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       #Post#: 3709--------------------------------------------------
       ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railroad t
       racks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:25 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/qAbQzsK.jpg
       A couple strolling through the woods off of Oronoque Road in
       Milford discovered the skeletal remains of the decedent by
       railroad tracks. His body was wrapped in a pink blanket, an
       olive drab colored blanket and two green plastic garbage bags.
       The remains were 90% skeletonized. Four small caliber gray metal
       bullets were recovered. The man was killed elsewhere.
       Investigators believe he was not from the local area.
       #Post#: 3710--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:27 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://www.namus.gov/UnidentifiedPersons/Case#/9242
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/1mzPwAJ.jpg
       Case Information
       Case Numbers
       NCMEC Number
       --
       ME/C Case Number
       92-7994
       Demographics
       Sex
       Male
       Race / Ethnicity
       Asian
       Estimated Age Group
       Adult - Pre 30
       Estimated Age Range (Years)
       18-25
       Estimated Year of Death
       1991-1992
       Estimated PMI
       6 Months
       Height
       5' 6"(66 inches) , Estimated
       Weight
       130 lbs, Estimated
       Circumstances
       Type
       Unidentified Deceased
       Date Found
       August 21, 1992
       NamUs Case Created
       September 2, 2011
       ME/C QA Reviewed
       September 3, 2011
       Location Found Map
       Street Address
       Wooded Area
       Oronoque Road
       Milford, Connecticut
       County
       New Haven County
       GPS Coordinates
       --
       Circumstances of Recovery
       Body found in wooded area by people walking through woods.
       Details of Recovery
       Inventory of Remains
       All parts recovered
       Condition of Remains
       Not recognizable - Near complete or complete skeleton
       Physical Description
       Hair Color
       --
       Head Hair Description
       --
       Body Hair Description
       --
       Facial Hair Description
       --
       Left Eye Color
       --
       Right Eye Color
       --
       Eye Description
       --
       Distinctive Physical Features
       No Known Information
       Clothing and Accessories
       Description
       Clothing Buttoned long-sleeved shirt with logo "FOREVER" over
       left chest pocket.
       "Fruit of the Loom" vest-type undershirt XL 14-16
       Jeans with brown belt and yellow metal buckle
       "Fruit of the Loom" jockey underwear size 30-32
       Case Contributors
       Michelle Clark, Medicolegal Death Investigator
       Connecticut Office of Chief Medical Examiner
       (860) 679-3980
       #Post#: 3711--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:29 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/1714umct.html
       1714UMCT - Unidentified Male
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/qAbQzsK.jpghttp://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/1714UMCT1_LARGE.jpg
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/1714UMCT2_LARGE.jpghttp://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/1714UMCT3_LARGE.jpg
       Reconstructions of the victim by the New York Academy of Art
       Date of Discovery: August 21, 1992
       Location of Discovery: Milford, New Haven County, Connecticut
       Estimated Date of Death: Months prior
       State of Remains: Unknown
       Cause of Death: Homicide by multiple gunshots to the head
       Physical Description
       Estimated Age: 18-30 years old
       Race: Asian
       Sex: Male
       Height: 5'5" to 5'6"
       Weight: 120-130 lbs.
       Hair Color: Black, straight, 4" to 5" in length.
       Eye Color: Unknown
       Distinguishing Marks/Features: Unknown
       Identifiers
       Dentals: Available. X-rays and photographs available. All teeth
       including third molars have erupted. No cavities, restorations
       or abnormalities are identified. The incisors do not have a
       shovel appearance.
       Fingerprints:Not available.
       DNA: Available.
       Clothing & Personal Items
       Clothing: Long sleeve buttoned shirt with logo "Forever" on the
       left chest pocket, Fruit of the Loom vest-type undershirt (size
       XL 14-16), denim pants, brown belt with yellow metal buckle, and
       Fruit of the Loom white jockey underwear (size 30-32).
       Jewelry: Unknown
       Additional Personal Items: Unknown
       Circumstances of Discovery
       A couple strolling through the woods off of Oronoque Road in
       Milford discovered the skeletal remains of the decedent by
       railroad tracks. His body was wrapped in a pink blanket, an
       olive drab colored blanket and two green plastic garbage bags.
       The remains were 90% skeletonized. Four small caliber gray metal
       bullets were recovered. The man was killed elswewhere.
       Investigators believe he was not from the local area.
