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       #Post#: 3018--------------------------------------------------
       LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 -Found in Willoughby Hills, OH- M
       arch 18, 1983 - Samuel Little victim
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:16 am
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       [img]
  HTML https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/unidentified/images/b/b8/Lake_county.png/revision/latest/scale-to-width-down/200?cb=20191003230224[/img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/UnidentifiedPersons/Case#/57572
       An older male was walking his dog when he discovered the
       skeletal remains.
       #Post#: 3019--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 - Found in Willoughby Hills, 
       OH - March 18, 1983 - Samuel Little 
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:17 am
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  HTML https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2019/06/i-killed-her-right-there-willoughby-hills-detectives-try-to-link-unidentified-body-to-serial-killer-samuel-littles-confession.html?fbclid=IwAR24bJyIyaBhiC07lD79vSTLnpQCJDod6c87c3HKbjXVjo9KV6ns3BH84Bg
       ‘I killed her right there:’ Willoughby Hills detectives try to
       link unidentified body to serial killer Samuel Little’s
       confession
       WILLOUGHBY HILLS, Ohio -- The two detectives and the confessed
       serial killer wanted the same thing: to close a murder case that
       had not been solved for more than three decades.
       The woman’s body had been dumped down a grassy slope, near a
       fence in a wooded area just off Interstate 271.
       By the time she was found in 1983 by a man walking his dog, only
       her skeleton, some clothing and jewelry remained.
       It wasn’t clear how she had died or how long she’d been there.
       Willoughby Hills detectives back then tried to identify the
       woman. She’d been wearing a blue-green dress. A man’s Elgin
       watch was on her left wrist and a gold-colored ring on one of
       her fingers. A pearlescent brooch was pinned to her dark
       sweater, which was found among the decaying leaves.
       Willoughby Hills unidentified woman
       This blue-green dress was found with the body of a woman found
       in 1983 in a wooded area off Interstate 271 in WIlloughby Hills.
       Police hope someone might recognize it and help them identify
       her.
       Detectives knew from the coroner that she was petite, somewhere
       between 20- and 35-years-old, and likely black. An
       anthropologist helped make a drawing to share with local media.
       None of the tips generated by the drawing panned out.
       Last year, detectives Jamie Onion and Ron Parmertor decided to
       pull the cardboard box containing the casefile down from a shelf
       and take a crack at what Onion called “one of the only
       whodunnits” the department had.
       “Someone out there, we thought, is wondering where their cousin
       or niece is,” Onion said.
       Around the same time, a man named Samuel Little was making
       national news, as the 78-year-old confessed to strangling women
       across the country — a catalog of his life’s “work,” which
       amounted to 93 murders.
       Little’s confessions detailed the killings of women, from 1970
       until 2005. Seven of those women, he’d killed in Ohio, including
       three in Cleveland — a short drive from where he was raised.
       Little confessed to killing the three women in Cleveland; one in
       Akron; two in Cincinnati, one whose body was dumped outside of
       Columbus; and one woman he met in Columbus and disposed of in
       Kentucky. Police in Akron and Cincinnati confirmed they are
       looking into cases in their cities.
       Explore a timeline of the cases here or a the bottom of the
       story.
       With help from FBI analysts, local officials quickly identified
       two of the women: Mary Jo Peyton, killed in 1984, and Rose
       Evans, whose body was found in a vacant lot under a pile of
       tires in 1991.
       On Friday, a Cuyahoga County grand jury indicted Little for
       their deaths. Working backward from Little’s confession to
       identify his first Ohio victim, a woman he said he killed in the
       late 1970s, proved more difficult.
       He told investigators that after strangling her in a car in
       Cleveland, he hopped on a highway and then pulled off to dump
       her body over a fence in a wooded area. Little never knew the
       woman’s name. He was only with her for about 30 minutes before
       strangling her, he said.
       “The only thing I remember her saying, when she realized I was
       damn crazy, was, ‘Oh, s---,’” Little said.
       Helping the authorities
       Little has an uncanny ability to describe the faces and body
       types of his victims. He’s done artistic drawings of them for
       investigators.
       His geography for the killings and sometimes his timelines are
       less precise, though he usually recalls the make and model of
       the car he was driving at the time. He targeted women he said
       would not be missed.
       Christie Palazzolo, a crime analyst with the FBI’s Violent
       Criminal Apprehension program, or ViCAP, has been building a
       timeline, piecing together Little’s whereabouts and possibly
       connected murder cases for more than five years.
