Sheriff Joe Pelle announced that the woman's identity has been confirmed as Dorothy Gay Howard, who was reported missing from Phoenix, Ariz., in March 1954. She was 18 years old at the time of her disappearance.
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IDENTIFIED!
Mystery solved: Boulder sheriff IDs 'Jane Doe' as
Dorothy Gay HowardIdentity gives important link in piecing together 1954 homicide.
Boulder County's famed “Jane Doe” — the homicide victim whose identity has been a mystery for more than five decades — was identified today by the sheriff as a woman who went missing from Arizona.
Sheriff Joe Pelle announced that the woman's identity has been confirmed as Dorothy Gay Howard, who was reported missing from Phoenix, Ariz., in March 1954. She was 18 years old at the time of her disappearance.
The sheriff's office received lab results that showed a match between Howard's DNA and DNA samples provided by a long-lost sister, confirming family's suspicion that their relative, known as “Dot,” was Boulder's “Jane Doe.” Detectives think the identification will help them finish piecing together the heinous murder.
Howard's naked, battered body was discovered along the banks of Boulder Creek, near Boulder Falls and eight miles west of Boulder, on April 8, 1954.
Investigators, and local historian Silvia Pettem, have, for years, doggedly tried to identify the woman — exhuming her body from her grave, and publicizing an artist's re-creation of “Jane Doe's” face. Her re-constructed skull provided a DNA profile.
The case was featured in an episode of “America's Most Wanted.”
Howard's great niece had been following Pettem's Web site,
www.boulderjanedoe.com, but put her suspicions aside that “Jane Doe” could be her great aunt because investigators had initially believed the woman was Katharine Farrand Dyer.
However, Dyer was discovered alive, living in an assisted living center in Australia last month. That discovery prompted Howard's great
This is the facial reconstruction of "Jane Doe," a woman found murdered in Boulder Canyon in April 1954, that was created by Frank Bender, a forensic artist from Philadelphia. Members of the Vidocq Society, based in Philadelphia, teamed up with the Boulder County Sheriffs Department to reconstruct the skull of the woman to create the likeness. Boulder County authorities on Wednesday confirmed they had identified Jane Doe as Dorothy Gay Howard. ( JOSHUA LAWTON )
niece to come forward with information about Howard and her disappearance. The younger sister of Howard provided a DNA sample that was then compared against “Jane Doe's” profile, establishing a match.
Sheriff Pelle commended Pettem's skills as a researcher and her persistence in pushing the investigation forward, while complimenting Detective Steve Ainsworth, who has diligently pursued and documented every lead in the case.
Together, they built a compelling circumstantial case for naming serial killer Harvey Glatman — who was executed in California in 1959 for the murder of three other women — as Howard's murderer.
“With her identification, a major piece of the puzzle has been added,” Ainsworth said in a news release. “I'm confident now that we will be able to find the missing links that will tie this all together.”
Howard's surviving family members have expressed their preference that she remain interred in Boulder's Columbia Cemetery.
The sheriff's office is not releasing information about Howard's family because they've requested privacy.
Pettem, with Pelle's cooperation, has announced a fund drive to purchase a new headstone for Howard.
Donations may be made to the “Jane Doe Fund”, c/o the Boulder History Museum, 1206 Euclid Avenue, Boulder, CO 80302.
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http://www.dailycamera.com/boulder-county-news/ci_13658937#at