Los Angeles Times

Hit-and-run victim is ID’d after 27 years

A push to connect fingerprin­t databases brings to light the name of a woman who died in O.C.

- By Sonali Kohli sonali.kohli @latimes.com Twitter: @Sonali_Kohli

It was 10 p.m. on April Fools’ Day, 1990. As a woman tried to cross Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach, two cars hit her.

Police found her dead on the road, wearing a black dress with fishnet stockings and pink heels. She had a strand of hair wrapped around her finger like a ring, and a lock of hair in her pocket.

For 27 years, no one knew who she was and her family could not be told of her death.

Now, thanks to a push to connect fingerprin­t databases among U.S. agencies, authoritie­s have finally learned her identity: Andrea Kuiper, a 26-year-old Virginia native.

There was too much trauma to Kuiper’s face to release a photo after her death, said Kelly Keyes, an Orange County supervisin­g deputy coroner. Instead, authoritie­s released a sketch, and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children created and circulated a computer-generated model of what she might look like.

The sketches helped investigat­ors in some ways, but they didn’t resolve the matter.

The closest police got to learning her identity was a few people telling them that her name was Andrea. One person told investigat­ors that they thought she might have been from Newport News, Va.

This was a case that should have been easier than many others to solve, Keyes said.

Investigat­ors had her DNA, dental records, fingerprin­ts, even a first name.

About seven years ago, they put all her informatio­n into the National Missing and Unidentifi­ed Persons System, or NamUs, a national searchable database establishe­d in 2010 to help solve cold cases such as this one.

But the years went by, and Andrea’s identity remained a mystery.

Keyes has been leading the effort to get answers on unidentifi­ed bodies for about a year and a half. There are more than 90 open cases. She has solved two.

Last year, Keyes reviewed the file and reached out to Newport News police “to make sure they didn’t have any new missing person reports matching Andrea’s descriptio­n,” Keyes said. They didn’t.

The breakthrou­gh came thanks to a partnershi­p between the FBI and NamUs to solve cases like Kuiper’s.

Kuiper worked for the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, Keyes said. Her job applicatio­n in 1987 included fingerprin­ts, and someone in the federal government finally put those fingerprin­ts into a system that the FBI accessed and shared with NamUs, she said.

Finally, last week, there was a match.

“We were very excited,” Keyes said. “We’re here to serve the public and try to get a family answers and support the deceased. So to finally get Andrea a name was doing exactly what we hoped to do.”

One of two children, Kuiper loved ice skating and art as a girl — her parents still have some of her drawings, they said in a statement.

Her family described her as “smart, clever, attractive and persuasive,” according to a news release from the Orange County Sheriff ’s Department.

The last her parents heard of her was from a friend, a few months before she was struck by the cars, who told them Kuiper was safe. They never filed a missing person’s report, Keyes said.

“We are thankful to know what happened to our daughter after all these years,” Andrea’s father, Richard Kuiper, said in a statement.

“Andrea was loved and respected. She was beautiful. But she was manic depressive, and therefore we had been through quite an adventure.”

All the family has always wanted, Richard Kuiper said, was to see Andrea driving up to their Virginia home in a “car full of beautiful children and say, ‘Hi, it’s me.’ ”

 ?? O.C. Sheriff’s Department ?? ANDREA KUIPER was killed trying to cross Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach.
O.C. Sheriff’s Department ANDREA KUIPER was killed trying to cross Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach.

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