       When Little started confessing last year during an interview
       with a Texas Ranger about an unsolved murder in that state,
       Palazzolo and Angela Williamson, a senior policy adviser for the
       Department of Justice, had the task of trying to match the
       details he shared with unsolved murders in 19 states.
       They mined federal violent crime databases and reached out to
       more than 200 detectives and investigators with information.
       The body in Willoughby Hills, almost a half-hour outside of
       Cleveland, wasn’t on their radar. But when Onion and Parmertor
       reached out about an FBI bulletin they’d seen, it looked like it
       could be a match.
       Cleveland takes an interest
       The Willoughby Hills detectives didn’t know it at the time, but
       Jack Bornfeld, an investigator for the Cuyahoga County
       Prosecutor’s office, was already working the case: he had notes
       from Little’s confession and was trying to find the murder it
       fit.
       But he had a problem.
       “We didn’t have a body,” Bornfeld said.
       Bornfeld, a retired Cleveland homicide detective, combed through
       unsolved murders from 1972 to 1986 but couldn’t find any cases
       that matched. Cleveland police had destroyed missing persons
       reports made prior to 1990, making the task more difficult.
       Little gave a precise description of where he had killed the
       woman: near East 39th and Broadway. He described her as nicely
       dressed, and said she was a prostitute who was looking to make
       money to buy heroin.
       He strangled the woman before they had sex, he said, right after
       a Cleveland patrol car passed.
       “They didn’t give a f---- if you killin’ over there,” Little
       told the Texas Ranger. But just in case, he jumped on the
       highway with the woman’s body in his black 1973 Thunderbird.
       That’s where things got tricky. Little said he was headed toward
       Akron, but he didn’t name a highway.
       “I couldn’t find any record of a female being dumped between
       Akron and Cleveland,” Bornfeld said.
       He called small departments, the medical examiner’s office and
       drove several times between the two cities trying to find a
       location that matched Little’s description of the highway
       pull-off with a fence, close to a wooded area.
       Willoughby Hills hoping for answers
       There were discrepancies with Little’s confession that Onion and
       Parmertor wanted to talk to him about.
       Little’s original accounting said he dumped the woman over a
       fence.
       The body in Willoughby Hills was found in front of a fence.
       Could the fence have been moved over the decades?
       Little’s description of the woman’s clothing also had changed.
       At first, he thought she was wearing pants and maybe a blouse.
       Then he said maybe a jacket and skull cap. And he hadn’t
       mentioned jewelry, which in other cases he tended to remember.
       Unaware that Cuyahoga County was also working the case, Onion
       and Parmertor flew to Texas in December.
       In the interview room, Little lit up to see some boys from
       Cleveland. It was a chance to get in a dig at late Cleveland
       Browns owner Art Modell and ask about Baker Mayfield, the new
       quarterback he’d heard everyone talk about. He hadn’t yet seen
       him play.
       “What can I help you all with now?” Little asked, sitting at the
       wooden table in a gray-striped jumper, his wheelchair parked in
       the corner.
       Little ran through the story he’d told before.
       The woman was skinny, about 5-foot-tall and with dark skin. She
       was a prostitute. They parked in an area with old factories. The
       police drove by.
       “I killed her right there,” he said.
       Little couldn’t remember which highway he took leaving Cleveland
       or how far he got before pulling off the highway. Five miles?
       10? 15?
       If Little had hopped on the highway, trying to head to Akron and
       ended up in Lake County near Willoughby Hills, he wouldn’t be
       the first.
       “It’s not uncommon,” said Onion, the Willoughby Hills detective.
       “When I was on patrol, a few times a month somebody would get
       screwed up and get on the wrong highway.”
       Then Onion showed Little some photos. The ones of the wooded
       area, taken in 1983, minus the woman’s body. They’d been warned
       Little didn’t want to look at decomposing bodies or skeletons,
       the results of his actions.
       Little leaned in, scrutinizing the image. The woods, the fence.
       “I dumped her over in there,” he said. “Yep.”
       He pointed out a little drainage ditch stream and said he didn’t
       remember that. It didn’t appear in the older photos, though,
       just ones the detectives took more recently.
       Parmertor showed Little a photo of the blue-green dress. He
       studied it.
       “I can’t say exactly what she had on,” he said finally.
       Little said he’d only spent 30 or so minutes with the woman more
       than 35 years earlier.
