CONTENT ADVISORY: This episode discusses the murder of a young woman whose body remained unidentified for nearly four decades. Listener discretion is advised.
THE CASE:April 24, 1981. Three men moving furniture along a rural Ohio road spotted what they thought was a nice coat dumped in a ditch.
It wasn't just a coat.
Inside was a young woman, beaten and strangled, wearing a fringed buckskin jacket that would give her the only name she'd have for 37 years: Buckskin Girl.
Her fingerprints weren't in any database. Her face didn't match any missing persons reports. For nearly four decades, investigators couldn't answer the most basic question: Who was she?
Then a revolutionary nonprofit tried something that had never been done before, extracting DNA from a blood sample that had sat unrefrigerated for 37 years.
Every expert said it was impossible.
It took four hours to prove them wrong.
FEATURING:
- The DNA sample that "couldn't work"—and did
- How the DNA Doe Project's first case changed forensic science
- A mother who never changed her phone number for 37 years
- The father who died three months before learning his daughter's fate
- Why investigators believe she may have been killed by someone she trusted
- The new hair evidence that might finally catch her killer
THE TWIST:Marcia King was never reported missing. She was an adult who hitchhiked across America. Her family thought she was still out there, somewhere, living her life.
Her mother kept the same phone number for 37 years. Just in case Marcia called.
She never did. Because she couldn't.
And there's this: her father uploaded his family tree to Ancestry before he died, a "note in a bottle" asking what happened to his daughter. He died three months before she was identified. That note helped solve the case. He found her. He just didn't live to know it.
UNSOLVED:Marcia King's murder remains unsolved. Investigators believe she may have been killed by a traveling companion—someone she trusted. The absence of her shoes, the overkill violence, the careful positioning of her body all suggest someone who knew her.
In 2020, hair samples from the crime scene were sent for cutting-edge DNA analysis. If any belonged to someone Marcia was with in her final hours, there may finally be a lead.
CREDITS:Research sources include Miami County Sheriff's Office records, Dayton Daily News, DNA Doe Project documentation, and CBS News.
Special thanks to the DNA Doe Project, Dr. Elizabeth Murray, and the volunteers who gave Marcia her name back.
For complete sources and references, visit: https://crimedecoded.com/episode-notes-3/
RESOURCES:If you have information about Marcia King's murder, contact:
- Miami County Sheriff's Office: 937-440-3990
- Anonymous tips accepted
- www.miamicountyohio.gov/sheriff
ABOUT CRIME DECODED:Crime Decoded explores forensic science, genetic genealogy, and the cases they help solve. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.
Contact: stacey@crimedecoded.com
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