Federal Government Assistance for Cases of Missing and Unidentified Persons
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Author Topic: Federal Government Assistance for Cases of Missing and Unidentified Persons  (Read 10349 times)

Offline Kelly

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This is HUGE news for our cause!

JUSTICE DEPARTMENT LAUNCHES NATIONAL MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PERSONS INITIATIVE (NAMUS)

Initiative Will Include Database to Provide National Search and Match of Unidentified Human Remains with Records of Missing Persons

テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ  WASHINGTON -- The Department of Justice today announced the launch of the National Missing and Unidentified Persons Initiative (NamUs) to provide the nation's medical examiners, coroners, victim advocates, law enforcement agencies and the general public with the ability to simultaneously search the records of missing persons and unidentified human remains in an effort to solve cases.

テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ  "Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has emphasized the importance of providing families and law enforcement with the important information that is often critical to solving missing person and unidentified dead cases," said Assistant Attorney General Regina B. Schofield, Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs (OJP). "OJP is proud to lead in addressing this critical problem and fulfilling the request of the Attorney General to improve this nation's ability to identify the missing and put names to the unidentified dead."

テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ  Developed by the National Institute of Justice; OJP's research, development, and evaluation component, NamUs provides a national database for unidentified remains for the use of medical examiners and coroners. Ultimately, NamUs will link records from the unidentified remains database with missing persons records through a search and matching tool. NamUs will also serve as a national repository for information on unidentified remains, and missing persons and the resources from around the country. It will be designed to facilitate the work of the diverse community of individuals and organizations who investigate missing and unidentified persons. The NamUs Web site is located at www.namus.gov.

テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ  The vast majority of unidentified remains cases are currently inaccessible for law enforcement investigative purposes, and are not available to the general public. NamUs will provide an additional tool for law enforcement; and access for medical examiners, coroners, missing person clearinghouses, and the public to track and solve these cases.

テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ  The creation of NamUs was motivated by an overwhelming need for a central reporting system for unidentified remains cases. Once complete, NamUs will provide access nationally to clearinghouse capabilities for reporting, locating and matching missing persons records to unidentified remains records. NamUs will use matching formulas that continuously search for similarities between missing person and unidentified person records. Individuals will be able to search the NamUs database using characteristics such as demographics, anthropologic assessments, dental information and distinct body features.

テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ テつ  The Office of Justice Programs, headed by Assistant Attorney General Regina B. Schofield, provides federal leadership in developing the nation's capacity to prevent and control crime, administer justice and assist victims. OJP has five component bureaus: the Bureau of Justice Assistance; the Bureau of Justice Statistics; the National Institute of Justice; the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention; and the Office for Victims of Crime. Additionally, OJP has two program offices: the Community Capacity Development Office, which incorporates the Weed and Seed strategy, and the Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering and Tracking Office (SMART). More information can be found at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov.

Be sure to check out the corresponding sites:

http://www.identifyus.org/

This website was developed and is maintained as a public service project of the National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME) and The International Association of Coroners and Medical Examiners (IACME). It is designed to assist in the identification of deceased persons whose names and identities have not yet been established. It includes cases from throughout the United States.
http://www.find-the-missing.org/index.htm

Find-the-Missing.org is being designed to improve the quality and quantity of missing persons data and to simplify the reporting and management of missing persons cases for the justice community and the general public. Law enforcement, medical examiners, coroners, and other members of the justice community as well as family members are able to log on to the database to enter data regarding missing persons.テつ  The system also provides access to a clearinghouse capability for missing persons that is available not only to law enforcement, but also to the general public.

Kelly Jolkowski, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
http://www.projectjason.org
kelly.jolkowski(at sign)projectjason.org
Forum for News and Information
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Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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http://www.tbo.com/news/metro/MGBBHCCZU3F.html

The Challenge: Identify The Dead

By JOSH POLTILOVE The Tampa Tribune

Published: Jul 8, 2007


TAMPA - The shelf above Pete Bihorel's desk is filled with cold cases on unidentified human remains.

It holds 69 folders, some dating to the 1970s, each containing a separate case about a corpse, skull or skeletal remains found in Hillsborough County.

One charred body was found in an incinerator in 1976. A skull and jawbone were found along with voodoo materials in a public storage facility in 1999. Another body, found aboard a ship in 2005, was discovered with a chopstick and a foreign coin.

Thirteen bodies have been identified, and the three folders on the right of Bihorel's shelf are his biggest coups: cases in which family members eventually learned their loved one had been found. Bihorel wishes he had more folders on the right side.

"I call this my wall of shame," he said.

Bihorel, a forensic investigator for the Hillsborough County Medical Examiner's Office, said a complete national database of unidentified human remains might reduce the number of unidentified remains locally and nationwide.

One might be coming. The Department of Justice launched the National Missing and Unidentified Persons Initiative last week with the goal of creating Web sites to solve cases.

A completed site, www.IdentifyUs.org, will be ready by September, with a fully functional national database on unidentified remains. By September 2008, the plan is to complete a national database on missing people: www.Find-the-Missing.org. The goal is to solve cases by establishing a system that will search the missing person database against the unidentified remains database.

The need for a database on human remains is bigger than people realize, said Bill Hagmaier, executive director for the Virginia-based International Homicide Investigators Association.

"There are over 100,000 missing in the United States, and the dots are not being connected," Hagmaier said. "Thousands of families are looking for their loved ones, and hundreds of people are getting away with murder. Municipalities are spending millions looking for people who are not missing and are in a morgue somewhere. It's been a blemish on the criminal justice system for decades."

Searching Online

There were nearly 13,500 unidentified human remains on record in medical examiners' and coroners' offices nationwide as of 2004, according to the first national census of those offices.

But the census, released in late June, shows that only half of the roughly 2,000 offices had policies for retaining records on remains.

For many of Hillsborough's remains, the medical examiner's office Web site posts an artist's rendering of what the person might have looked like and the location and date where the body was found. It includes descriptions of people, such as scars, tattoos and what the person was wearing when discovered.

Most of the unidentified Hillsborough County remains are buried. Eighteen remains ranging from skulls to skeletons, however, are kept in the medical examiner's office because of cost and because they don't take up as much space as a complete body, Bihorel said.
Four FBI databases also can be used to identify bodies, but there's no federal requirement for coroners, medical examiners or police departments to place information in those databases.

Many coroners wouldn't have the resources or access to use those FBI databases anyway, because the offices often are run by people who don't have law enforcement training or are unfamiliar with the databases, Hagmaier said.

Several states, including Florida and California, have databases, but most states do not, he said.

Hagmaier's association is among those pushing for such a more thorough national Web site and a national policy requiring guidelines for medical examiners, coroners and investigators to place their information online.

A Michigan family might not search in Hillsborough County to find a loved one because it might not realize he lived in or traveled through the county. That's why Vernard Adams, Hillsborough's medical examiner, said a thorough national Web site is vital.

"It's only important if you think missing persons cross county lines," he said.

Col. Gary Terry, who heads the department of investigative services for the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office, has witnessed the burden families face by not knowing what happened to their loved one.

A complete national Web site would be a great tool to help those families, he said.

"These families are sitting out here in limbo," Terry said. "You never overcome the loss of a loved one, and we may not resolve who killed the person. But at least we could satisfy their thirst of what happened to their loved one."

Solving Cold Cases

Bihorel focuses 10 to 20 hours a week working to identify the county's 56 unidentified human remains. As part of his duty managing the office's investigations section, he has worked for the past three or four years to identify bodies.

Several years ago, when the medical examiner's office started making its Web site more thorough and started working harder to help solve its cold cases, it took the fingerprints of 25 people.

It submitted the fingerprints to the FBI for analysis, and 13 came back with possible matches.

Three families have been notified that their loved one was in Hillsborough County's system. One lives in the Tampa area, one in Kissimmee and one in Tennessee.

