Anonymous ID: 395e63 Jan. 19, 2021, 3:44 p.m. No.12614642   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4656 >>4695

THIS is why the cabal has pig farms

 

JOLAINE HEMMY would have been 72 had she not been drowned.

 

 

The teen had been reported missing in early July 1966

from her home in Kansas,

said the police chief,

whose department reviewed the cold case just over a year ago.

 

Othram Inc.

@OthramTech

 

Incredibly excited to share that Pecos PD in Texas has identified Pecos Jane Doe.

 

https://dnasolves.com/articles/pecos_jane_doe/ #unsolvedmysteries #forensics #runthedna #dnasolves

 

1:09 PM · Jan 19, 2021

 

https://t.co/CB5Ubb2lpw?amp=1

 

After 55 years, Pecos Jane Doe is identified!!!

 

https://dnasolves.com/articles/pecos_jane_doe/

 

In 1966, a young woman drowned in the Ropers Motel pool in Pecos, Texas and more than 50 years later she has been identified as Jolaine Hemmy.

 

In 1966, a young woman drowned in the Ropers Motel pool in Pecos, Texas and for more than 50 years her true identity was unknown. The young woman, known until recently as Pecos Jane Doe, checked into the Ropers Motel with an unknown male companion, using the names, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Battoun. Hours later, a hotel employee found the woman’s body in the hotel pool. As the woman was being taken away in an ambulance, her companion checked out of the hotel and was never seen again.

 

More than 50 years later, Pecos Police Department Chief Lisa Tarango, continued the search for Pecos Jane Doe’s true identity. The victim is buried with a gravestone marked, "Unknown Girl Drowned July 5, 1966" and agency officials have continued to visit her grave and bring flowers.

 

Othram reached out to the Pecos Police Department in early 2020 to help identify the woman using advanced DNA testing. The laboratory work was funded mostly by Pecos Police Department, with a supplementary crowdfund established through DNASolves. Skeletal remains were brought to Othram in August 2020 and work on the case began, first to develop a DNA extract from the bone, and then to construct a DNA profile using Forensic-Grade Genome Sequencing®.

 

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children provided support and resources to faciliate an identification. First, NCMEC had produced an artistic sketch of what the woman might have looked like. Later, after successful DNA testing, they coordinated the genealogical research, securing the services of Innovative Forensic, who generously donated the time and resources to work family trees and produce a candidate lead. Pecos Police Department confirmed the lead through DNA testing of a close relative, confirming the identity of Pecos Jane Doe as Jolaine Hemmy.

 

Jolaine was 17 years old in 1966, working at a drive-in diner in Kansas City, Kansas. She abruptly vanished one day and didn't pick up her last paycheck. Her family reported her missing and worked hard to find out where she had gone and despite tremendous efforts by family and law enforcement, they were unable to find her. At least one family member remembers a man that took particular interest in Jolaine around the time of her disappearance, but little is known about him. Pecos Police Department is continuing to investigate. If anyone has information about Jolaine Hemmy, her disappearance, or the man that she was last seen with, please contact the Pecos Police Department at 432-445-4911 attention Cpl. Felix Salcido.

 

About Othram Inc.

Othram is the world’s first private DNA laboratory built specifically to apply the power of modern parallel sequencing to forensic evidence. Othram’s scientists are experts at recovery, enrichment, and analysis of human DNA from trace quantities of degraded or contaminated materials. Founded in 2018, and located in The Woodlands, Texas, our team works with academic researchers, forensic scientists, medical examiners, and law enforcement agencies to achieve results when other approaches have failed. Follow Othram on Twitter @OthramTech or visit Othram.com to learn how we can help you with your case. Visit dnasolves.com to learn how anyone can make a difference in helping solve the next cold case.

Anonymous ID: 395e63 Jan. 19, 2021, 3:44 p.m. No.12614656   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4695

>>12614642

Texas motel pool death mystery ends as police ID Kansas teen in 54-year-old cold case

BY DOMINGO RAMIREZ JR.

JANUARY 19, 2021 02:47 PM, UPDATED 1 HOUR 27 MINUTES AGO

FORT WORTH

A teen who drowned in a pool at a Pecos motel in 1966 and whose name was unknown for 54 years was identified on Tuesday as Jolaine Hemmy of Salina, Kansas, according to Pecos police.

Hemmy, 17, was with a man on July 5, 1966, when her body was found in the pool at the Ropers Motel in Pecos.

Her identify was released Tuesday at a news conference in Pecos by Pecos police. The town is about 395 miles southwest of Fort Worth.

She and the young man had registered at the motel as Mr. and Mrs. Russell Battuon.

Just hours after they registered, the teen’s body was found in the pool. The man was reported to have been in the couple’s motel room at the time she was in the pool, according to Pecos police.

After her body was found and emergency crews worked on her, the man left with the couple’s belongings, Pecos police said in a Tuesday news release.

As of Tuesday, Pecos police still did not have the identity of the man.

Since her death, authorities had tried to identify the girl, and they finally got identification through DNA, Pecos Police Chief Lisa Tarango said in a telephone interview with the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Pecos police had worked with officials with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children to verify Hemmy’s identification, as well as other labs and officials with the University of North Texas Center for Human Identification.

The teen had been reported missing in early July 1966 from her home in Kansas, said the police chief, whose department reviewed the cold case just over a year ago.

“Her body was exhumed on Aug. 27, 2019,” Tarango said. “The pandemic then slowed us down, but we were finally about to identify her.”

The police chief and a Pecos investigator recently traveled to Kansas to contact relatives.

“It was just raw emotions,” Tarango said when they informed family members that they had identified the teen.

The teen’s death remains under investigation, the police chief said.

 

https://www.star-telegram.com/news/state/texas/article248607760.html