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       #Post#: 1922--------------------------------------------------
       LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 22 Se
       ptember 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:49 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/iNyqaOq.jpg
       Unidentified remains found in a grave site with other buried
       remains. Cemetary is positioned where grave contents are laid
       east and west. These unidentified remains were laying north and
       south and were discovered when a new grave site was being dug by
       workers.
       #Post#: 1923--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:50 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/UnidentifiedPersons/Case#/10897/details
       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/10897/Images/37399/Thumbnail[/img]
       Unidentified Person / NamUs #UP10897 Male, White / Caucasian
       Date Found
       September 22, 1989
       Location Found
       Nez Perce County, Idaho
       Estimated Age Range
       24-26 Years
       Case Information
       Case Numbers
       NCMEC Number
       --
       ME/C Case Number
       89-4809
       Demographics
       Sex
       Male
       Race / Ethnicity
       White / Caucasian
       --
       Estimated Age Group
       Adult - Pre 30
       Estimated Age Range (Years)
       24-26
       Estimated Year of Death
       --
       Estimated PMI
       --
       Height
       5' 8"(68 inches) , Estimated
       Weight
       Cannot Estimate
       Circumstances
       Type
       Unidentified Deceased
       Date Found
       September 22, 1989
       NamUs Case Created
       January 4, 2013
       ME/C QA Reviewed
       --
       Location Found Map
       General Location
       --
       Idaho
       County
       Nez Perce County
       GPS Coordinates
       --
       Circumstances of Recovery
       unidentified remains found in a grave site with other buried
       remains. Cemetary is positioned where grave contents are laid
       east and west. These unidentified remains were laying north and
       south and were discovered when a new grave site was being dug by
       workers.
       Details of Recovery
       Inventory of Remains
       --
       Condition of Remains
       Not recognizable - Partial skeletal parts only
       Circumstance Notes
       in a local cemetary while digging a fresh grave, unidentified
       remains were found in another grave.
       Investigating Agencies
       CASE OWNER
       Nez Perce County Coroner's Office
       (208) 799-3074
       Agency Case Number
       --
       Joshua Hall, Coroner
       --
       Lewiston Police Department
       (208) 746-0171
       Agency Case Number
       89-4809
       Budd Hurd
       --
       Case Contributors
       Suzann Banks, Law Enforcement
       Lewiston Police Department
       (208) 746-0171
       #Post#: 1924--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:51 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/1180umid.html
       1180UMID - Unidentified Male
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/1180UMID1_LARGE.jpg
       
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/1180UMID.jpg
       Reconstructions of the decedent.
       Date of Discovery: September 22, 1989
       Location of Discovery: Lewiston, Nez Perce County, Idaho
       Estimated Date of Death: Less than 10 years prior
       State of Remains: Skeletal
       Cause of Death: Unknown
       Physical Description
       Estimated Age: 24-26 years old
       Race: White
       Sex: Male
       Height: 5'8"
       Weight: Unknown
       Hair Color: Unknown
       Eye Color: Unknown
       Distinguishing Marks/Features: The size and shape of the bones
       indicated the person had performed heavy lifting during his
       lifetime.
       Identifiers
       Dentals: Available.
       Fingerprints: Not available.
       DNA: Insufficient DNA for profiling.
       Clothing & Personal Items
       Clothing: None.
       Jewelry: None.
       Additional Personal Items: None.
       Circumstances of Discovery
       The decedent was located buried in an unmarked and shallow grave
       at the Normal Hill Cemetery. This man likely wouldn't have been
       found had grave diggers not discovered his bones while preparing
       another plot for burial on September 21, 1989.
       The cemetery began digging a hole for a plot, which no one was
       supposed to be in, they got down not very far and discovered
       some bones. Buried 2 feet down and without a casket, the bones
       were conspicuous from the beginning.
       The man had been buried in a north-south direction adjacent to
       other graves, while plots are buried on an east-west diagram in
       the cemetery.
       Cemetery workers at first suspected they had discovered the
       bones of a person previously buried legitimately at the
       cemetery. But the relatively young age of the remains, buried
       within 10 years of their discovery in 1989, made it nearly
       impossible for the man to have escaped cemetery record-keeping.
       And police note that a change in the law in the 1960s led to the
       requirement that all deceased subjects be buried in a vault or
       casket.