Bihorel speaks several times a week with families hoping the county's unidentified remains include their loved one. One father was positive a rendering online was his daughter, and Bihorel had to tell the man it wasn't.

"You want to say, 'Yes, it's them. It's over,'" Bihorel said. "On the other hand, it's crushing when it is, because there's no hope. When it's not the right person, I tell them, 'Best of luck with your search.' It's not an easy thing."

Because of Bihorel's efforts, Frances Bales of Chattanooga, Tenn., learned of her 19-year-old son Randy's death in Hillsborough County nearly 23 years later.

He was struck by a van and killed in December 1982, she said, but investigators didn't alert her of his death until September 2005. She spent a dozen years in Hillsborough searching for her son before moving to Tennessee.

"Until I moved up here in '93, I called the detective every day and asked him if he heard anything," she said. "It got to be where he wouldn't talk to me on the phone. So I went to the office. But then it got to be where he wouldn't come out and talk to me. But I still called and asked him if he'd heard anything."

Even then, she said, she never lost hope. Every Christmas, she left a candle in her window so Randy could find his way home.

She said a national database might prevent people from dealing with the pain she felt for so long.

"If I'd have known sooner what happened to Randy, it would have taken away a lot of the stress and a lot of pain of not knowing," she said. "That was the worst part - not knowing."

BY THE NUMBERS

テ「竄ャツ「Unidentified bodies on record nationwide: 13,486*

テ「竄ャツ「Unidentified bodies in Hillsborough County: 56

テ「竄ャツ「Unidentified bodies reported each year nationwide: 4,400

テ「竄ャツ「Unidentified bodies each year that remain unidentified after a year: 1,000

テ「竄ャツ「Number of medical examiners' and coroners' offices nationwide included in the census: 2,000

*Excludes Louisiana, because of Hurricane Katrina

Sources: U.S. Department of Justice, Hillsborough County Medical Examiner's Office

ON THE WEB

Hillsborough County remains: www.hillsboroughcounty.org/medexam/about/unidentified.cfm

Florida remains: fluiddb.com

National site for unidentified remains: www.identifyus.org

National site for missing people: www.find-the-missing.org
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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http://www.wjbf.com/midatlantic/jbf/news_index.apx.-content-articles-JBF-2007-07-06-0004.html

ID'ing John Doe

There are new ways to determine identities of unknown dead victims

Friday, Jul 06, 2007 - 12:25 PM

By Dave Hansen

Tonight someone, somewhere is looking for a missing loved one.

There's a project that can help those people.

It's called "Identify-US", and it helps identify bodies in missing persons cases.

Local authorities hope it will help them crack a murder case.

We warn you that some of pictures you are about to see could be disturbing.

He was found on a cold February night seven years ago.

Michael Firmin, Golden Harvest Food Bank: "It's really been a burden on my heart."

Mike Firmin's burden began when a freezer alarm forced him to check on this compressor, in a remote and heavily wooded area behind Augusta's Golden Harvest Food Bank.

Firmin: "...and I said hello are you alright? no answer, hello you alright?"

Firmin was startled to discover the lifeless figure of a man lying face down, here in the darkness nearby.

He is now referred to as Richmond County's John Doe.

Grover Tuten, Richmond County Coroner, says, "It just bothers that here is someone that died, and no one knows it, that's just amazing."

He had no ID on him, just a dollar in a pocket. He wore a gold, Caravelle watch... and had a single gunshot wound to the back of his head.

Tuten: "There's got to be someone, out there, who cares about this young man."

He wore fashionable "FUBU" clothing and shoes. He was in his mid-20's.

But Richmond County Coroner, Grover Tuten, says traditional fingerprint checks, and missing persons databases have resulted in nothing but frustration.

John Doe was eventually buried in this pauper's grave, but his story is not unique.

The latest federal figures suggest that there are about 6,000 active, unidentified cases nationwide, but if all the cases dating back to the 1980's were figured in, it's believed that that number could jump to about 40,000.

Fulton County's medical examiner is a key player in an effort to bring those cases to the web, so investigators can get some help in figuring out who they are.

Dr. Randy Hazlick, Fulton County Medical Examiner: "This is a simple one-stop-shop-type of thing, where anybody can go right to it."

Right now, several states, like South Carolina, and Georgia, only list a fraction of their John and Jane Does on certain websites, open to anyone. Eventually, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation's cases will join hundreds of others on Identify-US.Org

Dr. Hanzlick: "At least all the dead people are in one spot, regardless of what state they ended up in."

Identify-US.Org features an image of the person, if possible. It also allows folks to search, based on several factors.

Dr. Hanzlick: "Such as tatoos, or piercings, distinctive jewelry, or hair color."

Family members will also be able to submit a DNA sample to help make a connection.

Dr. Hanzlick: "I think it's going to increase the number of cold hits, through DNA, and I think it's going to increase the number where, somebody's looking for somebody, and they actually find them outside of the DNA."

Grover Tuten: "I just can't imagine the parents of this man not knowing, just not knowing where their child's at. It would just drive me crazy."

Richmond County plans to eventually post details about John Doe, and another Jane doe found earlier this year off of Lover's Lane. It's hoped they will, somehow be identified.

Firmin: "It'd be a blessing, absolutely nothing is worthy of a person being treated like that, and having their body dumped."

It would also be a fitting end for the one person that Mike Firmin never had a chance to help.

If you know anything that could help Richmond County investigators identify John Doe, give them a call at 706-821-1080.

If you want more information about "IDENTIFY-US", and ways to search for the unidentified dead, be sure to check these links below:

NATIONAL MISSING AND UNIDENTIFIED PERSONS INITIATIVE
http://www.namus.gov/

UNIDENTIFIED DECEDENT REPORTING SYSTEM
http://www.identifyus.org/
Just click on "search" and "advanced search" buttons

UNIDENTIFIED VICTIMS/DOE NETWORK
http://doenetwork.org/

GEORGIA BUREAU テつ OF INVESTIGATION MISSING PERSONS
http://www.ganet.org/gbi/uid.html

ENTIRE LIST OF GBI REMAINS
http://www.ganet.org/gbi/uidlist.cgi

SOUTH CAROLINA CORONERS ASSOCIATION
http://www.sc-coroners.org/Unidentified_Bodies.htm
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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RE: Federal Government Assistance for Cases of Missing and Unidentified Persons
« Reply #3 on: September 09, 2007, 01:27:18 PM »
http://www.prnewswire.com/news/index_mail.shtml?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/09-07-2007/0004658686&EDATE=

Justice Department to Hold Media Event to Demonstrate New Database for Matching Unidentified Remains and Missing Persons Informationテつ

WASHINGTON , Sept. 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Assistant Attorney General Regina B. Schofield of the Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs (OJP) will join nationally renowned medical examiners and other prominent speakers to exhibit a new national database for matching unidentified human remains with records of missing persons. The new National Missing and Unidentified Persons (NamUs) database serves as a repository for information such as height, weight, tattoos, scars, andテつ clothing, all of which, like DNA, can be vital to the identification of remains.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2007 12:00- 3:00 P.M. EDTテつ

WHO: Regina B. Schofield, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs

David W. Hagy, Acting Principal Deputy Director, National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs

Dr. Jan C. Garavaglia, Chief Medical Examiner, Orange-Osceola Medical Examiner's Office, Florida, Host of "Dr. G: Medical Examiner" on Discovery Health Channel

Randy Hanzlick, Medical Examiner, Fulton County Medical Examiner's Office, Atlanta, Georgia

Debbie Culberson, Victim Advocate, Blanchester, Ohioテつ

WHAT: National Missing and Unidentified Persons (NamUs) System,テつ
Bringing Hope to the Families of Missing and Unidentified Personsテつ

WHEN: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2007テつ 12:00- 3:00 P.M. EDTテつ

WHERE: National Press Club -- Holeman Lounge 13th Floorテつ 529 14th Street, N.W.テつ Washington, D.C.

