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DNA: ID

by AbJack Entertainment

We all hear stories almost daily now about cold cases being solved by investigative genetic genealogy. This new crime-solving tool answers the “who” question about these often decades-old crimes... but what about the why? This podcast will look at crimes solved by genetic genealogy, and examine the connection - if any - between the victim and the killer, and why the crime occurred. Each case is unique, and has its own story behind the headline. Join us for DNA: ID. New episodes will come out every other week on Mondays.

Copyright: Copyright AbJack Entertainment

Episodes

DOE ID; 'Jasper County Doe' William Joseph 'Bill' Lewis

41m · Published 10 Jul 16:15
Episode 73 DOE ID; 'Jasper County Doe' William Joseph 'Bill' Lewis

On October 15, 1983, a trapper on a private tract of land outside of Rensselaer in Jasper County Indiana found the unidentified remains of a young man. An investigation revealed that the man had been the victim of a homicide. He was dubbed 'Jasper County Doe'.
Based on similar murders of other young men in the area around the same time, police believed that Jasper County Doe was just one more victim in a string of murders committed by a serial killer that was dubbed 'The Highway Killer'. Many of his victims were young men who were found partially undressed. Police theorized that killer was targeting young gay men.
Eventually, the authorities came to believe that the killer was a serial killer named Larry Eyler.
He was responsible for the abductions and murders of several young men in the Midwest.
While Eyler was convicted and sent to prison in relation to his crimes, police still didn't know the identity of Jasper County Doe.
Eventually. DNA & genealogy gave Jasper County Doe his name back. He was William Joseph 'Bill' Lewis, and this is his story.

For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com

To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID

To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast

Follow DNA: ID on Social Media

on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast

on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418

on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/

This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

DOE ID; 'Jasper County Doe' William Joseph 'Bill' Lewis

41m · Published 10 Jul 16:15
Episode 73 DOE ID; 'Jasper County Doe' William Joseph 'Bill' Lewis
On October 15, 1983, a trapper on a private tract of land outside of Rensselaer in Jasper County Indiana found the unidentified remains of a young man. An investigation revealed that the man had been the victim of a homicide. He was dubbed 'Jasper County Doe'.
Based on similar murders of other young men in the area around the same time, police believed that Jasper County Doe was just one more victim in a string of murders committed by a serial killer that was dubbed 'The Highway Killer'. Many of his victims were young men who were found partially undressed. Police theorized that killer was targeting young gay men.
Eventually, the authorities came to believe that the killer was a serial killer named Larry Eyler.
He was responsible for the abductions and murders of several young men in the Midwest.
While Eyler was convicted and sent to prison in relation to his crimes, police still didn't know the identity of Jasper County Doe.
Eventually. DNA & genealogy gave Jasper County Doe his name back. He was William Joseph 'Bill' Lewis, and this is his story.
For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com
To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID
To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast
Follow DNA: ID on Social Media
on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast
on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418
on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/
This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

Eve Wilkowitz

1h 31m · Published 03 Jul 11:00
Episode 72 Eve Wilkowitz
20 year old Eve Wilkowitz’s life was all coming together during the first few days of spring, 1980. She had a job she loved and a new boyfriend. Her daily commute into Manhattan from Bay Shore, Long Island was long, but Eve had plans to move into the city. Someone took all that away from her. After boarding the last LIRR train from the city to Long Island, Eve vanished. Her loved ones were frantic for three days, and their worst fears came true when she turned up dead in the backyard of a nearby home. Police turned her complicated love life upside down, and left no stone unturned. Their theory that Eve’s abductor and murderer was a neighbor was correct – but they would not know that for decades to come.
For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com
To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID
To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast
Follow DNA: ID on Social Media
on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast
on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418
on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/
This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

Eve Wilkowitz

1h 31m · Published 03 Jul 11:00
Episode 72 Eve Wilkowitz

20 year old Eve Wilkowitz’s life was all coming together during the first few days of spring, 1980. She had a job she loved and a new boyfriend. Her daily commute into Manhattan from Bay Shore, Long Island was long, but Eve had plans to move into the city. Someone took all that away from her. After boarding the last LIRR train from the city to Long Island, Eve vanished. Her loved ones were frantic for three days, and their worst fears came true when she turned up dead in the backyard of a nearby home. Police turned her complicated love life upside down, and left no stone unturned. Their theory that Eve’s abductor and murderer was a neighbor was correct – but they would not know that for decades to come.

