Los Angeles Times

Sword-killing cold case gets a genetic break

Clues from genealogy team help lead police to arrest distant relative of La Mesa man killed in 2006.

- By Teri Figueroa Figueroa writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

For more than 12 years, police searched for a killer, one who ambushed and repeatedly plunged a sword into a La Mesa man as the victim walked into his own apartment.

Police found blood from an unknown source — believed to be the killer — at the scene. But leads in the June 2006 slaying of Scott Martinez, 47, ran dry. Searches of DNA crime databases yielded no matches.

Then last fall, armed with crime-scene DNA data, a team of four genetic genealogis­ts working with Parabon NanoLabs took on the case. It took about a weekend of digging for them to come up with the name of a suspect: Zachary Bunney, 39.

On Thursday, La Mesa police announced that they had arrested Bunney in the death of Martinez. They did not discuss a motive and declined to go into detail about the investigat­ion.

Bunney has not yet been arraigned.

The arrest came as an unexpected relief to Martinez’s adult daughter, Angelina, who said Thursday that her dad — who died on Father’s Day weekend — had been her best friend.

“It’s finally over,” she said. “I can breathe.”

The arrest marks the second known San Dieog County case in which genetic genealogy has led police to publicly identify a murder suspect. In November, Carlsbad police cited the method when naming a suspect in the 2007 killing of Jodine Serrin. (The suspect killed himself in 2011.)

When genetic genealogis­ts came up with Bunney’s name, it was “news to me,” said La Mesa police Det. Ryan Gremillion, the lead investigat­or on the case. It had not been a name on his radar.

Genetic genealogy came to the forefront as a crimesolvi­ng tool in April with the announceme­nt that it had been used to catch the suspected Golden State Killer — so named for a crime spree that included at least 13 murders and more than 50 rapes in California from 1974 to 1986.

After that case made headlines, Gremillion asked his bosses for permission to give the method a try in the Martinez case.

Understand­ing the science

Here’s how genetic genealogy works: Police upload DNA from a crime scene into a public repository of DNA profiles in hopes that the evidence shares markers with what exists in the database. If there is enough of a family connection between the crime-scene DNA samples and a profile in the database, experts might be able to figure out whose DNA was left at the site of a homicide.

Searches are done using public databases — GEDmatch, with 1.2 million DNA profiles, is the biggest.

Consumers must intentiona­lly upload their data to to be part included in such databases. Many users do so because they are eager to figure out who their ancestors were. Others are genetic genealogis­ts working with police to solve a violent crime.

In the Martinez slaying, the name genealogis­ts came up with was not that of a close family member, said CeCe Moore, chief genetic genealogis­t with Parabon.

It was a more distant relative.

“We had to do quite a lot of work to pull the pieces together,” Moore said.

Traditiona­l tactics cement the case

Once armed with a name, Gremillion followed up with more traditiona­l investigat­ive methods.

The detective learned that Bunney had been a 26year-old La Mesa resident at the time of the killing. He had since moved to Oregon and was living in Hillsboro, outside metro Portland.

Gremillion secured a warrant that allowed him to obtain a DNA sample from Bunney.

La Mesa Police Chief Walt Vasquez said investigat­ors had found extensive evidence at the crime scene, including blood they believed came from the suspect. Testing showed that the DNA Bunney provided matched DNA recovered from the scene of Martinez’s slaying.

A judge issued a warrant for Bunney’s arrest. He was picked up Jan. 10 and jailed in Oregon on a charge of murder. It was not immediatel­y clear whether Bunney had an attorney.

As of Thursday, Bunney was still in an Oregon jail. La Mesa police said he would be brought back to San Diego County and was slated to be arraigned Friday.

“Justice may have been delayed,” San Diego Dist. Atty. Summer Stephan said, “but we will do our best to make sure it is not denied.”

Although an arrest has been made, the case is still under active investigat­ion, authoritie­s said.

Those with informatio­n about the case can contact Gremillion, the lead detective, at (619) 667-7537 or by email at rgremillio­n@ ci.la-mesa.ca.us.

Anonymous tips can be left by calling San Diego Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-8477, or online at SDCrimeSto­ppers.org.

 ?? Washington County Sheriff's Office ?? ZACHARY BUNNEY, 39, is jailed in Oregon on a charge of murder.
Washington County Sheriff's Office ZACHARY BUNNEY, 39, is jailed in Oregon on a charge of murder.
 ??  ?? POLICE LEADS had run dry in Scott Martinez’s ambush stabbing.
POLICE LEADS had run dry in Scott Martinez’s ambush stabbing.

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