       Onion decided to show Little the sketch of the woman, the one
       the anthropologist helped make.
       Little had been drawing his own images of the women he had
       killed for investigators, and the sketches had been helpful.
       The 1983 rendering wasn’t as good, the detectives told him. But
       it was good enough.
       “That’s the girl,” Little said.
       How certain do you feel, Onion asked.
       “I’m totally convinced it’s her,” Little said. “No ifs, ands
       [or] buts about it.”
       The investigations merge
       Little was sure that they’d found the right woman, his first
       Ohio victim.
       The detectives from Willoughby Hills felt confident, but not 100
       percent certain.
       The Willoughby Hills and Cuyahoga County investigations
       dovetailed last year, when the medical examiner’s office
       realized they were both looking to solve what could be the same
       case.
       If Little’s confession was accurate, he’d killed the woman in
       Cleveland, the jurisdiction of the Cuyahoga County prosecutor.
       The investigators met to decide what to do.
       Bell knew a murder case could be prosecuted without a body, it
       had been done before. But he was hesitant to charge Little based
       on his confession alone.
       Knowing the identity of the victim could cement the case. Bell
       asked the medical examiner’s office whether they might be able
       to get a DNA profile from the woman’s bones.
       The first try was unsuccessful. But a second try, using a ground
       up piece of bone, worked.
       The next step will be to compare the DNA profile with others.
       There are two ways to do that: asking the Ohio Attorney
       General’s office to do what’s called a familial DNA search for
       the woman’s relatives or to do a genealogical search using
       private databases, which have successfully helped identify other
       victims and the man referred to as the Golden State Killer,
       Joseph James DeAngelo.
       Bell asked for permission to use some of the funding the county
       has to investigate and prosecute cold case sexual assaults to
       pay for the genealogical testing, which could cost about $5,000
       to $6,000.
       “We could use a connection to a family member,” Bell said. “If
       she lived here in Cleveland and did disappear, that would help
       us to know.”
       It would put to rest one more of the unsolved murders Little
       said he was responsible for over the decades, a time when he
       told the Willoughby detectives he was “running around acting
       up.”
       “I’m trying to get everything clear with the establishments,” he
       told the Willoughby Hills detectives. “So people can find out
       what happened to their daughters, and I can help police know
       what the hell happened.”
       Anyone with information that might help identify the woman found
       in Willoughby Hills should call Det. Jamie Onion at 440-918-8727
       or Det. Ron Parmertor at 440-918-8725.
       Emet Celeste-Cohen contributed research for this story.
       #Post#: 3020--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 - Found in Willoughby Hills, 
       OH - March 18, 1983 - Samuel Little 
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:17 am
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  HTML https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/samuel-little-most-prolific-serial-killer-in-us-history-100619
       October 1, 2019 Update: The continued investigation into the
       confessions of Samuel Little has resulted in several changes to
       this map. Five cases have been removed after being confirmed by
       law enforcement. Two new cases have been added—one in Willoughby
       Hills, Ohio, and an additional case in New Orleans, Louisiana.
       Two previously unmatched confessions have been linked to
       unidentified bodies or “Jane Does.” Eight new portraits have
       been added. Little draws the portraits based on his memories of
       the victims.
       #Post#: 3021--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 - Found in Willoughby Hills, 
       OH - March 18, 1983 - Samuel Little 
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:17 am
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       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/57572/Images/58306/Original[/img]
       Blue/Green Dress, likely size 6-8;
       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/57572/Images/58305/Original[/img]
       Black or dark blue sweater w/ belt
       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/57572/Images/58304/Original[/img]
       Black High Heel, approx. 7-7 1/2
       #Post#: 3022--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 - Found in Willoughby Hills, 
       OH - March 18, 1983 - Samuel Little 
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:17 am
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       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/57572/Images/58302/Original[/img]
       Elgin Watch
       #Post#: 3023--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 - Found in Willoughby Hills, 
       OH - March 18, 1983 - Samuel Little 
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:18 am
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       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/57572/Images/58303/Original[/img]
       Ring
       #Post#: 3024--------------------------------------------------
       Re: LAKE COUNTY JANE DOE: F, 17-35 - Found in Willoughby Hills, 
       OH - March 18, 1983 - Samuel Little 
       By: Scorpio Date: February 22, 2020, 12:18 am
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       [img]
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/api/CaseSets/NamUs/UnidentifiedPersons/Cases/57572/Images/58301/Original[/img]
       Cross charm
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