For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com

To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID

To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast

Follow DNA: ID on Social Media

on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast

on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418

on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/

This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

DOE ID 'The Lady In The Fridge' Amanda Deza

31m · Published 26 Jun 21:15
Episode 71 DOE ID 'The Lady In The Fridge' Amanda Deza
In March, 1995, 2 scrap scavagers found an abandoned refrigerator in a canal area known as 'Whiskey Slew' in Holt, California. As they tried to remove the fridge, it opened revealing it's ghastly contents; the decomposed remains of a young woman.
An investigation of the body revealed that the woman had been murdered; the victim of blunt force trauma to the head. Although she had no identification, police hoped that using the scant clues and items found inside the fridge, that they would be able to ID her. That didn't happen, and she became known as 'The Lady In The Fridge'. She was buried, and her skull was kept with hopes that it would one day help identify her.
Years later, DNA & genealogy would ultimately give 'The Lady In The Fridge' her name back. She was Amanda Deza, who would have been 30 years old when her remains were found. Despite having a name for her, police didn't have much else to go on. They learned she was the mother of three children and that her husband had disappeared leaving Amanda to care for her children alone. Before long, she struggled and apparently turned to drugs, ultimately having her children taken from her home. After Amanda's children were removed, Amanda seemed to vanish. While her family had some ideas of where she was at time, she didn't stay in regular contact and eventually vanished altogether. They didn't report her missing because they didn't think police would do anything.
Although they know who Amanda is, they don't know who her killer is and continue to dig for answers. It's theorized by some that Amanda fell victim to one of the countless serial killers that roamed the SF Bay area.
'The Lady In The Fridge' finally has her name back, it's Amanda Deza, and this is her story.
The sheriff’s office encouraged any member of the public with information about Amanda's case to contact their cold case unit at (209) 468-5087 or [email protected] .
For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com
To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID
To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast
Follow DNA: ID on Social Media
on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast
on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418
on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/
This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

DOE ID 'The Lady In The Fridge' Amanda Deza

31m · Published 26 Jun 21:15
Episode 71 DOE ID 'The Lady In The Fridge' Amanda Deza

In March, 1995, 2 scrap scavagers found an abandoned refrigerator in a canal area known as 'Whiskey Slew' in Holt, California. As they tried to remove the fridge, it opened revealing it's ghastly contents; the decomposed remains of a young woman.
An investigation of the body revealed that the woman had been murdered; the victim of blunt force trauma to the head. Although she had no identification, police hoped that using the scant clues and items found inside the fridge, that they would be able to ID her. That didn't happen, and she became known as 'The Lady In The Fridge'. She was buried, and her skull was kept with hopes that it would one day help identify her.
Years later, DNA & genealogy would ultimately give 'The Lady In The Fridge' her name back. She was Amanda Deza, who would have been 30 years old when her remains were found. Despite having a name for her, police didn't have much else to go on. They learned she was the mother of three children and that her husband had disappeared leaving Amanda to care for her children alone. Before long, she struggled and apparently turned to drugs, ultimately having her children taken from her home. After Amanda's children were removed, Amanda seemed to vanish. While her family had some ideas of where she was at time, she didn't stay in regular contact and eventually vanished altogether. They didn't report her missing because they didn't think police would do anything.
Although they know who Amanda is, they don't know who her killer is and continue to dig for answers. It's theorized by some that Amanda fell victim to one of the countless serial killers that roamed the SF Bay area.

'The Lady In The Fridge' finally has her name back, it's Amanda Deza, and this is her story.

The sheriff’s office encouraged any member of the public with information about Amanda's case to contact their cold case unit at (209) 468-5087 or [email protected].