Additional information can be found at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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RE: Federal Government Assistance for Cases of Missing and Unidentified Persons
« Reply #4 on: September 13, 2007, 10:19:47 PM »
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/newsroom/2007/OAAG07072.htm

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, September 12, 2007
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ Office of Justice Programs  
Contact: Summer Duncan  
Phone: (202) 307-0703  
TTY: (202) 514-1888  

JUSTICE DEPARTMENT DEMONSTRATES NATIONAL DATABASE TO MATCH UNIDENTIFIED REMAINS AND MISSING PERSONS INFORMATION


New System Will Help Bring Answers to Families of the Missing

         WASHINGTON - Assistant Attorney General Regina B. Schofield of the Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs (OJP) today joined nationally renowned medical examiners and other prominent speakers in exhibiting a new national database for matching unidentified human remains with records of missing persons.

         "Thousands of people, children and adults, vanish under suspicious circumstances every year," said Assistant Attorney General Schofield. "The remains of thousands more sit in coroners' and medical examiners' offices waiting to be identified. This new Internet-based tool will enable investigators, forensics professionals, and the public to cross-reference these records and bring answers to families of the missing."

         The database showcased today is the foundation of the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) announced by the Justice Department on July 2, 2007. NamUs will address two of the Department's priorities: assisting investigators in solving missing persons cases and helping medical examiners and coroners identify human remains. The NamUs database, which is viewable at http://www.namus.gov, was developed by the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), OJP's research, development, and evaluation component. Ultimately, medical examiners, coroners, law enforcement officials, forensic professionals, and the public will be able to use the database to search and match missing persons records and information about unidentified human remains. Today's meeting at the National Press Club began an OJP outreach effort to solicit the participation of medical examiners and coroners across the United States and inform the public about the resources available through the system.

         More than 100,000 missing persons are listed in the FBI's National Crime Information Center, a computerized index of criminal justice information from local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies. Almost half of these individuals have had no known contact for over a year. A recent report from OJP's Bureau of Justice Statistics found that, on average, some 4,400 unidentified human bodies are received in medical examiners' and coroners' offices each year and about 1,000 remain unidentified after one year. In establishing a central reporting system for unidentified remains, NamUs enhances the potential of investigators to solve cases by matching those remains with missing persons records.

         The creation of NamUs is part of a major effort by the Department of Justice that began shortly after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. The recovery effort, and NIJ's work to assist the New York City Medical Examiner's Office in identifying the victims, underscored an ongoing problem in matching missing persons with human remains. In April 2005, NIJ convened a summit of law enforcement officials, medical examiners, coroners, forensic scientists, policymakers, victim advocates, and families of the missing. As a result of the summit, the Department created a National Missing Persons Task Force, which recommended improved access to information about these cases through a national database. The work of the task force complements the President's DNA Initiative, under which the Department is supporting the use of DNA evidence to identify missing persons. The new NamUs database serves as a repository for information such as height, weight, tattoos, scars, and clothing, all of which, like DNA, can be vital to the identification of remains.

         "Solving these difficult cases depends on the ability of professionals to access information about physical characteristics," said Assistant Attorney General Schofield. "I hope that medical examiners and coroners across the country will work with us to use the NamUs database to its fullest potential."

         Joining Assistant Attorney General Schofield were David Hagy, Acting Principal Deputy Director of NIJ; Jan C. Garavaglia, M.D., Chief Medical Examiner for Orange and Osceola Counties in Florida and host of the Discovery Health Channel's "Dr. G: Medical Examiner;" Randy Hanzlick, M.D., Medical Examiner for Fulton County, Georgia; and Debbie Culberson, a victim advocate from Blanchester, Ohio and mother of Carrie Culberson, who was murdered 11 years ago and whose body has never been found.

         The Office of Justice Programs, headed by Assistant Attorney General Regina B. Schofield, provides federal leadership in developing the nation's capacity to prevent and control crime, administer justice, and assist victims. OJP has five component bureaus: the Bureau of Justice Assistance; the Bureau of Justice Statistics; the National Institute of Justice; the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention; and the Office for Victims of Crime. Additionally, OJP has two program offices: the Community Capacity Development Office, which incorporates the Weed and Seed strategy, and the Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering and Tracking Office (SMART). More information can be found at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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RE: Federal Government Assistance for Cases of Missing and Unidentified Persons
« Reply #5 on: September 24, 2007, 11:18:28 AM »
http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070923/NEWS/709230343

Tracing the unknown dead: Database links DNA to bodies

By Doyle Murphy


Times Herald-Record
September 23, 2007

Middletown テ「竄ャ窶 Three years ago, city police hiked into the woods east of Dolson Avenue where a man sat alone on a make-shift recliner.

He was wearing blue jeans when they found him, blue jeans with a gray button-down shirt over a white shirt. Nearby were a pair of size 9 black sneakers and a fleece jacket with "Rockland County Grandparents Association" printed on it.

He'd been dead a long time, and if anyone knows his name, they've never come forward to say so.

EVERY YEAR, THOUSANDS DIE and join the ranks of the unidentified dead. A survey of nearly 2,000 medical examiners and coroners across the country found nearly 13,500 sets of unidentified human remains on record. There might be more because not everyone keeps the records the same way or at all, according to the survey released in June by the U.S. Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics. Some have estimated the number closer to 40,000.

"We refer to it as a mass disaster over time," said George Adams, program coordinator for the Center for Human Identification at the University of North Texas.

Adams knows why identification is important. He can hear it in the voices of those looking for lost relatives and read it in the e-mails sleep-deprived parents send him at 3 a.m. The family and friends of the missing seek answers. They depend on a mixture of investigators and scientists for the closure only information can bring, even if that gives them a body to bury.

The key to identification, Adams said, is feeding a national database called CODIS テ「竄ャ窶 the Combined DNA Index System. Once a profile is entered, the system can sift it through the database for possible matches. CODIS will continue to search every month automatically. But CODIS can only work if it has DNA samples to sort. To make a match, it needs two samples: one from the body and one that can positively identify the person. That second sample could come from the person or from a biological family member. Unfortunately, Adams said, there have been many cases in which someone has found a body but scientists couldn't identify it, because they didn't have that second sample.

"It's very, very simple, super simple," Adams said. "We need to get the family sample from anyone who has a missing person."

The family sample is one part of connecting the gap between the missing and the unidentified. Another is the sample from the body. That usually has to come from law enforcement, coroners or medical examiners. Sometimes, the sample never makes it to the lab.

"It's not unusual for a new sheriff to come in and say, 'Guess what I found in my evidence room; I found a skeleton,'" Adams said.

It's impossible to tell how many bodies and their DNA profiles have disappeared over the years into evidence lockers, the ground or cremation fires. Recent efforts have sought to change that.

The National Institute of Justice helps fund the Center for Identification and has opened federal resources, such as CODIS, to all jurisdictions across the country. The center even provides collection kits and analyzes them for free.

Adams said more agencies take advantage of the service as they learn how DNA analysis can focus or redirect investigations. Scientists at the center have discovered bodies thought to be women that are actually men and found dental records aren't always correct.

"Don't dispose of a body, don't bury a body unless you've saved an appropriate sample," Adams said.

NEW YORK AGENCIES use the New York state police laboratory in Albany for similar investigations. Mike Brownstein, identification officer for Middletown police, said little has changed in the collection processes on the ground, but the science in the laboratories has made DNA much easier to use in police work. For example, he can send smaller samples than before テ「竄ャ窶 important in cases where little is available.

There wasn't much tissue left on the man found in the woods east of Dolson. A Broadloom City employee found him in a place where homeless people had often walked or camped. Police said it looked like the man just sat down one day and never got up. Middletown detectives sent his femur to the state police lab to be entered in CODIS. Every month, the system searches his profile against those entered into the CODIS missing persons database. So far, the system hasn't identified the man.

