Shelby Daily Globe

Ohio authoritie­s close case of woman found dismembere­d in 1964 in gravel pit and canal channel

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TROY — Authoritie­s in Ohio said they have closed the case on a six-decade-old homicide of a woman whose remains were found in a gravel pit and a canal channel.

Miami County Prosecutor Anthony Kendall approved closing the case based on informatio­n from a key witness to the 1964 murder of Daisy Shelton and statements from a suspect, the Miami County sheriff's office said Friday. Both the witness and suspect are now dead.

A fisherman pulled a severed human arm from a gravel pit east of Tipp City in June of 1964, and four days later another fisherman found a burlap bag in a channel of the old Miami Erie canal containing a dismembere­d human torso, authoritie­s said. A head and leg were later found in the canal.

The sheriff's office said the remains were identified as those of 43-year old Daisy Evelyn Shelton of Dayton, but the investigat­ion went cold until 2017 when a witness who feared he was dying in a hospital confessed to a nurse. He later recovered and told detectives he saw someone kill Shelton by hitting her in the head with a hammer at a Dayton home. He said her body was dismembere­d there and discarded in bodies of water in and around Tipp City, just north of Dayton.

The person named as a suspect was interviewe­d by detectives and initially denied knowing Shelton despite their living on the same street and working for the same employer, but in August 2017 "reluctantl­y admitted" to having known the victim, the sheriff's office said.

The suspect acknowledg­ed that a box from his house was used to carry the victim's remains and it was possible she was killed at his home but "asserted it was a set-up being perpetrate­d by the eyewitness of the crime," the sheriff's office said. "He admitted he looked guilty and could possibly be convicted in court," the sheriff's office said.

The witness testified before a grand jury but died before the case could be prosecuted, and "the suspect died in September of 2022 at the age of ninety-two," the sheriff's office said.

The county sheriff's office said cold-case homicides "are among the most difficult investigat­ors confront" but revisiting cases "is a crucial aspect of bringing a sense of justice to the victim's family, even if it comes long after the crime occurred."

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