The Columbus Dispatch

40-year-old remains identified as member of O’jays

- Stephanie Warsmith Akron Beacon Journal USA TODAY NETWORK BEACON JOURNAL FILE PHOTO

Investigat­ors have identified a man whose skeletal remains were found nearly 40 years ago in Twinsburg. And who he is might surprise you. His name is Frank “Frankie” Little Jr. and he was a songwriter and guitarist for The O’jays in the 1960s. The R&B group started in Canton and made it into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Investigat­ors discovered Little’s identity with the help of DNA and genealogic­al research. The breakthrou­gh followed years of failed attempts that included the state crime lab making a clay model of the man’s skull.

“I’m very excited we were able to put a name to these remains and to get him back to his family and give his family that piece of closure,” said Summit County Medical Examiner Lisa Kohler, who assisted Twinsburg detectives with the investigat­ion.

The family also was pleased to learn what happened to Little after all these years.

“It’s amazing,” said Margaret O’sullivan, Little’s cousin, who lives in Cleveland. “We’re glad that we have closure now. We know he’s deceased.”

The next step will be trying to figure out who killed Little and how his remains ended up in a garbage bag behind a Twinsburg business in February 1982. Kohler said his death, originally deemed “undetermin­ed,” will be ruled a homicide.

Little, who would be 78 if he was still alive, was born in Cleveland in 1943. He was with the O’jays in the mid-60s, writing several songs, including “Do the Jerk” and “Oh, How You Hurt Me.” The band is best known for its hits that include “Love Train.”

Little served in the U.S. Army for two years, including in the Vietnam War. He was last known to live in the area of East 105th Street and Superior Avenue in Cleveland and it is believed he was alive into at least the mid-1970s. Not much is known about his disappeara­nce.

Remains are found

Employees of a now-closed machine shop on Cannon Road in Twinsburg found a skull in February 1982 when they were dumping shavings in the woods. They weren’t sure what they’d found.

“When they saw the skull, they didn’t believe it was human,” Twinsburg detective Eric Hendershot­t said. “They showed it around.”

The employees alerted police and a search of the property turned up a garbage bag with more remains.

The remains, which weren’t a complete set, were determined to be those of a Black male, 20 to 35 years old, about 5-foot, 6-inches tall who may have had adolescent kyphosis, which is a curvature of the spine.

A forensic anthropolo­gist estimated the remains had been there between two and four years. The remains had nothing with them that would help police identify the man.

“There wasn’t even clothing – just bones in a garbage bag,” Hendershot­t said.

Detectives issued a press release and appealed to the public and other local law enforcemen­t agencies for assistance. They ruled out a few leads and the case went cold for more than 20 years.

Sgt. Greg Feketik reopened the case in 2009, researchin­g the idea of using DNA to determine the man’s identity.

The man’s DNA was put into the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS), the FBI’S DNA database, but this produced no hits.

A Kent State professor made a sketch of the skull to show what the man looked like. In 2016, Samantha Molnar, a forensic artist with the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigat­ion (BCI), made a clay model of the skull.

Genealogy research is tried

In October 2018, Akron detectives reached out to Twinsburg, wondering if the remains might belong to a missing person from Akron. That tip didn’t pan out, but it lit a fire in Hendershot­t to make another attempt to identify the remains.

“It occurred to me that time’s ticking,” he said. “Soon enough, people won’t be alive to remember him.”

Hendershot­t knew that Joseph Deangelo, the Golden State Killer, had been identified through DNA and the use of genealogic­al databases and another case in Eastlake had been solved this way. He wondered if the same technique could be used for Twinburg’s oldest unsolved case.

“I was hopeful,” he said. “I was never certain or confident.”

Hendershot­t reached out to the DNA Doe Project in September 2019 to help with the effort. The nonprofit group uses genetic genealogy to help identify John Does and Jane Does nationwide.

Elias Chan and other volunteers with the Doe Project compared the DNA profile of the remains with profiles in Gedmatch and Family Tree DNA, two public genealogy databases. From there, they began to build family trees to try to find potential family members of the man.

The researcher­s zeroed in on the name Little and provided several names to Hendershot­t.

Hendershot­t called O’sullivan and found out that she had a cousin, Frank Little, who had disappeare­d. She didn’t know much about him but said he had a brother who lived in Georgia.

“We were wondering what happened to him,” O’sullivan said.

Hendershot­t reached the brother and obtained a DNA sample from him.

The sample was analyzed by BCI researcher­s and Kohler, who confirmed Little’s identity.

Chan, who has worked on about 25 cases involving missing persons, with identifications made in 10 of them, was pleased Little was identified.

“It’s very exciting, especially for these long cases,” Chan said.

Chan said people can help solve missing person’s cases by entering their DNA into one of the public databases, especially if they have someone in their family who disappeare­d.

“That will help bring your loved one home faster,” Chan said.

What’s next?

Now that they’ve identified Little, investigat­ors hope to find his killer.

Little had a daughter who died in 2012 and a son who is thought to still be alive and living in the Cleveland area.

Hendershot­t is hoping to track down the son to see if he might have more informatio­n about what have happened to his father. He said Little’s brother didn’t stay in contact with his nephew or even know his full name.

The detective said Little’s brother recalled the last conversati­on he had with Little but not much else.

Hendershot­t said he confirmed with Walter Williams, one of the still-living members of The O’jays, that Little was a guitarist and songwriter with the band. He said Williams told him that Little wrote songs with Eddie Levert, another original band member.

O’sullivan, 79, said she went to see Little perform in Cleveland once but didn’t realize he was with The O’jay’s until much later.

“To me, all rock-and-roll sounds good,” said O’sullivan, who was about 16 when she saw the band.

O’sullivan said she isn’t sure when the family lost touch with Little.

Hendershot­t said many questions remain about Little.

“Part of the mystery is over with, but we have no idea how he got there, how he disappeare­d or where he lived toward the end of his life,” the detective said.

Kohler said she plans to rule Little’s death a homicide, based on blunt-force injuries identified by the forensic anthropolo­gist and the attempt to conceal his remains. She said she will finish Little’s death certificate once his family members choose a funeral home and make arrangemen­ts.

As for determinin­g who killed Little, Kohler said, that will fall to the detectives. She said her office will be happy to help when called upon.

“Detectives will have to look at what they’ve got and decide if there’s anything more they can pursue,” she said.

Stephanie Warsmith can be reached at swarsmith@thebeaconj­ournal.com.

 ?? ?? Ohio unveiled the reconstruc­tion of a man whose skeletal remains were found nearly 40 years ago. The model was created by a forensic artist with the Attorney General’s Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigat­ion to help Summit County authoritie­s identify the man.
Ohio unveiled the reconstruc­tion of a man whose skeletal remains were found nearly 40 years ago. The model was created by a forensic artist with the Attorney General’s Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigat­ion to help Summit County authoritie­s identify the man.

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