The director at Calvary Cemetery in New Windsor recently looked up the man's plot for a reporter. Orange County Social Services Department paid the $1,600 to have the man cremated and buried. He lies below a covering of grass and earth, next to the ashes of another unidentified body. No marker says he's there. No relatives visit his grave. He's buried up on a hill close to the road, so he'll be easy to dig up if anyone ever learns his name.

Looking for someone?

Family members searching for a missing relative should submit a DNA sample for entry in the Combined DNA Index System, recommends George Adams, program coordinator for the Center for Human Identification at the University of North Texas. Laboratories such as the one at the University of North Texas can process the samples and submit them to CODIS, but they require the samples to come from agencies such as law enforcement or coroner. Adams recommends relatives of missing persons contact their local law enforcement agency.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Offline Kelly

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http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=662069&category=REGION&newsdate=2/8/2008

Campus safety bill advances

February 8, 2008


WASHINGTON -- The House Thursday approved legislation that would require colleges to develop plans for working with local law enforcement in investigations of major crimes on campus.

 U.S. Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-Greenport, sponsored the proposal, which was added to a larger bill governing higher education and financial aid.

The measure had been promoted by the parents of Suzanne Lyall, a SUNY Albany sophomore who disappeared from the campus nearly a decade ago and has been missing ever since.

Her father, Doug Lyall, said the legislation would ensure campus security forces and local police coordinate before the agencies find themselves working together investigating a crime or disappearance.

They can figure out who is supposed to do what before a crime occurs, instead of wasting valuable time "sorting out jurisdictional disputes," Lyall said. "Any time there has to be conversations or decisions ... about who is doing what, that means there are delays."

Gillibrand said universities and police departments need to develop strategies for investigating crimes that occur on or near college campuses, so they can hit the ground running in the vital first few days after an incident.

"If you don't have a protocol in place to coordinate ... those very important hours are wasted," Gillibrand said in an interview. "That often is the difference between finding a missing person and being too late."

Speaking on the floor of the House on Thursday, Gillibrand told her colleagues that "questions involving police jurisdiction should be settled before a crime occurs -- not after."

Gillibrand's legislation, which passed the House unanimously, would expand existing federal mandates that colleges and universities provide annual reports on campus security policies.

The measure would require colleges and universities to report annually on "the working relationship of campus security personnel with state and local police agencies." Colleges and universities also would have to reveal their plans for coordinating with those agencies in investigating reports of missing students or probing murders, robberies and other crimes.

Similar laws are on the books in New York and California.

Gillibrand's predecessor in Congress, former Rep. John Sweeney, sponsored similar legislation, but the House never voted on the measure.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

Linda

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http://www.poststar.com/articles/2008/02/08/news/latest/doc47acd5016cbd7856449296.txt

Gillibrand discusses missing persons bill on House floor

February 8, 2008

U.S. Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-Greenport, on Thursday evening, spoke on the House floor about Suzanne Lyall, a SUNY Albany student who disappeared from the Albany campus on March 2, 1998 and has not been seen since.

"Nearly 10 years later, her case remains unsolved," Gilliband said.

After her remarks, the House passed an amendment sponsored by Gillibrand that would require colleges to have a plan in place for coordination between campus security and law enforcement agencies in the investigation of felonies or reports of missing persons.

The amendment was tacked onto legislation that outlines federal funding for colleges and universities.

Mary and Douglas Lyall of Ballston Spa, parents of Suzanne Lyall, founded The Center for Hope after their daughter disappeared. The organization provides assistance to families of missing children.

The couple has advocated for passage of the federal government amendment for years, Mary Lyall said. The amendment mirrors state legislation enacted in New York and California in 1999, she said.

The law has applied to local colleges ever since.

"We thought, since it should be all over the United States, we started working on it. We worked on it off and on for the past nine years," she said.

Sometimes getting legislation passed is a matter of timing, said Douglas Lyall.

"We don窶冲 profess to understand politics," he said.

The amendment is expected to pass through a joint House and Senate conference committee and be signed by President Bush, said Rachel McEneny, a spokeswoman for Gillibrand.

The congresswoman also has sponsored a House resolution that recommends President Bush declare April 6 窶 Suzanne Lyall窶冱 birthday 窶 National Missing Person窶冱 Day.

"This day will allow all Americans to honor those who remain missing, and to remember their families and loved ones who hope and pray every day for their safe return," Gillibrand said Thursday evening during her speech.

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http://www.dailygazette.com/news/2008/apr/07/0407_database/

Online missing persons system unveiled
Database called revolutionary


Monday, April 7, 2008
By Cari Scribner (Contact)
Gazette Reporter

ALBANY 窶 A search for a loved one gone missing may begin on foot with dozens of people combing for physical clues, but in the tragic days, months or years that follow, the search can actively continue online via a National Missing and Unidentified Persons System unveiled Sunday.

As part of the seventh annual New York State Missing Persons Day held at the New York State Museum, experts from the Center for Human Identification at the University of North Texas gave the first presentation on the database system, due to be fully operational by 2009.

Called the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUS), and run by the National Institute of Justice, the system acts as a clearinghouse for records of unidentified remains and missing persons reports, constantly sifting through data, searching for matches. 窶弋his will revolutionize how justice agencies investigate cases,窶 said George Adams, missing persons coordinator for the Center for Human Identification at the University of North Texas, who was Sunday窶冱 keynote speaker.

By next year, the databases will be readily available to families, law enforcement officials, medical examiners, coroners, victim advocates and the general public.

窶弩e want as many people inside and outside the justice system searching,窶 Adams said. 窶弩e want more eyes on these cases.窶

With dental records long considered the gold standard for identification, Adams said there窶冱 an enormous capacity for human error as those records are traced.

窶弋here was a woman not identified for 21 years because the dentist accidentally misfiled the right jaw x-rays with the left,窶 said Adams. 窶弋hese things happen; what we need is a more methodical way to centralize any identifying information we have.窶

The National Institute of Justice program will also allow another extraordinary scientific breakthrough 窶 DNA sampling 窶 to be harnessed as an additional key component in identification. A five-second swab test inside the mouth of a family member could help match them with any remains located by authorities. Called Family Reference Samples, the Justice Institute hopes to disseminate collection kits free of charge to families. Once collected, the unique family genetic map is entered into the database as a further search tool. While some states allow authorities to automatically seek dental records for those missing more than 30 days, there aren窶冲 any who send out a notice requiring DNA sampling. Adams said there are currently 614 cases of unidentified remains across the United States, cases that could be solved by a DNA match.

People can log in now to www.namus.gov to take a look at the system, pull up records from decedents still not identified, and add a profile of their missing loved one. Prompts allow people to enter even the smallest details that could prove vital, including tattoo designs, as well as scars or freckles.

Following the link of a missing person to their remains is also crucial to tracing the crime, and ultimately, working to locate the criminal, authorities say.

窶弩hen we go back and take a look at what we find, many are homicides, and most are part of multiple crimes,窶 Adams said. 窶弩e want that perpetrator; we want to find that person before he harms anyone, before he takes any more victims, because all the families involved are victims.窶

Although harnessing the latest high technology, the system was borne from the human compassion that moves people beyond family and friends of the missing to help in any way they can.

窶弩hat you hear from authorities, 窶牢orry, there窶冱 nothing more we can do,窶 is no longer valid in the United States,窶 Adams said. 窶弩e are your family. I窶冦 part of you, and you窶决e part of me.窶
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

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http://www.fbi.gov/publications/leb/2003/june2003/june03leb.htm

The New ViCAP has enhanced technology to assist agencies attempting to solve violent crime cases.

ORIGIN OF VICAP

     The Violent Criminal Apprehension Program (ViCAP)1 originated from an idea by local law enforcement and the late Pierce Brooks.2 In 1956, Mr. Brooks investigated the murders of two Los Angeles women who had replied to an advertisement for photographic models. Their bodies, tied with rope in such a fashion as to suggest that the killer might practice bondage, subsequently were found in the desert.

