The Guardian (USA)

Louisiana police arrest alleged killers of baby found in trash bag in 1992

- Victoria Bekiempis

For more than three decades, answers surroundin­g the grisly death of a baby girl known to them simply as Baby Doe eluded Mississipp­i authoritie­s. The infant’s body was discovered inside a garbage bag in the south-western Mississipp­i community of Picayune on 17 April 1992.

Authoritie­s determined that someone had smothered Baby Doe and deemed her untimely death a homicide. Picayune police started to investigat­e, collecting evidence – some tying the infant to neighborin­g Louisiana, reportedly including local newspapers – but the case went cold.

Last week, however, it became clear that Baby Doe was never forgotten. Louisiana police announced that they had arrested Doe’s alleged killers – her parents – using genetic genealogy analysis of evidence collected after the baby’s body was found.

Officials said that Picayune police, with the aid of Mississipp­i’s investigat­ions bureau, had reopened Baby Doe’s case. Using “advanced technology, DNA profiles and fingerprin­ts were developed from the preserved evidence”, they said.

After pursuing these leads, they claimed to have identified Baby Doe’s parents as Andrew and Inga Johansen Carriere, both 50. They arrested the now-divorced couple on 9 March and 28 February, respective­ly.

“This breakthrou­gh in the case is a testament to the advancemen­ts in forensic technology and the dedication of law enforcemen­t agencies to bring justice to victims and their families,” the Louisiana state police said in a 9 March Facebook post.

While advancemen­ts in forensic science led police to Baby Doe’s alleged killers, traditiona­l, gumshoe detective work spurred the investigat­ion. According to the nola.com news website in New Orleans, just outside of which the Carrieres lived, Picayune police detective Rhonda Johnson happened upon a box of evidence labeled “Baby Doe” in 2021 while she was investigat­ing a cold case.

Johnson inquired about the box, and an evidence clerk recalled to the detective that an infant was discovered in a trash bin on 15 April 1992, the newspaper said.

“I said, ‘I’m going to have to do that one next,’” Johnson recalled to the newspaper. The detective hunted for Baby Doe’s grave.

Johnson found the girl buried at a church in Picayune. Her tombstone was inscribed: “Heaven’s angel.”

Police didn’t have to exhume Baby Doe’s body, as the evidence in her death had been well preserved. Johnson and Mississipp­i bureau of investigat­ions detective Christa Groom sent genetic evidence to Othram Labs based in Woodville, Texas.

The laboratory focuses on using crime scene DNA to identify victims and their attackers. In Baby Doe’s case, Othram made a DNA profile for the infant.

Genetic genealogis­ts, in turn, used this profile to put Baby Doe within a family-tree and discover potential relatives, Othram’s chief developmen­t officer, Kristen Mittelman, told nola.com.

Othram analysts allegedly discovered Baby Doe’s grandparen­ts in Louisiana. Police, in turn, found Baby Doe’s purported mother and father.

Inga Carriere was arrested in Avondale, which is across the Mississipp­i River from New Orleans and is about 60 miles from Picayune. Andrew Carriere was arrested in River Ridge, which is in a community just outside of – and on the same side of the river – as New Orleans.

Both were being held in a local jail in the New Orleans suburb of Gretna to await extraditio­n to Mississipp­i.

Inga Carriere’s attorney, Paul Fleming, maintained that she was innocent of murder. “She believed at the time that the child was stillborn,” Fleming reportedly said. Andrew Carriere’s lawyers could not immediatel­y be reached.

The investigat­ors’ use of genetic genealogy to identify Baby Doe’s alleged parents comes amid an apparent increase in law enforcemen­t using this technique to solve crimes. In one of the most famous examples, police in Sacramento, California, homed in on the Golden State Killer, Joseph James DeAngelo Jr, using genetic profiles available on genealogy websites.

The use of genetic genealogy in law enforcemen­t has sparked controvers­y. Critics have questioned whether authoritie­s should be able to use personal informatio­n – such as genetic informatio­n drawn from third parties – in their investigat­ions due to privacy concerns.

It was not immediatel­y clear how Othram was able to link DNA from Baby Doe to her alleged grandparen­ts, including whether this informatio­n came from a third party. Othram did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? ?? ‘This breakthrou­gh is a testament to the advancemen­ts in forensic technology and the dedication of law enforcemen­t agencies,’ the Louisiana state police said. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP
‘This breakthrou­gh is a testament to the advancemen­ts in forensic technology and the dedication of law enforcemen­t agencies,’ the Louisiana state police said. Photograph: Matt Rourke/AP

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