led to the arrest and guilty plea of the Golden State Killer, in 2018.

Sunnyvale police Detective Matt Hutchison said he arrested Ramirez, a man with a bad hip who appeared so shocked he could say little more than, “Oh my gosh.”

Ramirez, a retired bug exterminat­or, had no criminal record, police say. His older brother, Rudy Ramirez, who also lives in Maui, said he can’t imagine that his younger brother would be capable of such a horrific crime.

“I’ve never seen him violent or get angry ever,” Ramirez’s brother told the newspaper. “He wouldn’t hurt a fly.”

Three years ago, Hutchison teamed up with a genealogis­t who narrowed the DNA down to four brothers. Hutchison then sought out one of Gary Ramirez’s children and collected a DNA sample, which showed a high probabilit­y that the suspect was their father, he said. After that, authoritie­s used a search warrant to swab Gary Ramirez’s mouth for a DNA sample, which a crime lab confirmed matched the DNA found at the crime scene.

When he opened the email with the DNA match, “I wanted to scream, but I can’t because I didn’t want to wake up the hotel,” Hutchinson said. “So I just took a moment to reflect.”

“I took a quick glance at her photo,” he said, “and I just told her, ‘We did it.’”

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