Sources: DNA websites used to hunt suspected killer
Published on April 27, 2018 at 09:21AM by By Melody Gutierrez and Jenna Lyons
SACRAMENTO — Investigators broke open the long-stagnant case of the prolific serial killer and rapist known as the Golden State Killer by mining DNA profiles collected by a genealogical website used by the public to trace family heritage, sources told The Chronicle on Thursday. Law enforcement had long had a DNA profile of the suspected killer, which helped them connect murders and rapes across the state to the same unidentified man. But, the DNA profile did not match any contained in criminal databases that are used by law enforcement throughout the U.S. to link crimes to suspects. The explosion in recent years of DNA heritage websites such as 23andMe and Ancestry.
Published on April 27, 2018 at 09:21AM by By Melody Gutierrez and Jenna Lyons
SACRAMENTO — Investigators broke open the long-stagnant case of the prolific serial killer and rapist known as the Golden State Killer by mining DNA profiles collected by a genealogical website used by the public to trace family heritage, sources told The Chronicle on Thursday. Law enforcement had long had a DNA profile of the suspected killer, which helped them connect murders and rapes across the state to the same unidentified man. But, the DNA profile did not match any contained in criminal databases that are used by law enforcement throughout the U.S. to link crimes to suspects. The explosion in recent years of DNA heritage websites such as 23andMe and Ancestry.
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