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Related: About this forumWoman buried as Jane Doe and exhumed for DNA can't be reburied: Loudoun Co. board pushes to change law
Woman buried as Jane Doe and exhumed for DNA cant be reburied: Loudoun Co. board pushes to change law
Neal Augenstein | naugenstein@wtop.com
November 20, 2024, 8:18 AM
In 1973, the body of a woman in her 20s was discovered in Loudoun County, Virginia. ... At the time, the Loudoun County Sheriffs Office said that she had been killed, but they were not able to identify her body. ... They did not know who she was, said Board of Supervisors Chair Phyllis Randall in a Nov. 7 meeting. She was buried as a Jane Doe, and that was legal to do that 25 years ago, to bury someone as a Jane Doe.
Recently, the sheriffs office got the courts permission to exhume Jane Does remains to use improved DNA technology to attempt identifying her. ... The medical examiners office was able to get viable DNA from her, said Lt. Col. Christopher Sawyer, of the sheriffs office. Obviously, theres not a direct match sample, since they werent taking DNA samples back in 1973, so working through genealogy takes time. ... However, after changes in the law, its now illegal to bury an unidentified person and Jane Does final resting place, for now, is in limbo.
She cannot be legally be reinterred she is now in the regional coroners office in Manassas, said Randall. They cannot reinter her, although we did exhume her after 25 years. ... As the sheriffs department continues their work to find out who Jane Doe was, and ultimately determine who killed her, there are concerns about treating the deceased with respect. ... In the interim time, before we have her identified, we really dont feel like its an appropriate or respectful situation to just have her body in the morgue, Sawyer said. Weve worked with a funeral home, to have a headstone, a service, and everything else to give her the respectful burial that she deserves.
However, he continued, The Chief Medical Examiner said, Well, you cant have the body, because we dont have a name.' ... For now, Randall has asked staff to work on adding a policy statement to the countys 2025 Legislative Program. Those changes to the law would allow bodies that have been exhumed for the purposes of DNA-gathering or investigation to be reinterred, even if they still cant be identified. ... The board will vote on this addition to the legislative program in the next few weeks.
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© 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Neal Augenstein
Neal Augenstein has been a general assignment reporter with WTOP since 1997. He says he looks forward to coming to work every day, even though that means waking up at 3:30 a.m.
naugenstein@wtop.com
@AugensteinWTOP
Neal Augenstein | naugenstein@wtop.com
November 20, 2024, 8:18 AM
In 1973, the body of a woman in her 20s was discovered in Loudoun County, Virginia. ... At the time, the Loudoun County Sheriffs Office said that she had been killed, but they were not able to identify her body. ... They did not know who she was, said Board of Supervisors Chair Phyllis Randall in a Nov. 7 meeting. She was buried as a Jane Doe, and that was legal to do that 25 years ago, to bury someone as a Jane Doe.
Recently, the sheriffs office got the courts permission to exhume Jane Does remains to use improved DNA technology to attempt identifying her. ... The medical examiners office was able to get viable DNA from her, said Lt. Col. Christopher Sawyer, of the sheriffs office. Obviously, theres not a direct match sample, since they werent taking DNA samples back in 1973, so working through genealogy takes time. ... However, after changes in the law, its now illegal to bury an unidentified person and Jane Does final resting place, for now, is in limbo.
She cannot be legally be reinterred she is now in the regional coroners office in Manassas, said Randall. They cannot reinter her, although we did exhume her after 25 years. ... As the sheriffs department continues their work to find out who Jane Doe was, and ultimately determine who killed her, there are concerns about treating the deceased with respect. ... In the interim time, before we have her identified, we really dont feel like its an appropriate or respectful situation to just have her body in the morgue, Sawyer said. Weve worked with a funeral home, to have a headstone, a service, and everything else to give her the respectful burial that she deserves.
However, he continued, The Chief Medical Examiner said, Well, you cant have the body, because we dont have a name.' ... For now, Randall has asked staff to work on adding a policy statement to the countys 2025 Legislative Program. Those changes to the law would allow bodies that have been exhumed for the purposes of DNA-gathering or investigation to be reinterred, even if they still cant be identified. ... The board will vote on this addition to the legislative program in the next few weeks.
Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.
© 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Neal Augenstein
Neal Augenstein has been a general assignment reporter with WTOP since 1997. He says he looks forward to coming to work every day, even though that means waking up at 3:30 a.m.
naugenstein@wtop.com
@AugensteinWTOP
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Woman buried as Jane Doe and exhumed for DNA can't be reburied: Loudoun Co. board pushes to change law (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
9 hrs ago
OP
Otto_Harper
(702 posts)1. For the small, weak and powerless
they can follow every piddling law to the absolute letter. For high crimes and misdemeanors, not so much
keithbvadu2
(40,083 posts)2. Stupid.
Irish_Dem
(57,309 posts)3. They should have a name fairly soon.
If the woman's family has been in the US for at least two generations, it should not take long.
But that said, sometimes it can take weeks or a couple of months.
Sometimes with genetic genealogy we can get a name in a couple of hours.
Just depends upon how many DNA matches show up on the DNA sites.