Post Tribune (Sunday)

Headless torso in Idaho cave ID’d as 1916 escapee Loveless

- By Rebecca Boone Associated Press

BOISE, Idaho — The headless torso that was found in a remote Idaho cave 40 years ago has finally been identified as belonging to an outlaw who killed his wife with an ax and was last seen after escaping from jail in 1916.

Clark County Sheriff Bart May said late last month that the cold case will remain open because investigat­ors don’t yet know who killed Joseph Henry Loveless. Still, they were able to notify one of Loveless’ surviving relatives, an 87-year-old grandson, of his fate.

For investigat­ors, the mystery began when a family hunting for arrowheads in Buffalo Cave near Dubois, Idaho, on Aug. 26, 1979, found his remains wrapped in burlap and buried in a shallow grave. Few additional clues turned up until March 30, 1991, when a girl exploring the same cave system found a mummified hand. Investigat­ors began excavating, finding an arm and two legs nearby, also wrapped in burlap.

Local authoritie­s turned to Idaho State University for help, and over the subsequent years anthropolo­gy students and staffers from ISU worked on the case. Experts from the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n and the FBI were recruited to assist. No other remains were ever found, however, and without the head, identifyin­g the John Doe of Buffalo Cave seemed unlikely.

Scientists were able to determine the slain man’s hair was reddish brown, that he was of European descent, that he may have been around 40 years old when he died, and that his body had been there for at least six months and possibly as long as 10 or more years. They weren’t able to tell what killed the man, though they could determine that his body was dismembere­d by sharp tools, perhaps to make it easier for his killer or killers to hide the remains.

Earlier this year ISU and Clark County authoritie­s asked the DNA Doe Project for help. The nonprofit uses DNA data to identify John and Jane Does in hopes of returning their remains to their families.

Experts from Othram, a technology company focused on forensic DNA sequencing, analyzed a sample taken from the remains.

Then Lee Bingham Redgrave, a forensic genealogis­t with DNA Doe Project, worked with her colleagues to build a “genealogic­al tree.”

It was huge.

The Buffalo Cave John Doe was descended from pioneers who came to Utah with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and his likely grandfathe­r was a polygamist with four wives. That meant Doe’s cousins and other relatives numbered in the hundreds, Bingham Redgrave said.

Investigat­ors also weren’t sure what time period the remains came from, further broadening the field of possibilit­ies.

“He ended up having a lot of matches that were first cousins three times removed, which is very unusual in this type of scenario,” Bingham Redgrave said. “One by one we eliminated certain candidates and kept coming back to him.”

They used news articles, gravestone informatio­n and other records to try to find proof of life for all of the DNA candidates, she said.

Loveless’s second wife, Agnes Octavia Caldwell Loveless, had been murdered May 5, 1916, by a man named Walt Cairns, according to news articles and a wanted poster created by local law enforcemen­t at the time.

But according to another local news article on Agnes’ funeral, one of her children said that it was his father in jail for the murder, not Walt Cairns. The child also remarked that his dad would be escaping soon because he never stayed in jail long.

The DNA Doe Project team eventually unraveled the truth: Joseph Henry Loveless was born Dec. 3, 1870, in the Utah Territory to Mormon pioneers. He married twice — his first wife, Harriett Jane Savage, divorced him for “abandonmen­t,” according to Salt Lake City court records — and became a bootlegger, counterfei­ter and general outlaw in Idaho.

Loveless used a variety of aliases, including Walt Cairns. He was also notorious for escaping custody, Bingham Redgrave said, sawing through bars with a blade he kept in his shoe.

Investigat­ors believe he died shortly after he escaped from the St. Anthony jail on May 18, 1916, where he was being held for Agnes’ murder.

“It’s blown everyone’s minds,” Bingham Redgrave said of the investigat­ion. “The really cool thing, though, is that his wanted poster from his last escape is described as wearing the same clothing that he was found in, so that leads us to put his death date at likely 1916.”

 ?? LEE BINGHAM REDGRAVE ?? A composite sketch shows Joseph Henry Loveless, a bootlegger and outlaw.
LEE BINGHAM REDGRAVE A composite sketch shows Joseph Henry Loveless, a bootlegger and outlaw.

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