Jane Doe Murder Solved After 24 Years

Jane Doe Murder Solved After 24 Years

This beautiful woman was murdered in 1998.

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She remained unidentified for 20 years.

Her killer was unconfirmed for 24 years.

But thanks to dogged determination from investigators, support and cooperation from her family, new technology and help from the community, we now know her name is Lina Reyes-Geddes.?

She was a fun-loving, wonderful woman who immigrated from Mexico, and lived in Youngstown, Ohio with her husband of two years.

Then, on April 20, 1998, the 38-year-old’s' body was found near Maidenwater Spring in Garfield County, Utah, off State Route 276 in a remote area about 45 miles north of Lake Powell. Despite extensive investigations by the Garfield County Sheriff's Office and the Utah State Bureau of Investigation, due to a number of complications, including the husband never reporting her missing, authorities were unable to identify the body. The case went cold.

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Lina Reyes-Geddes' killer spent a good amount of time trying to conceal his merciless deeds.?After tying her arms and legs, shooting her in the head and removing her fingertips, he covered Lina’s body in plastic bags, then wrapped in duct tape, tied with rope and placed inside a sleeping bag before being rolled into a carpet. Then he transported her, potentially from Ohio or Texas, all the way to the middle of Utah.?Because of that, for almost 20 years, Lina remained unidentified and was instead referred to as the "Maidenwater victim."

Over the years investigators sent various pieces of evidence to the state crime lab for analysis, including DNA from the rope, but with no actionable results.?The Utah State Lab simply didn’t have the tools they needed to help solve the mystery.?The frustration of another unsolved case languished on.

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Theories popped up, including the potential of serial killer Scott "Hannibal" Kimball being responsible, but he was eventually ruled out as a suspect.?Lina’s killer was yet to be found.

Then, in 2018, the Utah SBI released a post-mortem picture of Lina.?An alert citizen in California matched the picture to one that had been released by the Youngstown PD of missing person Lina Reyes-Geddes, and the break investigators had been hoping for finally happened.?

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Once Lina had been identified, then the hard work of identifying her killer commenced in earnest.?But 20+ yr old evidence, especially evidence that had already been sent to the lab on multiple occasions, has its challenges.? Detective Brian Davis had an ace in his corner though, and her name is Kathy MacKay. Kathy is an expert researcher and had found the M-Vac system as a new, more aggressive forensic DNA collection technology, and brought this to Brian’s attention. ?And, as fortune would have it, they also knew a senior CSI at West Jordan PD named Francine Bardole, and Francine was (and still is) an expert with this new collection system.

?Detective Davis asked Francine for help and they got to work.?Francine used the M-Vac to sample multiple items, but what yielded the best results was the rope that was used to tie Lina’s wrists and legs.?

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But wait, how was that possible??That rope had already been sent to the Utah State Crime Lab for testing, and their results were negligible.?Based on their testing Detective Davis was led to believe there wasn’t a half of a nanogram of DNA material on that rope, which is what is necessary to produce a viable DNA profile.

By using the M-Vac Francine was able to collect 117 nanograms of DNA material from that rope, which is 234 times more than what is needed.? It was the best news the investigators had heard in a long time. ?

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Detective Davis was then able to send the M-Vac filters to Pure Gold Forensics in Redlands, CA for analysis.?Using the latest in lab processing and analysis techniques, the experts at Pure Gold Forensics were able to identify two DNA profiles from that rope.?One was eliminated as a knot expert who had examined the rope years before, the other was Lina’s husband, Edward Geddes.?

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The 24 year old mystery of who killed Lina Reyes-Geddes was finally known. The man who was supposed to love, protect and provide for her was the sub-human who brutally took her life. Had he not committed suicide in 2001, just three years after he killed Lina, he would be facing murder charges.

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Our congratulations to all those involved in helping Lina receive justice.?Despite the endless hours, frustrations from dead-ends, lack of evidence, the brutality that people do to each other and all the other the investigators persisted and in this case won one for the good side.

But most importantly our hearts go out to Lina’s family.?Contrary to what some might think, most victims and their families never really get full closure.?Yes, life goes on, and some are able to put the murder of a loved one in a place that doesn’t affect them in a dramatic way, but some cannot and it literally destroys the loved ones left behind.?In that light we also pray for all of Lina’s family and hope they can now not only lay Lina to rest in a sacred place for their family, but also now be able to find peace knowing what happened to their beloved Lina. May she finally Rest in Peace.

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?For more details and a in-person accounting of his efforts, tune into the video and podcast All Things Crime. The link is below!

https://youtu.be/9jF-h2M9h5c

Izabela Lundberg, M.S.

Ignite Resistance Into Resilience, Results & ROIs Momentum ? Strategic Advisor To Billion Dollar Companies ? Top 40 Global Thought Leader ? TEDx Speaker ? #1 Best-Selling Author "From Fear To Greatness" ? Forbes ???????

2 年

So glad that cold cases like this get eventually solved and victims families much needed cloasure.

Susan Bauer

Assistant Public Defender

2 年

This was a moving account. I am grateful for this technology and second your wishes that she finally rest in peace.

Amanda Coleman

Executive Director @ Irish Angel Inc | Nonprofit, PTSD

2 年

This goes to show, never stop... keep pushing the truth will out.

Tom Joyce

Former Police Officer and Public Safety Technology Industry SME

2 年

#nevergiveup

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