     Mr. Brooks, convinced that these were not the killer窶冱 first murders and that the offender would kill again, devised an early form of ViCAP. For 18 months, he used his off-duty time to visit the Los Angeles central library and read out-of-town newspapers to look for information on murders that exhibited characteristics similar to those he was investigating. He found such an article in a newspaper and, using pieces from that case coupled with evidence from his own cases, arrested an individual who subsequently was tried, convicted, and executed for the murders.

     Mr. Brooks refined his idea and concluded that a computer could capture relevant information about murders. If open and closed cases were stored in the computer, investigators easily could query the database for similar ones when they first confront new, 窶徇ystery窶 cases. They could use clues from other cases that exhibit similar characteristics to solve more cases. Moreover, when officers identify offenders, a search of the computer using their modus operandi (MO) would reveal other open cases for which they might be responsible.3 In 1983, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention and the National Institute of Justice gave a planning grant, the 窶廸ational Missing/Abducted Children and Serial Murder Tracking and Prevention Program,窶 to Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas. After three workshops, with the last held in November 1983, the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime (NCAVC) emerged. The U.S. Department of Justice provided the initial funding for the NCAVC and stipulated that it would be 窶...under the direction and control of the FBI training center at Quantico, Virginia.窶4 ViCAP became a part of the NCAVC with its goal to 窶...collect, collate, and analyze all aspects of the investigation of similar-pattern, multiple murders, on a nationwide basis, regardless of the location or number of police agencies involved.窶5 Mr. Brooks envisioned ViCAP as a 窶從ationwide clearing-house...to provide all law enforcement agencies reporting similar-pattern violent crimes with the information necessary to initiate a coordinated multiagency investigation.窶6 ViCAP attempts to identify similar characteristics that may exist in a series of unsolved murders and provide all police agencies reporting similar patterns with information necessary to initiate a coordinated multiagency investigation.7

REDESIGN OF VICAP

     Since ViCAP窶冱 beginning at the FBI Academy in July 1985, its goal of identifying cases exhibiting similar characteristics and providing that information to law enforcement agencies for a coordinated, case-closing investigation has remained constant. But, a tremendous change has occurred in the way ViCAP now provides services to state and local law enforcement. In 1996, a business analysis revealed several details about ViCAP.8

    *  Only 3 to 7 percent of the total cases were reported each year. Of the 21,000 homicides (average) reported per year in the 1990s,9 only about 1,500 to 1,800 were submitted to the nationwide database.
    * An urban void existed. While most murders occurred in large cities, the cities were not contributing their homicides to the nationwide database.
    * ViCAP users reported that the 189-question ViCAP form was cumbersome and difficult.

    * Users perceived that ViCAP case submissions entered a bureaucratic 窶彙lack hole窶 never to emerge or be seen again.
    * Chronic understaffing caused a failure to address incoming case work on a timely basis.


      The beginning of the ViCAP change originated with the 1994 crime bill. Legislation in this bill directed the attorney general to 窶...develop and implement, on a pilot basis with no more than 10 participating cities, an intelligent information system that gathers, integrates, organizes, and analyzes information in active support of investigations by federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies of violent serial crimes.窶10 From the business analysis, ViCAP learned that the program had to be placed in the hands of state and local law enforcement. This concept of program delivery required two conditions of ViCAP software: 1) migration of the application from a mainframe computing environment to a platform more affordable by state and local law enforcement and 2) a choice of software that eliminated the need for a computer programmer to extract information from a database. To accomplish these objectives, ViCAP had to create a powerful, object-oriented, user-friendly, software seamlessly integrating data, mapping, reporting, and image-capturing tools. This high-end software would have to operate on a modestly priced desktop computer. Crime bill monies provided the initial funding to create completely new software for ViCAP and to move it as an application from a mainframe to a client-server environment.

     ViCAP decided that users of the new ViCAP software would receive the service free of charge. Moreover, ViCAP loaned high-end computers loaded with the new software to more than 50 law enforcement entities. These computers had a modem that enabled users to exchange information with each other and forward case information to state hubs where it was downloaded to the national database. A memorandum of understanding (MOU) formalized the conveyance of new ViCAP software, the loan of a desktop computer to participating agencies, and these agencies窶 relationship with ViCAP.

     Additionally, the 189-question ViCAP form was completely redesigned, streamlined to only 95 questions, and became more appealing to the eye. The paper form both looked and became more user-friendly.

     In 1998, Congress provided additional funding for ViCAP crime analysts. Today, 19 well-trained and experienced crime analysts serve with ViCAP, and they address incoming work and requests on a more timely basis. They handle high-profile or immediate case requests rapidly, frequently within the same hour or day. In a symbolic, but important, perceptual break with the old ways of doing business, ViCAP reflected its new software and energy with a new name窶杯he New ViCAP.

Case Example: Victim by the Lake

     In 1996, a suspect in a drug case in a northeastern state made an offer to the authorities窶琶n exchange for leniency in his prosecution or at the time of his sentencing, he would give information linking his brother to a murder. He advised that a white male in a southeastern state died from repeated strikes with a blunt object. The investigators questioned the suspect about where the crime occurred, and the suspect advised that he did not know the exact location, but that he thought it happened near a body of water. Further, the suspect advised that his brother ran over the victim with an automobile.

     Investigators from the northeastern state contacted ViCAP and related the details of the case as told to them by the suspect. A crime analyst searched the ViCAP database and found a case from 1986 in a southeastern state that matched the details offered by the suspect in the drug case. The victim窶冱 cause of death was blunt force trauma, and he was run over by an automobile. Further, the murder occurred near a small lake. Authorities in the northeast with the information contacted investigators in the southeast with the open homicide case. The southeastern case successfully was closed with the identification and arrest of the offender.11

Case Example: Texas Railroads

     In 1999, a series of homicides occurred in Texas. Early in the series, the cases were presented as murders in the victims窶 homes. Female victims were sexually assaulted, blunt force trauma was the cause of death,12 and items of value were stolen from the homes.13 The murder scenes were close to railroad tracks, sometimes only a few feet away.

     In May 1999, personnel from the command post in Texas called ViCAP with information about three of the murders. One of the ViCAP crime analysts remembered a case from Kentucky where railroad tracks were prominently mentioned. The analyst searched the database and quickly found the case in Kentucky where a male was killed along a pair of railroad tracks. The cause of death was blunt force trauma.14 His female companion was sexually assaulted and left for dead. ViCAP relayed information concerning the Kentucky rape/homicide to the command post in Texas. Subsequent DNA examinations linked the Texas cases with the Kentucky case.

     An itinerant freight train rider was identified as the suspect in the series of cases.15 He was apprehended by authorities on July 13, 1999, when he surrendered at the border in El Paso, Texas. Charged with nine murders, two in Illinois, one in Kentucky, and six in Texas,16 the subject was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death.

     In July 2000, he confessed to the 1997 murders of two teenagers on a railroad track near Oxford, Florida.17 The male victim窶冱 body was found on March 23, 1997; the female victim窶冱 body was not found until July 2000, when authorities, following the killer窶冱 directions, found her skeletal remains wrapped in a blanket and jacket.18 While confessing to the two murders in Florida, the subject said that he once killed a woman in a southeastern state, somewhere along railroad tracks. She was an old woman, hanging her wash on the line, and he killed her inside her house. He did not provide more details.

     A check of the ViCAP database revealed a 1998 case from a southeastern state where an elderly woman was hanging laundry in her backyard just a few feet from a pair of railroad tracks that ran by her property. The command post in Texas and the investigator in the southeastern state were notified of the case match. When interviewed by the investigator, the subject confessed in detail and drew a diagram of the inside of the victim窶冱 house. In this case, no fingerprint or DNA evidence matched the defendant to the murder.

