Remains of 19-year-old Virginia sailor killed in Pearl Harbor attack identified


Military labs identify fallen soldiers


Military labs identify long-fallen soldiers

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A Virginia man who was killed in World War II has been accounted for, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency announced this week. 

David Walker, 19, was assigned to the battleship USS California when it was torpedoed during the attack on Pearl Harbor. Walker was one of 103 crewmen who died on the ship during the attack, the DPAA said. Remains from the ship were recovered by U.S. Navy personnel and interred in Hawaii cemeteries, including the the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, but it wasn’t until 2018 that the 25 men who were buried as “Unknowns” were exhumed. 

The remains were analyzed with anthropological and dental analysis by the DPAA and mitochondrial DNA analysis by the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System. 

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David Walker. 

Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency


Now that Walker has been identified, a rosette will be placed next to his name on the Walls of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. He will be buried in Arlington National Cemetery in September, the DPAA said.  

According to Walker’s personnel file, he was from Norfolk, Virginia. There was no information available about surviving relatives, or when Walker entered the U.S. Navy. According to a news clipping shared by the DPAA, Walker enlisted in the U.S. Navy about one year before his death. Another news clipping said that he left high school early to enlist. According to one of the news clippings, Walker’s mother, identified as Edna Lee Ward, asked a local reporter to place Walker’s photo in the newspaper to announce his death at Pearl Harbor. 



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Body found in barrel identified as potential witness in case of Missouri man accused of holding woman in basement


Human remains found in a barrel in the Missouri River were identified last week as belonging to a woman considered a potential witness in the case against a Missouri man accused of holding a Black woman hostage in his basement.

During a Monday hearing seeking a bond increase for Timothy Haslett Jr., prosecutors said the woman found in the barrel, Jaynie Crosdale, “was inside” Haslett’s Excelsior Springs home before his arrest in October.

The Clay County Prosecutor’s Office did not provide further details but said it presented the evidence to the court.

Excelsior Springs police had identified Crosdale as a potential witness in Haslett’s case in January and asked the public’s help in locating her. Authorities said at the time that they believed Crosdale had “information about the investigation.”

She was later found dead after kayakers located her body in a blue barrel in the Missouri River, according to NBC affiliate KSNT of Topeka, Kansas. Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Immediately after police identified her remains last week, prosecutors filed a motion seeking a higher bond for Haslett, writing in a court filing that they had “concern for the safety of the community.” Prosecutors said Haslett’s bond of $3 million was “insufficient to insure the safety of the community and the victim.”

The court, however, ruled against increasing Haslett’s bond. His attorney did not immediately return a request for comment on Tuesday.

The home where neighbors raised the alarm in Excelsior Springs, Mo.
The home where neighbors raised the alarm in Excelsior Springs, Mo.Sarah Plake / KSHB

Haslett was taken into custody in October after the 22-year-old unidentified victim escaped from his basement wearing a metal dog collar and ran to neighbors for help. The woman said she had been held captive and assaulted.

Lisa Johnson, a neighbor who helped the woman, said she was getting ready for work when she heard a faint “help me” from outside her front door.

“She looked straight at me and said ‘help,'” Johnson previously said.

Johnson said the woman feared that if the police were called Haslett would kill them both, but Johnson called authorities anyway.

“I understood where she was coming from at that point. But I did it anyway,” she said.

Police said they found the woman wearing a metal collar with a padlock, latex lingerie and she had duct tape around her mouth, according to a probable cause statement filed in October.

The woman said Haslett had picked her up in early September and kept her in a small room in his basement, restraining her wrists and ankles with handcuffs, the document stated. She said she had been repeatedly raped and whipped and escaped when Haslett left to take his child to school, according to the probable cause.

Haslett was indicted in February on one count of first-degree rape, four counts of first-degree sodomy, one count of first-degree kidnapping, two counts of second-degree assault and one count of endangering a child. He faces more than five life sentences in prison if convicted.



