Los Angeles Times

Found dead in freezer. How did she get there?

- By Brittny Mejia

Mary Margaret HaxbyJones worked as a nurse anesthetis­t in San Diego for nearly two decades before resigning in 1999. She went years without speaking to relatives, and exactly what happened to her has been a mystery since December, when her body was discovered in a freezer at a home where she once lived.

Detectives believe Haxby-Jones — who would have been 81 this year — might have been missing or dead for up to nine years. Police say she was never reported as missing.

As the San Diego Police Department awaits a determinat­ion on her death from the medical examiner, detectives are working to piece together her life.

“A lot of this investigat­ion is trying to learn what we can about her,” said Lt. Jud Campbell. “There’s a lot of gaps we’re still trying to fill in.”

On Dec. 22, officers arrived at a home on Zion Avenue to investigat­e a report of a death. Family members visiting from out of town had found a body inside a chest freezer.

Those visitors are related to a current resident of the home, not to Haxby-Jones, according to Campbell.

On Thursday, police said the body had been identified as that of Haxby-Jones. Detectives believe that at some point she had lived at the address on Zion Avenue.

Her cause of death has not been determined and remains under investigat­ion by the medical examiner’s office, police said. While there was no obvious traumatic injury to the body, police are investigat­ing the case as a suspicious death.

It’s unclear when the medical examiner will have answers about HaxbyJones’ death, police said.

“When you don’t have that obvious traumatic injury, it’s just a much slower determinat­ion,” Campbell said. “They have to come to a

determinat­ion they can support scientific­ally.”

There have been no arrests, according to Campbell. He said no welfare check had been called in on Haxby-Jones.

He declined to answer questions regarding the current resident of the home.

“We just want to get informatio­n that will help us figure out what happened here,” Campbell said. “Even while the medical examiner is doing their thing.”

A relative of HaxbyJones by marriage, who asked not to be identified due to the ongoing investigat­ion, said she doesn’t believe the woman had any blood relatives and noted that the family “is estranged.”

Although the relative hadn’t seen Haxby-Jones since 1995, she described her as someone who smiled often and loved to get her nails and hair done. HaxbyJones and her husband also rescued exotic birds, she recalled.

“It’s all under investigat­ion, and it’s kind of saddening about how everything is happening,” the relative said. “We’re trying to not make a comment at this time, because we weren’t there, we don’t know, we can’t answer these questions.”

She added that HaxbyJones was a military veteran. Google Street View images of the home where records show Haxby-Jones lived show a car with a sticker reading “U.S. Army Retired.”

“I’m hoping that she can get the burial she deserves,” the relative said.

 ?? THE BODY Google Street View ?? was found Dec. 22 at a San Diego home.
THE BODY Google Street View was found Dec. 22 at a San Diego home.

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