 

THE NEW VICAP

     Some agencies run the New ViCAP system in their own departments, others prefer to run the software on a stand-alone desktop, and several put the software on their internal networks. Agency networks support as few as three users, through the entire investigative staff, and up to five different boroughs and the precincts therein. New ViCAP software operating in participating agencies allows direct access to all of the information that they enter and the ability to perform their own crime analysis.

     Cold case squads can store their cases without resorting to wall-filling filing cabinets. With just a piece of information, a nickname, an address, or the name of a bar or other business, investigators can retrieve decade-old cases for additional investigation. Conversely, cold case squads looking for cases exhibiting an MO used by a suspect, or a series of cases matching a particular MO, can make those searches as well.

     Research has shown that administrators like the reports package in New ViCAP. Standard reports include窶

    * cases by day of the week, month, or district;
    * case status (open or closed);
    * causative factors;
    * offender age or ethnicity;
    * victim age or ethnicity;
    * victim-offender relationship; and
    * all weapons used or firearms used by caliber or type.

     Perhaps most useful to administrators and investigators is the one-page New ViCAP summary report, which collects the main facts from a violent crime and prints them to the screen or, typically, two sheets of paper. The summary report proves an excellent briefing tool for administrators, managers, or elected officials.

     Some investigators and prosecutors like to have all of the information about a case in one place, but the concept of electronic storage of case information proves unsettling to some people. To overcome this problem, New ViCAP provided a hard copy. This multi-page report prints on screen or on paper and includes all of the information entered into the database. The printed document can be placed in the case folder or jacket and preserved indefinitely.

     New ViCAP understands that unique cases require distinctive database queries. To provide for discrete, particular questions of the database, the program has a powerful ad hoc query tool, whereby any combination of New ViCAP variables and attributes can be strung together to produce a set of possibly related cases. Refinement of the ad hoc query produces more, or fewer, cases delivered to the crime analyst through the possibilities set. When the listing of cases is returned, the crime analyst can contrast and compare them in a matrix of variables specified by the analyst. Particularly valuable case matrixes can be titled and printed for more formal presentations, such as

multiagency case meetings. The ad hoc query and resulting matrix analysis prove a very powerful combination of tools for any analyst examining violent crime.

Sexual Assault Data Collection

     Many New ViCAP users have reported that the homicide-oriented version was a helpful crime analysis tool. But, what the users really needed was a crime analysis tool for sexual assaults. ViCAP currently is working on that product by determining data elements for the paper form and the electronic version and designing the paper form for sexual assault data collection to mirror the existing homicide-oriented form. ViCAP is developing the electronic portion of the system in a Web-enabled fashion. This will permit users to exchange information more easily and potentially will provide limited access to the nationwide database.

More Developments

     A recent development in New ViCAP is the ability to store one or more images and associate them with a particular case. The images can be photographs scanned into the system or maps or other graphics imported into the system. This tool has important implications for training new investigators, refreshing case-specific recollections of experienced investigators, or exchanging precise information to identify unknown victims.

     An envisioned tool, not yet a part of the software, is a mapping capability. New ViCAP already captures graphic information system (GIS) data. This information could be used for traditional pin maps. Alternatively, investigators could use GIS data to store and search offender time lines like those prepared for suspected or known serial killers. Once offender time lines are stored, GIS data for each newly entered case could be automatically compared with the time lines. For example, an automated hit system could report to the analyst that plus or minus 3 days, a killer was in the town where the murder occurred.19

A Communication Tool

     Police agencies across the country recognize New ViCAP as a valuable violent crime communication tool. The first pair of cities to use New ViCAP were Kansas City, Missouri, and Kansas City, Kansas. Now, police and sheriff departments in the largest metropolitan areas are using New ViCAP, including Baltimore, Maryland; Chi-cago, Illinois; Los Angeles, Califor-nia; Miami, Florida; New York, New York; and Washington, D.C. Further, MOUs and the New ViCAP system are in place with 40 states. More than 400 state and local law enforcement entities use the New ViCAP software.

     The architecture of the New ViCAP network is as varied as the needs of its users. For some states, such as Colorado, a 窶徂ub and spoke窶 design works well. MOUs are created between the Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and cities and counties in the state. Cases can be entered at the local level and uploaded to the state. In addition to its networking arrangements, CBI selected New ViCAP as the statewide tool for sex offender registry.

     Other states have implemented a regional model. For example, the Los Angeles County Sheriff窶冱 and Los Angeles Police Departments provide an excellent example of regional concept application. The sheriff窶冱 department serves as the collection point and analysis hub for cases in the county. MOUs are in place between the sheriff窶冱 department and 45 of the 46 police agencies in the county, thus providing a web of case-sharing information for participating law enforcement entities, including the two largest, the police and sheriff窶冱 departments.

Case Example: Bag of Bones

     In 2001, a ViCAP crime analyst reviewed a state police publication that mentioned a bag of human bones found by hunters in a seaboard forest of an eastern state. The victim was a white male, about 40 to 60 years old, and between 5' 7" and 5' 9" in height. His cause of death was blunt force trauma to the head. Recovered with the remains was a 14-carat gold ring with engraved letters. Authorities had no leads for identification of the remains.

     A ViCAP crime analyst searched the database using the physical description of the victim and then made an additional search, thinking that the letters engraved in the ring might be the initials of a name. A possible match was made with a July 1998 case where three people were reported missing from a midwestern state. The report was made by a fourth member of the family, a son, who waited a week before reporting his mother, father, and sibling as missing persons. Personnel had exhausted all investigative leads.

     Authorities in the eastern and midwestern states contacted each other. In January 2001, ViCAP learned that forensic odontology had identified the bones in the bag as those of the father missing from the midwestern state. The letters in the recovered ring represented the maiden name of the missing mother and the name of the missing father.

     ViCAP learned later that a suspect was identified and charged with the murder窶杯he oldest son who made the report in the midwest. The remains of his mother and his sibling have not been located.

 

Data Security


     New ViCAP created a standard of information for exchange between law enforcement agencies. Naturally, a law enforcement entity would express concern for violent crime data sent to a national database with information no longer under an agency窶冱 direct control. ViCAP recognizes its responsibility to provide security for violent crime case data and has provided that security for more than 16 years. New ViCAP continues to recognize the sensitive nature of violent crime data and provides appropriate security.



CONCLUSION

     The FBI窶冱 Violent Criminal Apprehension Program Unit has helped local and state law enforcement agencies solve violent crimes for almost 20 years. As technology has improved, ViCAP has ensured that its objectives change to support such advancements. New ViCAP represents an instructional and technological violent crime analysis tool suitable for use in a law enforcement agency of any size. It provides a standard method for the communication of violent crime information between and among agencies.

     New ViCAP software is free to agencies that formalize their relationship with a state hub or ViCAP. The software is case-management and case-matching capable with an easy-to-use data retrieval scheme and a package of reports that serves the needs of administrators and commanders. Initially designed for homicide-oriented violent crime, New ViCAP soon will provide an information technology system to capture and analyze sex offenses as well. Forty years after Mr. Brooks窶 idea of putting all homicides into a computer, law enforcement is on the cusp of making his thinking a practical reality.

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http://www.local12.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=237bbc3b-20cf-4252-a37e-ffe25476e835

New Tool To Match Remains To Missing Persons

Last Update: 7/08 9:21 am 

A local mother's dedication could help solve thousands of family mysteries and some murders.

Debbie Culberson is on the board of the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System.

Culberson worked with the Justice Department to create a centralized, online tool to match the unidentified dead, with missing persons across the country.

Local 12's Deborah Dixon shows how, for Culberson, the mission is personal, as she looks for the remains of her daughter, Carrie, killed 12 years ago.

Great American Ball Park filled to capacity. It would take 8,000 more people to equal the number of unidentified dead in America.

"The number of unidentified bodies is astounding," said Dr. Amy Burrows-Beckham, Kentucky medical examiner. "It's been called the nation's silent national disaster."

Some of the unidentified dead were murdered. Thousands have families searching for answers.

There was no way to do that, until now.