For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com

To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID

To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast

Follow DNA: ID on Social Media

on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast

on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418

on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/

This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

Lee Rotatori

1h 35m · Published 19 Jun 20:30
Episode 70 Lee Rotatori
In June 1982, Lee Rotatori was excited for the new job that meant a move to Council Bluffs, Iowa. But when Lee was found murdered in the Best Western there, police were stumped. The only clue was floral foam on the floor, and there were no suspects. Lee knew only a few people in town, and her husband was over 600 miles away when she was raped and stabbed in Room 106. Her case went cold. When forensic genealogy pointed to a man named Thomas Freeman as her killer, it just added to the mystery. Freeman had been murdered within weeks of Lee, and his killer was unknown. And, he had no connection whatsoever to Council Bluffs, or Lee. But he did have a connection to Carbondale, IL, where he lived 15 miles from Lee’s husband Jerry Nemke – who had a history of his own.
For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com
To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID
To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast
Follow DNA: ID on Social Media
on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast
on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418
on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/
This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

Lee Rotatori

1h 35m · Published 19 Jun 20:30
Episode 70 Lee Rotatori

In June 1982, Lee Rotatori was excited for the new job that meant a move to Council Bluffs, Iowa. But when Lee was found murdered in the Best Western there, police were stumped. The only clue was floral foam on the floor, and there were no suspects. Lee knew only a few people in town, and her husband was over 600 miles away when she was raped and stabbed in Room 106. Her case went cold. When forensic genealogy pointed to a man named Thomas Freeman as her killer, it just added to the mystery. Freeman had been murdered within weeks of Lee, and his killer was unknown. And, he had no connection whatsoever to Council Bluffs, or Lee. But he did have a connection to Carbondale, IL, where he lived 15 miles from Lee’s husband Jerry Nemke – who had a history of his own.

For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com

To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID

To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast

Follow DNA: ID on Social Media

on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast

on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418

on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/

This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

Doe ID 'Rosemount John Doe' James Everett

27m · Published 12 Jun 11:00
Episode 69 Doe ID 'Rosemount John Doe' James Everett

On September 26,2014, the remains of an unidentified man were found in a decommissioned railroad switching shed located behind American Legion in Rosemount, Minnesota. Although the remains were mostly skeletonized and too decomposed to determine a cause of death, it appeared that he had died of natural causes. Items and belongings found with him were indications to the authorities that the man was possibly homeless, and had died from exposure due to the cold Minnesota winter.
He was dubbed 'Rosemount John Doe'.
In July 2022, using DNA and forensic genealogy, 'Rosemount John Doe' was identified as James Everett of New York State, who had voluntarily gone missing for reasons unknown in September of the previous year. Why he left his life behind, and how he wound up living in a railroad shed in Rosemount still remain a mystery, but his family and friends are happy to have some closure knowing what happened to him.

'Rosemount John Doe' finally has his name back, it's James Everett, and this is his story.

For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com

To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID

To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast

Follow DNA: ID on Social Media

on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast

on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418

on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/

This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

Doe ID 'Rosemount John Doe' James Everett

27m · Published 12 Jun 11:00
Episode 69 Doe ID 'Rosemount John Doe' James Everett
On September 26,2014, the remains of an unidentified man were found in a decommissioned railroad switching shed located behind American Legion in Rosemount, Minnesota. Although the remains were mostly skeletonized and too decomposed to determine a cause of death, it appeared that he had died of natural causes. Items and belongings found with him were indications to the authorities that the man was possibly homeless, and had died from exposure due to the cold Minnesota winter.
He was dubbed 'Rosemount John Doe'.
In July 2022, using DNA and forensic genealogy, 'Rosemount John Doe' was identified as James Everett of New York State, who had voluntarily gone missing for reasons unknown in September of the previous year. Why he left his life behind, and how he wound up living in a railroad shed in Rosemount still remain a mystery, but his family and friends are happy to have some closure knowing what happened to him.
'Rosemount John Doe' finally has his name back, it's James Everett, and this is his story.
For all things DNA: ID, visit the show's homepage:
DNAIDpodcast.com
To Support DNA: ID on Patreon, visit this link:
https://www.patreon.com/DNAID
To buy DNA ID Merch, visit this link:
https://www.customizedgirl.com/s/dnaidpodcast
Follow DNA: ID on Social Media
on Twitter at- https://twitter.com/DNAIDPodcast
on Facebook at- https://www.facebook.com/DNA-ID-True-Crime-Podcast-103667495017418
on Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/dnaidpodcast/
This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4720335/advertisement

DNA: ID has 260 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 218:27:43. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on March 12th 2023. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on May 11th, 2024 14:10.

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