       Investigating Agency(s)
       Agency Name: Nez Perce County Coroner
       Agency Contact Person: Joshua Hall or Suzann Banks
       Agency Phone Number: 208-799-3074 (Hall) or 208-746-0171 (Banks)
       Agency E-Mail: N/A
       Agency Case Number: 89-4809
       Agency Name: Lewiston Police Department
       Agency Contact Person: N/A
       Agency Phone Number: 208-746-0171
       Agency E-Mail: N/A
       Agency Case Number: Unknown
       NCIC Case Number: Unknown
       NamUs Case Number: 10897
       Information Source(s)
       NamUs
       The Olympian
       Admin Notes
       Added: 11/27/08; Last Updated: 2/13/18
       #Post#: 1925--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:52 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://lmtribune.com/northwest/remains-with-no-names/article_388c42f8-f208-5f70-bd1e-042f534df575.html
       Remains with no names
       Two dead bodies were found in Lewiston, in 1982 and 1989, but
       putting names to either one of them has proven elusive
       By RALPH BARTHOLDT OF THE TRIBUNE
       By RALPH BARTHOLDT of the Tribune May 19, 2014
       The bones have recently been returned.
       This in itself is not noteworthy except it serves to close a
       chapter of a saga that has been ongoing for 25 years.
       The bones belong to "Mr. Bonesey," as Lewiston Police Detective
       Budd Hurd has come to call the physical remains of the 24- to
       26-year-old white male found buried in an unmarked, shallow
       grave in Normal Hill Cemetery on Sept. 21, 1989. Police have
       been trying since then to connect the remains with an identity,
       but have fallen short.
       The bones filled an unmarked sack in the Lewiston Police
       Department evidence room and were all but forgotten until a few
       years ago when Hurd, the department's evidence detective,
       reacquainted himself with the 33 pieces.
       "I found them in evidence, and that's what started this again,"
       Hurd said.
       By "this," he means police department efforts to rejoin the hunt
       to identify the pieces that were found more than two decades ago
       by a grave digger preparing another plot for burial. Instead of
       being laid in an east to west direction under several feet of
       fill, according to cemetery protocol, the remains he found were
       laid north to south without a casket under about 2 feet of soil.
       There was no record of the burial.
       Using dental records and descriptions, police tried to match
       them with a number of missing persons, but nothing fit.
       Anthropologist Donald Tyler, chairman of the sociology,
       anthropology and justice studies program at the University of
       Idaho, was tapped to examine the bones. Tyler concluded they
       were from a male, approximately 5 feet 8 inches tall and 24 to
       26 years of age. The bones indicated the person had performed
       heavy lifting during his lifetime.
       Based upon the decomposition of the body and the relative
       freshness of the bones, Tyler found they had been buried for
       less than 10 years.
       "His skull was wiped off, but I could see that it was recently
       decomposed," Tyler said. "The skull, through the mineral water,
       will change color to what minerals are around it, and this had
       just started the process."
       The cause of death could not be determined, he said. Unless a
       body was inflicted with multiple stab wounds, or shot through
       the skull with a firearm, evidence becomes sketchy once a
       person's remains have been degraded to bone, he said.
       Dental records of Steven Pearsall, who was reported missing from
       the Lewiston Civic Theatre in September 1982 and would have fit
       a time line of the remains, failed to provide a match.
       A number of other missing persons of the era were also closely
       checked to determine if their records could provide a match for
       the man, said former Lewiston Police Detective Alan Johnson.
       None were found.
       Police publicized the man's bones in 1990 when an employee at
       the North Idaho Laboratory, then located at North Idaho College
       in Coeur d'Alene, was able to reconstruct the man's skull by
       adding clay features that would simulate what he may have looked
       like.
       Identifications on the face and other age-identifying marks
       could not be determined, but the man's skull gives police a
       small picture into his appearance. No one can be sure, however,
       if the resemblance is accurate. Such resemblances sometimes
       provide the person's face in exact detail, Tyler said. Others
       may not resemble the living person.
       Lewiston police entered X-rays of the man's jaw, which included
       his dental makeup, into a Northwest DNA database, and it was
       crosschecked with other cases of the time. Again, no hits.
       When Hurd found the bones and lugged them out of evidence it had
       been a decade or more since they were stored away. Advances in
       DNA research had blossomed during that time and the department
       opted to employ the latest technology as yet another step to
       uncovering the man's identity. The bones were sent to the
       University of North Texas Center for Human Identification where
       Mr. Bonesey's DNA was logged into a national registry for
       posterity.
       "We used to need 100 DNA markers to make a positive identity,"
       Hurd said. "Now, it's down to five."
       Lt. Mike Pedersen, who was a patrol officer in 1989 when he
       responded to the cemetery where the bones were first uncovered,
       has watched the investigative process over the years. After many
       dead ends, he is skeptical that new technology will help close
       the case.
       "I would be extremely surprised if we find him," Pedersen said.
       Since their return from the Texas laboratory, Lewiston police
       have made plans to cremate the skeletal remains, closing another
       small chapter in this cold case.
