The Murder of April Tinsley
Back in July, John D. Miller was arrested for the 1988 rape, murder and abduction of April Tinsley, 8, who had vanished while walking to a friend's house in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Police reportedly matched DNA from Tinsley's underwear to condoms used by Miller—and according to CNN, Miller confessed to the heinous crimes.
Three days after Tinsley disappeared on April 1, 1988, her body was found in a ditch about 20 miles from her home. According to the FBI, the suspect scrawled a threatening note on a barn near where Tinsley's body was found, but that note was not uncovered until two years later. Written in crayon, it read: "I kill 8 year old April Marie Tisley [sic] I will kill agin [sic]."
In 2004, other young girls in the Fort Wayne area began finding similar notes addressed to them, accompanied by used condoms. One note read, "Hi Honey I been watching you I am the same person that kinapped an rape an kill Aproil Tinsely you are my next vitem [sic]."
He says the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children referred Parabon to the Fort Wayne Police Department (FWPD) in the spring of 2014. The company performed the analysis later that summer.
"Although phenotyping alone was not sufficient, four years later our genetic genealogy team, led by CeCe Moore, was able to provide FWPD with a lead that enabled them to solve the case," says Armentrout. He also says it was "gratifying" to give Tinsley's family closure after all these years.
Suspect Arrested in East Area Rapist/Golden State Killer Case
Perhaps the biggest cold case to attract global attention in 2018 was that of the Golden State Killer, aka the East Area Rapist.
In April, a retired police officer, Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, was arrested and charged with multiple murders and rapes in Northern and Southern California over an 11-year-stretch between 1975 to 1986. Authorities charged him with 13 counts of murder, as well as other crimes including rape and robbery in six counties.
Watch: The Golden State Killer terrorized California for a decade. For 40 years, victims and the community feared the killer might never be caught, until investigators discovered a positive DNA match from an unexpected source.
The unsolved home-invasion-style attacks received wide media coverage over the years, including by crime writers like the late Michelle McNamara, who gave the criminal his "Golden State Killer" nickname (and posthumously published a bestselling book about him, entitled I'll Be Gone in the Dark).
Authorities pinpointed DeAngelo using data from a genealogy website where people submit their DNA results in hopes of tracking down ancestors. Using DNA from one of the killer's long-ago crime scenes, they matched it to genetic material from a relative of DeAngelo's who was active on internet genealogy forums. They then obtained a discarded sample of DeAngelo's DNA, which matched what had been found at the crime scene. DeAngelo was arrested—and the shock of the news that he was former police officer took hold.
"I was not surprised [that he was a former cop], but I was appalled," says Kenneth Mains, a detective specializing in cold cases. "Police officers are just like any other profession—you have good and bad. Unfortunately, when a police officer is bad, it will create headlines because we are supposed to be held to a higher standard."
Mains also mentions Dennis Rader—aka the BTK Killer—as a respectable member of society in a position of authority that may have given him access to people and places he wouldn't have otherwise received. "This allows them to kill with a feeling of superiority...and impunity," he says.
According to Sacramento District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, "The East Area Rapist/Golden State killer case involved an incredible amount of passion, persistence and dedication by countless professionals."
Schubert started working on the case professionally in 2001 when she formed the D.A.'s cold-case unit. "As a child who grew up in Sacramento at the time of the attacks, I knew firsthand the impact it had on our community," she says. "This case has been a long journey for justice in what is undoubtedly one of the most horrific serial-killing cases in California history. The journey will continue with the prosecution of James DeAngelo."