Now there is NamUs, the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System.

Debbie Culberson is looking for daughter, Carrie's, remains. Possibly this skull. The X-ray was taken after ex-boyfriend Vince Doan hit her in the head. He's doing life for her murder. Carrie's body has never been found.

Now, Debbie can search NamUs for her remains by comparing Carrie's profile, in the missing person database with the database of unidentified dead.

Kentucky's Forensic Anthropologist Emily Craig helps Debbie Culberson create Carrie's profile. The missing persons part of NamUs will be up in the fall.

The two, Tri-State women were forces behind NamUs. For Dr. Craig, it means possible identification of some of the 54 unidentified dead in Kentucky, alone. Dr. Craig's created profiles on all of them.

"There is incredible potential on both sides of the equation," said Dr. Craig. "Coroners have to get information into the database. And even more important, families of the missing have to get information into the database."

Information such as a broken bones, or a childhood head injury, but dental records. are the most important identifier.

Families can take a digital photo for NamUs.

No remains in NamUs match Carrie so far. But the database is growing by thousands daily as coroners and medical examiners enter profiles.

Now, Debbie can search for Carrie, usually at night when she can't sleep. Something she says will not change until her search is over.

The cases on the NaMus web site are open to investigators and the public.

This fall, families can begin entering profiles of their missing loved ones. They will be reviewed by a gatekeeper before they are added to the system.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

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Re: Federal Government Assistance for Cases of Missing and Unidentified Persons
« Reply #11 on: February 28, 2009, 04:45:21 PM »
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09053/950645-85.stm

National site helps ID remains, find the lost
Public has access on the Web to government records of missing people, the nameless dead


Sunday, February 22, 2009

By Michael A. Fuoco, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The new Web site NamUs.gov, for National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, shows the page for missing Pittsburgher Lonnett Jackson.

For nearly a decade, the remains of a female homicide victim discovered in Wilkinsburg have been stored in the Allegheny County morgue, awaiting what she had in life but lost in death -- an identity.

The mummified remains of another unidentified woman were found in Homestead in 2000; the cause of her death was undetermined. The body of a third woman, the victim of a drug overdose, was discovered in the Allegheny River near the Fox Chapel Yacht Club in 2003.

Those three mysteries are among the 40,000 cases of unidentified human remains that are stored in the offices of the nation's medical examiners and coroners. Just as sobering: on any given day there are as many as 100,000 active missing person cases in the United States.

To deal with what it has termed a national "mass disaster over time," the National Institute of Justice has developed two new databases to more efficiently match information about unidentified remains to missing persons.

The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, known by the acronym "NamUs" -- available on the Internet at www.namus.gov -- is the first national repository for records about missing persons and unidentified dead people, including both the Unidentified Decedents Database and the Missing Persons Database.

Also unique to the system is the access it grants to the general public, which NIJ views as a valuable asset in helping to solve cases. By entering characteristics such as sex, race, distinct body features and dental information, anyone can search the Unidentified Decedents Database, where information is entered by medical examiners and coroners.

And the Missing Persons Database contains information that, once verified, can be entered by anyone. The site also provides links to state clearinghouses, medical examiners and coroners, victim assistance groups and pertinent legislation.

The unidentified remains database has been online since 2007; the missing persons site has been up since January. NIJ is now working on software that would automatically search each database for matches.

Nationally, there are now 1,354 missing person cases in the system. Pennsylvania has 25 open missing person cases in the system -- 12 men and 13 women.

Those numbers will grow exponentially as more cases are added by law enforcement agencies, clearinghouses and the public, said Richard Mac-Knight, NamUs regional system administrator responsible for Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and Washington, D.C.

The only other Western Pennsylvania case currently listed is that of Lonnett Jackson, 46, who was last seen on April 11, 2006, "at approximately 11 a.m. at her residence in the vicinity of the 5100 block of Chaplain Way in Hazelwood." Also in the listing: Ms. Jackson has a medical condition and needs medication.

Ed Strimlan, chief forensic investigator for the Allegheny County medical examiner's office, said the county's three cases of unidentified remains have been included for years in other national databases. About six months ago, the office also entered those cases into NamUs.

The results surprised him.

"We got about 10 to 15 calls from multiple states about different possibilities. None of them panned out, but at least we were able to [exclude them]."

Some queries came from law enforcement agencies. Others came from citizens who volunteer their time to groups like the Doe Network, an Internet-based volunteer clearinghouse of missing persons and unidentified bodies. Because the public, including families of the missing and other advocates, has access to NamUs, he said, there is great potential for increased success in identification.

Joni Lapeyrouse, of Pensacola, Fla., couldn't agree more.

"Allowing average people to get on there is going to take a load off police officers who don't have time to go and search for every cold case," she said. "Lord knows I've done enough searching on the Internet."

For years she's been trying to find out what happened to her aunt, former Erie resident Nellie Florence Cornman Flickinger.

In March 1979, at age 30, Ms. Flickinger left for California with a man to get her troubled life together, promising she'd return for her five children, ages 6 to 12. She was never heard from again.

In July 2007, Ms. Lapeyrouse contacted the Doe Network, which the next day reported a possible match with unidentified female skeletal remains discovered in 1982 in a drainage ditch northwest of Sacramento. In addition to hair color, height and age, the biggest match between her aunt and the remains was a metal plate screwed into bones of the right leg.

The remains are now at the University of North Texas Center For Human Identification in Fort Worth, which is seeking to extract DNA from a femur and tooth in hopes of matching it to DNA provided by Ms. Flickinger's relatives.

On Thursday, after learning about NamUs and surfing the sites, Ms. Lapeyrouse asked Erie police to help her enter Ms. Flickinger's case into the missing person database.

In the meantime, she searched NamUs's unidentified remains database using her aunt's physical characteristics and found a potential match in Arizona. She contacted the law enforcement agency involved in the case but learned that woman's DNA didn't match anything in another national database, where that of her aunt's relatives also is stored.

Still, NamUs is a godsend because it provides the public with the opportunity to help search for answers to such painful mysteries and does so in an efficient way.

That is the goal, NamUs's Mr. MacKnight said.

"It's very important for the loved ones of missing persons. They can't start the grieving process until they know what happened," he said. "Even if it's years later and the body of their loved one is located, it lets them begin the grieving process."
« Last Edit: August 09, 2010, 08:03:28 PM by Kelly »
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

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http://www.newschannel10.com/Global/story.asp?S=9934422

Help ID Human Remains and Missing People

Posted: Mar 02, 2009 9:56 PM EST Updated: Mar 02, 2009 11:18 PM EST

Thousands of bodies lay unidentified in morgues all across America, and hundreds of missing people go undiscovered everyday. Now there is a way you can help law enforcement close these cases.

The website is www.namus.gov,  and it's basically CSI meets the real world. It's a new database that allows law enforcement and citizens to access information on open case crimes.

There are 40-thousand unidentified victim mysteries waiting to be solved nationwide. In hopes that you can help them solve those mysteries, the US Department of Justice has put most of their information at your fingertips.

Just log onto www.namus.gov.

Four thousand unidentified victims are currently listed on the website, which was recently opened to the public.

One in four of those victims is a Texas resident.

Potter County Justice of the Peace Thomas Jones says, "You have to take into consideration the amount of undocumented people who come across the border. "

The Potter County morgue is very small, so storing unidentified victims bodies is a challenge. Jones says, "We have to cremate them and keep them in our local facilities until a positive identification can be made."

Also on the site you'll find 83 people reported missing from Texas, with the oldest being from Childress, missing since 1966.

Others from the Panhandle include two from Amarillo and one from Borger. Medical examiners from around the nation are touting this as something that will not only help clear the books, but also bring closure to restless families.

Local victims are sent to the Lubbock medical examiner. We attempted to call the ME's office several times today to get his opinion on the site, but no one returned our phone calls.

The site is expected to link the missing person and unidentified victims database in the near future.