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Long Island murder victim identified as missing woman Karen Vergata


Long Island murder victim identified as missing woman Karen Vergata – CBS News

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Authorities announced Friday that a Long Island murder victim who was referred to for decades by investigators only as “Jane Doe No. 7,” has been identified as Karen Vergata, a woman who went missing in 1996. Her remains were found in two locations near Gilgo Beach. Officials would not say if serial killing suspect Rex Heuermann is linked to her slaying. Shanelle Kaul reports.

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Long Island murder victim identified as woman who disappeared 27 years ago


Long Island murder victim identified as woman who disappeared 27 years ago – CBS News

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Police on New York’s Long Island have identified a murder victim as Karen Vergata, a woman who disappeared in 1996 at the age of 34. It is not clear if the discovery is linked to the Gilgo Beach serial killing suspect already facing charges for three other murders. CBS News correspondent Shanelle Kaul has more.

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Remains found in shallow grave in 2007 identified as Florida woman who was never reported missing


A set of female skeletal remains found in Florida in 2007 have been identified as those of Jeana Lynn Burrus, 39. Burrus, who lived in Sarasota, Florida, was never reported missing, the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release announcing the identification.

Her whereabouts had also not been questioned in the 16 years since the remains were found, the sheriff’s office said.

Jeana Burrus is seen in a photo combination released by the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office in Florida, Aug. 2, 2023.
Jeana Burrus is seen in a photo combination released by the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office in Florida, Aug. 2, 2023.

The remains were found in February 2007 in a shallow grave in a wooded area of the Ashton Court area of Sarasota. The investigation went cold, but later DNA testing and genetic genealogy advancements allowed the sheriff’s office to make a positive identification in November 2022.

On Wednesday, the sheriff’s office said investigators were seeking information from anyone familiar with Burrus or her husband, James Burrus. The couple lived in Citrus County, Florida, and Frederick, Maryland, before moving to Sarasota County.

Burrus had a son, James Burrus Jr., who attended a Sarasota elementary school between 2005 and 2006. Her husband worked at a body shop in Sarasota, while Burrus herself was unemployed.



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A serial killer said he killed a woman in Texas. Four decades later her remains have been identified.


More than four decades since law enforcement found the remains of a young woman on the side of a Texas highway, her remains have been identified, Bastrop County Sheriff’s Office announced at a news conference on Thursday. 

The woman was found in Elgin, Texas, when law enforcement was driving by. She was wearing a white shirt with red neck trim and dark blue jeans, according to DNA Solves, which helps crowdfund identification investigations. 

Her name was Kathy Ann Smith. She was just 22 years old, almost 23, at the time of her murder, the sheriff’s office said. Investigators at the time had no leads on who she was or who killed her. 

In 1984, serial killer Henry Lee Lucas –who confessed to killing hundreds of people, although only three were confirmed– claimed responsibility for Smith’s death.  But local officials still didn’t know the identity of the woman they had found. 

Lucas recanted some of his confessions, but didn’t recant this particular case, the sheriff said at the news conference. “I know Henry Lee was capable of committing murder,” said Bastrop County Sheriff Maurice Cook, but couldn’t definitely say he was responsible for this particular crime. However, Lucas was listed in the investigation files, and still remains the only suspect, the sheriff said.

The grave was exhumed in 2019 to collect DNA samples after Sergeant James Miller began examining the case, the sheriff’s office said. There was not enough information to produce a DNA profile at that time. In 2022, another exhumation was conducted, the sheriff’s office said, and enough DNA existed for a lab to identify the remains through forensic genealogy.

The lab built a profile and provided law enforcement with a name in April 2023. “The problem was she was adopted,” Cook said at the news conference. Law enforcement had to get court permission to get access to the adopted family’s information so they could notify both families of what happened to the victim, before they notified the public.

The sheriff’s office worked the case “to give closure to the family,” they said.

Last week would have been Smith’s 67th birthday, the sheriff’s office. Smith left behind a daughter, who asked not to be identified, the sheriff’s office said.  “The daughter now knows what happened to her mother,” Cook said. 



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