Los Angeles Times

DNA solves girl’s 1972 rape, murder

Investigat­ors use genealogic­al data to ID the killer as a man who died in 2003.

- By Colleen Shalby

Eleven-year-old Terri Lynn Hollis was riding her bicycle in her Torrance neighborho­od when she was kidnapped on Nov. 23, 1972, Thanksgivi­ng Day.

Her body was found a day later, miles away on a desolate, rocky beach in Oxnard. Terri had been raped and strangled. For nearly half a century, her family never knew who was responsibl­e.

Terri’s brother Randy Hollis was 16 at the time of his little sister’s death. Every Thanksgivi­ng since, he takes a moment to remember her. A few weeks ago, he arrived home to find officers on his driveway. Inside, they told him that a suspect in Terri’s murder had been identified. Though it had been 47 years, Hollis said, he was consumed by emotion.

“That really surprised me after all this time. It brings back a lot of tough memories,” he said.

On Wednesday, Hollis and his sister Tammy — the only two left from their family of six — sat with family and friends at the Torrance Police Department as they listened to officials reveal the details of their discovery.

“This is what nightmares are made of,” said Torrance Police Chief Eve Irvine.

A sample collected from Terri’s body at the time of her death had been connected to a DNA sample that was submitted to a genealogic­al database by a relative of the suspect.

That match led detectives to identify the suspect as Jake Edward Brown. He died in Arizona in 2003 and had previously been arrested in connection with narcotics, robbery and two rapes after Hollis’, in April 1973 and April 1974. The DNA matching method was the same as that used to identify Joseph James DeAngelo Jr. as the suspect in the Golden State Killer case.

In 1974, Torrance police arrested a man believed to have been connected with Terri’s murder. Evidence showed otherwise, and in the decades since, nearly 2,000 interviews and multiple leads had proved futile. Then in 2018, a hit on the genealogic­al database led officials to Arizona, where Brown was buried. Detectives exhumed the body and DNA Labs Internatio­nal in Virginia extracted DNA and confirmed that Brown, also known as Thomas Tracy Burum, was the killer.

Randy Hollis, at a news conference Wednesday, tearfully shared a message with families still searching for answers about their loved one’s deaths.

“Don’t lose the heart or the drive to get resolution. You just never know.”

He said that although his sister’s killer has been identified, this Thanksgivi­ng will be no different than those past. He’ll still take a moment by himself to remember his sister. Maybe, he said, a moment longer.

“Just a few moments to remember how lucky we are to have what we have.”

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? TORRANCE police say a genealogic­al database led them to a relative of 11-year-old Terri Hollis’ killer.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times TORRANCE police say a genealogic­al database led them to a relative of 11-year-old Terri Hollis’ killer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States