Jennifer, Project Jason Forum Moderator
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If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

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http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1911076/namus_awakens.html

NamUs Awakens


July 04, 2009
by Todd Matthews   

The Third and Final Phase of NamUs
www.NamUs.gov

NamUs has three phases, two of which are complete. Phase three is in progress.

Phase 1 (July-September 2007) - "COMPLETE"

"Complete creation of the national database of unidentified decedentrecords, which will allow searches based on characteristics such as demographics, anthropologic analysis, dental information, and distinct body features."

www.IdentifyUs.org

"Begin functional and technical design of the national online missing persons database."

Phase II (October 2007-September 2008) - "COMPLETE"

"Develop a national online missing persons database to enhance reporting, investigating, and solving missing persons cases."

www.FindTheMissing.org

Phase III (2009) - "In Process"

"Release fully searchable NamUs system, which will search cases in the missing persons database against cases in the unidentified decedents database in an effort to identify unidentified human remains and solve missing persons cases."

This means that officials using NamUs will have a stream of possible matches showing as pending in their control panel / dashboard. It is very much a process of elimination at that point. Based on exclusions already known to the official, many can be quickly marked as such.

"In 2009, the two databases will be linked. Families, law enforcement agencies, medical examiners and coroners, victim advocates, and the general public will be able to search for matches between missing persons and unidentified decedent records."

The "linking" between the missing and the unidentified databases has began. Manual searches were already possible and have been moving forward. But now the system itself is becoming capable of generating possible matches based on information contained in the dual databases of the NamUs System.

It is vital that cases listed include all known information. A lack of specific information can produce numerous and maybe unlikely possible matches that have to be eliminated manually. But this also sparks the search for more detailed information which in turn enhances the accuracy of the system.

Exclusions made and added to the exclusions list will prevent the same matches from being made over and again. The exclusions database will be a very valuable resource to law enforcement officials.

The NamUs system can only generate matches nd exclusions between the missing and unidentifieds that have been entered into it's databases. So if you have a missing loved one, the sooner you get their (complete and accurate) information into the system the better.

A detailed and "official" press release will be penned by the communications department at NamUs and will be released at a later date as the process of linking the databases continues.
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
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www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.

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http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/0194C844A0CAF80C86257605000E0856?OpenDocument

Families of the missing can search from home

By Phillip O'Connor
ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
08/02/2009

Sixteen years after her son vanished in the Nevada desert, a new Web-based tool could aid Judy Tilley's search for his whereabouts.

For the first time, families of the missing can freely search a national database that includes detailed records of more than 5,400 cases of unidentified remains recovered across the country. The site includes basic information such as height and weight, hair and eye color, clothing and any other identifying factors. Some descriptions are graphic. A few include photographs.

Tilley holds out hope that her son, Greg Tilley, who would now be 39, will be found alive.

She is resolved to use the site, even though it could force the Valley Park woman to confront gruesome possibilities.

"It will be difficult," she said. "If it would bring closure, I would do it. I will do it."

Launched in January, the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, or NamUs, is part of a broader effort by the U.S. Department of Justice to address two long-standing problems 窶 the tens of thousands of people who go missing each year and the thousands of recovered remains that go unidentified.

The system is designed to aid law enforcement, families and medical examiners in finding links between the missing and the recovered remains. It already is credited for providing evidence that helped solve at least three cases.

"We're hearing directly from people most affected," said Todd Matthews, a NamUs systems administrator. "For the first time, we've given them a voice."

Each year, coroners and medical examiners investigate about 4,400 sets of unidentified remains. Most are quickly identified, but about 1,000 such cases remain unresolved a year later. A 2007 study reported 13,468 unidentified remains cases on record, some dating back decades. Others estimate the number of such cases could be three times that.

So far, the database includes details on 46 unidentified remains cases in Missouri, including seven from the St. Louis region. Of the 14 cases from Illinois, all but one are from the Chicago area.

St. Louis police homicide detective Tom Carroll said he plans to use the new system to help crack what many consider to be one of the city's most infamous cases 窶 a small girl whose headless body was found bound and raped in the basement of an abandoned St. Louis apartment building in 1983.

Carroll says the database should improve communication among investigators and between law enforcement and medical examiners, especially in cases that cross state lines. He described an instance in 1990 when Belleville police chased a stolen car that crashed and killed the driver. Police were unable to identify the man, and his body was buried. Within days of the accident, the victim's mother filed a missing persons report with St. Louis police.

It wasn't until 15 years later that an offhand conversation between Belleville and St. Louis police detectives linked the two cases and led to the man's identification. "They never tied it to us, and we never checked with them," Carroll said.

Now, investigators can bridge jurisdictions by entering and searching for data from a centralized source of information, Matthews said.

"It's the first time we've all had a universal place, a spot to go to, that was a legitimate, government-sponsored site."

'A FABULOUS TOOL'

Using a password, law enforcement and medical examiners can review more in-depth investigative files that are not available to the public.

"We're all at the same trough looking at the same data," Matthews said. "They just have a little deeper look."

And the fact that medical examiners can enter information using their terminology helps assure accuracy and improves the chance of successful matches.

"It's a good tool, a fabulous tool," said Rose Psara, chief investigator for the St. Louis medical examiner.

Law enforcement agencies often are reluctant to dedicate too many resources to missing persons investigations. On any given day, there are as many as 100,000 active cases nationwide, many of them lacking evidence of a crime. Just in Missouri, about 12,000 people are reported missing each year, the vast majority juvenile runaways who are quickly located. But at the end of last year, 567 cases remained active.

"The families are always looking," said Sgt. Keverne McCollum, who oversees the Missouri Highway Patrol's missing persons unit.

Denise Brannon felt authorities weren't doing enough to locate her sister Nancy Brannon, who was 34 when she disappeared from her Shrewsbury apartment complex parking lot in 1986.

"You make so many phone calls, and you know they're not doing anything," said Brannon, 53, of Crestwood.

The NamUs system can help families channel that energy by allowing them to do their own legwork. In addition to searching the remains database, families and advocates can enter information into the missing persons database.

"It's helpful for them because it gives them another avenue to pursue ... until hopefully there is one day some resolution," McCollum said.

This month, NamUs began to automatically cross-match the databases and alert authorities and families of potential matches. Brannon said she felt sorry that the new system wasn't in place before her mother, who conducted a relentless search for her missing daughter, died.

"She would have given her heart and soul to solve this case," said Brannon. "It never goes away."

MISSOURI, ILLINOIS CASES

So far, about 1,950 missing persons cases have been entered on the site. Eighteen Illinois cases are listed, again almost all from the Chicago area. Missouri lists 43 cases, including 10 from the St. Louis area.

System administrators like Matthews monitor and validate new case information before it is posted on the website. One shortcoming is that not all missing-person and unidentified-remains cases have been entered. In some cases, law enforcement officials, especially in smaller jurisdictions, fail to enter the data or are unaware of the system.

"The missing ingredient is, there needs to be more cases," Matthews said. "The more cases, the better it can do its job."

One missing person case listed on the site is that of Michelle Angela Yarnell. She was 28 when she was reported missing from her home in Ivy Bend, Mo., six years ago. Her husband later confessed to killing her. But her body has never been found.

Her mother, Marianne Asher-Chapman, of Holts Summit, Mo., estimated she has made 50 trips to the property where her daughter used to live to dig for clues.

"It's so important for me to find even one finger. I can't even describe it," said Asher-Chapman, 55. "This is my baby I held all those years. I will never, never, never give up looking for Angie.

"It's a life of anguish," she said.

"NamUs gives us hope."
« Last Edit: August 02, 2009, 12:08:02 PM by Kelly »
Kelly Murphy, Mother of Missing Jason Jolkowski
President and Founder,
Project Jason
www.projectjason.org


If you have seen any of our missing persons, please call the law enforcement agency listed on the post. All missing persons are loved by someone, and their families deserve to find the answers they seek in regards to the disappearance.