South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

DNA helps investigat­ors identify remains 41 years later as teenage victim of serial killer

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SPRING HILL — Investigat­ors have confirmed that remains unearthed in a Florida junk yard 41 years ago match a missing teenager, the victim of a serial killer now imprisoned for life in California, sheriff ’s officials said.

Hernando County Sheriff ’s investigat­ors, with an assist from the University of North Texas and Virginia-based DNA technology company Parabon Nano Labs, identified Theresa Caroline Fillingim as the third of four bodies uncovered in April 1981 from what neighbors referred to as a “house of horrors.”

Sheriff’s officials made the announceme­nt Wednesday.

It took weeks for excavators and deputies to find the four bodies in a sprawling junkyard on the property of Billy Mansfield Jr. in Spring Hill, sheriff ’s officials said. Only two of the female victims were quickly identified.

Fillingim had been reported missing by her sister in Tampa nearly a year before that, on May 16, 1980. She was a week from her 17th birthday.

The teen’s remains were sent to numerous labs over the years, but investigat­ors didn’t develop a DNA profile until 2020, sheriff ’s officials said. The sample was sent to the University of North Texas seeking a match in a national database, without results.

They tried again this year, using Parabon’s “Snapshot DNA Phenotypin­g” service, which creates a descriptio­n of the victim rather than searching for a genetic match, officials said.

“Using DNA evidence from this investigat­ion,

Snapshot produced trait prediction­s for the associated victim. Individual prediction­s were made for the victim’s ancestry, eye color, hair color, skin color, freckling, and face shape,” a news release said.

The profile gave investigat­ors an opportunit­y to generate their own leads, and a DNA sample from Fillingim’s sister confirmed the identity, “finally bringing peace to the victim’s family,” the sheriff ’s release said.

Mansfield had already been charged with crimes including battery, kidnapping and sexual assault when he met 30-year-old Rene Sailing at a California tavern on Dec. 6, 1980, the Tampa Bay Times reported.

Her body was found the next morning in a drainage ditch, officials said. Mansfield was arrested days later and charged with first-degree murder. He was eventually convicted after a mistrial and an attempted prison escape, the Times reported.

Publicity from that case led an anonymous tipster to ask Hernando County officials to search Mansfield’s home for Sandra Graham,

21, who went missing from Tampa on April 17, 1980.

On March 17, 1981, officials unearthed the first victim — a woman in her 20s who remains unidentifi­ed. A week later they uncovered the remains of 15-yearold Elaine Zeigler, a tourist from Ohio who disappeare­d on New Year’s Eve in 1975. The bodies of Fillingim and Graham were then uncovered.

Mansfield, now 66, pleaded guilty to killing all four women and to the attempted sexual battery of another. He’s been denied parole multiple times, according to California prison records.

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