This Cross Dresser Laid in The Chimney 2-4Yrs,35Yrs Ago Now/Identified
Decades after a skeleton was found in a chimney, police officials in Wisconsin identified who the person was. (AP) |
An autopsy determined that the skeleton belonged to a thin man, who was 5 feet 7 inches tall and between 18 and 35 years old. For decades, he came to be known as Dane County Doe, or Chimney Doe, featured in television programs about cold cases and unsolved mysteries with a sculpted reconstruction of his face.
Thirty-five years later, now his name has been returned to him: Ronnie Joe Kirk. He was 5 feet 7 inches tall with a slim body.
He was born in Tulsa, Okla., in 1942, was adopted, and had family ties to Wisconsin, Madison police officials said at a news conference on Monday. They described a breakthrough using DNA and genetic genealogy techniques that have revolutionized cold-case work in recent years.
A Madison Police Department photo of the skull and bones that were found in a chimney of a music store in Madison, Wisconsin. |
Detective Ludden sent strands of hair recovered from the chimney to Astrea. Because the hair was covered in grime, Dr. Kincaid said, it took the lab nine months to extract enough DNA for genomic sequencing.
The parking lot of the Good ‘n Loud Music store in Madison, Wis., was excavated in 1989 after bones were found in a chimney. |
The lab shared a genetic profile with the DNA Doe Project, a group of volunteer genealogists whose sleuthing has helped solve more than 100 cold cases since 2017.
Gwen Knapp, the project’s lead investigator, searched for the profile on GEDMatch, an online database that law enforcement can access and that combines and compares DNA tests from a variety of popular DNA testing companies, like Ancestry.com and 23andMe.
Dr. Knapp’s team parsed many distant matches before finding DNA for both sets of grandparents that helped them build a family tree. They compared genetic data with public records to establish that Mr. Kirk, a man with children who had been married and divorced twice and who had some family ties to Madison, was the likely source of the sequenced DNA. The work was complicated by the fact that Mr. Kirk had been adopted — though the team’s research suggested that his adoptive parents were relatives.
Detective Ludden’s interviews with the family, who requested privacy when the details of the case were revealed, confirmed the match.
And now, 35 years after Mr. Kirk’s skeletal remains were found, a search for how he ended up dead in a chimney can begin.
Detective Ludden has asked the Dane County Medical Examiner’s Office to reexamine the remains, to try to determine when Mr. Kirk died. She has also enlisted the help of the nonprofit Trans Doe Task Force, which focuses on assisting law enforcement in researching cold cases involving L.G.B.T.Q. victims and victims of suspected gender-based violence.
“Based on everything we have at this point, he always identified as male, but I know that sometimes people hide aspects of their life from friends and family,” Detective Ludden said.
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