The Guardian (USA)

Remains found in car in creek identified as US student who went missing in 1976

- Ramon Antonio Vargas

Skeletal remains inside a car discovered in a creek a little more than a year ago belonged to an Auburn University student who had disappeare­d in 1976, authoritie­s have confirmed, closing the book on a missing person case that had puzzled investigat­ors for nearly five decades.

Kyle Clinkscale­s, 22, was last seen alive at a bar where he worked in his home town of LaGrange, Georgia, on the night of 27 January 1976. He was planning to drive back to school in Alabama about 35 miles away in his white 1974 Ford Pinto, but he never arrived.

“It was like the earth opened … and he vanished,” his mother, Louise Clinkscale­s, once told their local newspaper.

The search for Clinkscale­s after he was reported missing saw authoritie­s drain lakes as they tried to find him and his Pinto. Investigat­ors working the case did not receive the break that they needed until 7 December 2021, when someone spotted the Pinto in a creek in Cusseta, Alabama, and reported the discovery to officials.

Investigat­ors found a wallet, an ID, credit cards and bones inside Clinkscale­s’ car. They turned the skeletal remains over to Georgia’s state bureau of investigat­ion to conduct a DNA analysis on them, and the local sheriff’s office announced on Sunday that the bones had been matched to Clinkscale­s.

Despite that confirmati­on, Clinkscale­s’ cause and manner of death have not been determined, the sheriff’s office announceme­nt added.

A cause of death, generally, describes the illness or injury that killed a person. Meanwhile, manners of death explain whether people died naturally or as a result of some other reason, including an accident or a homicide.

Clinkscale­s’ parents had previously talked in public about how a mysterious caller once told them that he had reason to believe their son was killed and his body had been dumped.

Two people accused of being present when Clinkscale­s was slain by a third person – who had possibly overheard something compromisi­ng about his killer – even went to prison for a few years after being charged with hindering the investigat­ion into the student’s death.

But nobody was charged with murder. Furthermor­e, the local sheriff has previously said that the condition of Clinkscale­s’ remains could make it difficult for investigat­ors to ever figure out whether someone murdered him – or if he accidental­ly drove off the road, as the Daily Beast reported in December 2021.

Neither Clinkscale­s’ father, John, nor his mother, Louise, lived long enough to hear Sunday’s announceme­nt. John Clinkscale­s died of a heart attack in 2007. And Louise died in 2021 about 11 months before the recovery of Clinkscale­s’ Pinto, along with what were later to be determined his remains, according to the Oxford American magazine.

A friend of Kyle Clinkscale­s, Lauren Griffen, said many who knew him never lost hope of finding out what had been his fate.

“Everybody was always wondering if he was going to show up somewhere,” Griffen told the Atlanta NBC news affiliate WXIA.

Griffen recalled Clinkscale­s as someone who was known and liked by many in their community.

“His personalit­y was just charming,” Griffen said to WXIA. “He was a sweet guy. Most of the time he was very quiet. But he was very kind to everyone.”

 ?? ?? Clinkscale’s 1974 Ford Pinto was found in December 2021. Photograph: Major Terry "Tj" Wood/AP
Clinkscale’s 1974 Ford Pinto was found in December 2021. Photograph: Major Terry "Tj" Wood/AP

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