       The case of 'John Doe'
       The dead man whose body was found bullet-riddled in the Snake
       River south of Lewiston more than 30 years ago could have come
       from three drainages.
       He was discovered on a Saturday night, June 26, 1982, by a
       Lewiston fisherman on the Idaho side of the river, near an eddy
       just across from the mouth of the Grande Ronde River.
       Detectives estimated the man had been in the water for two or
       three weeks. Because river levels were high during the spring
       runoff, the body could have floated in from the Salmon River, or
       the Grande Ronde, detectives speculated. It could have been
       dumped into the Snake upstream.
       He was removed from the water at Heller Bar by Asotin County
       deputies and later buried in Normal Hill Cemetery as "John Doe."
       After more than 30 years, Nez Perce County Sheriff's Office
       detectives are still trying to identify the 18- to 20-year-old
       man who suffered gunshot wounds to the left shoulder and neck.
       Sheriff Joe Rodriguez was an investigator when the sheriff's
       office received a tip that detectives felt could rekindle the
       cold case. John Doe was exhumed to collect a DNA sample, which
       was sent to the University of Northern Texas Center for Human
       Identification.
       "It was not a match," Rodriguez said.
       Since taking the helm of county law enforcement, Rodriguez has
       been collecting leads and following up with people who may shed
       new light on the old case.
       "I just started making phone calls and setting up meetings with
       people," he said. "It takes basically somebody to remember
       something that could be part of this."
       No other law enforcement agencies along the Snake and Salmon
       river systems ever identified the man as a missing person of
       their own, according to newspaper reports.
       Doe was of medium build, weighing 150 pounds and standing 5 feet
       11 inches, according to authorities. He had straight brown or
       black hair, and a 2-inch scar on his right ankle, but no tattoos
       or other distinguishing marks. The color of his eyes could not
       be determined. When he was found, Doe wore designer jeans over
       blue swimming trunks with red and white stripes. Dental records
       didn't produce a match.
       Authorities said he was shot with a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber
       36 Centennial Model, a rare firearm, which had not been
       manufactured since 1967.
       "There was only 100 of them made," Rodriguez said.
       Detectives believed the man was dead when he entered the river,
       although an autopsy report was inconclusive on whether he
       drowned or died from the gunshots.
       Investigations in the years after Doe was buried prompted
       ballistic checks of a few handguns, but investigations fizzled.
       Cold cases such as John Doe's don't go away, Rodriguez said.
       They sit idly sometimes, but new information and new technology
       such as recent advances in DNA research can prompt renewed
       interest.
       "If something piques our interest, we look at it again,"
       Rodriguez said. "If you look at technology, we've advanced."
       Bartholdt can be contacted at rbartholdt@lmtribune.com or (208)
       848-2275.
       #Post#: 1926--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:54 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       The bones belong to "Mr. Bonesey," as Lewiston Police Detective
       Budd Hurd has come to call the physical remains of the 24- to
       26-year-old white male found buried in an unmarked, shallow
       grave in Normal Hill Cemetery on Sept. 21, 1989.
       Normal Hill Cemetery
       1122 7th St,
       Lewiston, ID 83501
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/C8aOm1U.jpg
       #Post#: 1927--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:55 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       [img]
  HTML https://www.google.com/maps/vt/data=FleuU8RmM6ePoIaICo0E3BvsbzctBCpZWF25wE-OjDYH97bE_yvYCqB9HnsKZeU1NDhMhtry-qfuPbue5LWHfnjVaOR4sjU86ZPdVK3vbniLRVYc52c7P0ESP-K6C_JQz8E7Sw6QDzH4v0_lpJsggPus_wPPRhq8-3qXG0CmBr4wkVVCMEfVaAWgWCz6zmOxynL-bQy4T8LyyiR9OPlw81HElRN06-CQqWNSCl8hn55oRvXl9-Kq4mKfmcYk2I3dyegO47EwXt3e7UUlzN6ptaHOErBkLaqk5etCSA[/img]
       Lewiston
       Idaho 83501
       #Post#: 1928--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:57 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/LG7B2bR.gif
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/vHgChh2.png
       #Post#: 1929--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:58 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       Lewiston, Idaho
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/tF4msw0.jpg
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/W2nhuSz.jpg
       #Post#: 1930--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 9:59 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/nBxmVxe.jpg
       #Post#: 1931--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LEWISTON JOHN DOE (1989): WM, 24-26, found in a cemetery - 2
       2 September 1989
       By: Akoya Date: February 12, 2020, 10:00 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       Lewiston Tribune
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/LlZFz7J.jpg
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