       Investigating Agency(s)
       Agency Name: Office of the Connecticut Medical Examiner
       Agency Contact Person: Michelle Clark
       Agency Phone Number: 860-679-3980
       Agency E-Mail: msclark(at)ocme.org
       Agency Case Number: 92-7994
       Agency Name: Milford Police Department (CT)
       Agency Contact Person: N/A
       Agency Phone Number: 203-878-6551
       Agency E-Mail: N/A
       Agency Case Number: Unknown
       NCIC Case Number: Unknown
       NamUs Case Number: 9242
       Former Hot Case Number: 1127
       Information Source(s)
       NamUs
       Connecticut Post News Archive
       Admin Notes
       Added: Prior to 2012; Last Updated: 11/15/17
       #Post#: 3712--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:33 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       [img]
  HTML https://www.google.com/maps/vt/data=_haYmticpJIyagEdks_pASLBOSbSUv8Sr2AXnOgeTFouleGfVRv3dWQ_k2R1faiHPs1_mc0ptcln_-lLnUw_wTuj8GpO5jtjvDUPOgLHxv8wDDnOYB8x5a0FAMu7rO4bcPuuxArzEYz0WlBGB0y2qJNOmJBq-SPu86HXmMxDD3dkXrG7fiD4e1vW-O77Y7oCyCUpnBJIZj9B2Mu2-9cUup_3GJ_6b2huX6AXG6YJHQSocwjQ7MtC4JVh3Asok4YY7a9iy9CZKkpVSGBK6SfBn-acEkWva-uIRL2lbw[/img]
       Milford
       Connecticut
       #Post#: 3713--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:35 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://www.nhregister.com/news/article/Missing-in-Connecticut-Giving-a-name-to-the-11547255.php
       Missing in Connecticut: Giving a name to the 'missing missing,'
       databases and DNA may help identify unnamed remains (video)
       Michelle Tuccitto Sullo, Investigations Editor Published 12:00
       am EST, Saturday, February 4, 2012
       The region's nameless dead have been found floating in the
       Connecticut River, hidden in ditches and dumped in forests and
       near highways. Around the state, human remains have been found
       by street sweepers, hunters, hikers and passers-by and unearthed
       by construction crews.
       Police have worked for years trying to figure out who they are
       -- a young woman found murdered in East Haven still remains
       nameless after 37 years.
       East Haven police Detective Sgt. Bruce Scobie said police would
       like to solve the mystery, know her name and capture her killer.
       Scobie, a father himself, thinks about Jane Doe's parents and
       relatives.
       "You wonder if this person had family somewhere at one time,"
       Scobie said. "Are they out there wondering? Did they pass on,
       never knowing what happened to her? It is hard to believe no one
       ever missed her. There must be someone out there with a story of
       a friend or cousin who disappeared. Someday, I'd like to hear
       that a name has been put to her."
       According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's National
       Crime Information Center, the country's number of unidentified
       deceased was at 7,551 as of Jan. 1. However, it isn't mandatory
       for law enforcement to enter all cases into this database,
       according to a center spokeswoman.
       U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, D-5, who has proposed the federal "Help
       Find the Missing Act," or "Billy's Law," in honor of missing
       Waterbury man William Smolinski Jr., estimates there are 40,000
       sets of unidentified remains nationwide. Murphy's proposal seeks
       to create an organized system to match remains to missing
       people, and an incentive grants program for law enforcement and
       medical examiners to report information to NCIC, the U.S.
       Department of Justice's National Missing and Unidentified
       Persons System, or NamUs, and the National DNA Index System.
       "Unless you put information about unidentified remains on NamUs,
       you are cutting out the most important investigators, the loved
       ones of the missing," Murphy said, as NamUs is open to the
       public. "The Internet is perfectly positioned to solve these
       cases, yet we aren't using it to its capacity."
       On Friday, NamUs, which launched in 2007, listed 41 cases of
       unidentified remains found in Connecticut, going back to 1972.
       It listed 8,165 open unidentified remains cases for the country.
       While various databases can help match the missing to the
       unidentified, investigators frequently aren't using all
       available databases. Older cases predate DNA extraction
       technology. In many area cases, the unidentified bodies were
       buried, so investigators don't have DNA to add to databases
       unless they exhume the bodies.
       Of the 41 cases of unidentified remains listed on NamUs for
       Connecticut, only three show DNA samples have been submitted,
       with no DNA samples taken even for many cases in years when the
       technology was available, the site shows.
       Under state law effective in October 2011, in cases involving
       remains where homicide is suspected, the office of the chief
       state medical examiner has to obtain tissue samples, bone and
       hair for DNA typing, and these samples must go to the Division
       of Scientific Services within the Department of Public Safety.
       While several cases of unidentified remains from years ago have
       been added to NamUs in recent months, the NamUs list isn't
       complete. State Victim Advocate Michelle Cruz said plans are
       under way for statewide training for law enforcement on how to
       use NamUs.
       East Haven's Jane Doe, for example, isn't on there yet, though
       police say they are considering including her.
       A truck driver found her body Aug. 16, 1975, in a drainage ditch
       behind a department store on Frontage Road. The white woman was
       found wrapped in a canvas tarp with black wire around her neck,
       waist and knees. Her cause of death was asphyxiation by
       suffocation, according to police.
       Police have circulated an artist's rendering of the brunette,
       who is believed to have been 18 to 28 years old. They have
       featured her case on The Doe Network. This has led to occasional
       leads, but none have led to Doe's identity.
       Scobie said police are discussing exhuming her body from a
       Hamden cemetery to try to get DNA from her remains.
       Police have Jane Doe's dental records, but she was found in an
       era that pre-dates the widespread use of DNA testing, Scobie
       said.
       Scobie said having her DNA may not lead to any matches, because
       there may not be DNA available from women who went missing back
       then for comparison.
       "Exhuming her body is something that has been discussed," Scobie
       said. "If the laboratory said there would be viable DNA, we
       would probably do it."
       Also, while an artist did a rendering of Doe years ago, Scobie
       said computer technology has advanced so much that using her
       skull today could result in a more accurate image of what she
       looked like.
       Henry C. Lee, forensics expert, professor and founder of the
       University of New Haven Forensic Research Training Center, said
       technology has changed tremendously in the years since the
       discovery of East Haven's Jane Doe. According to Lee, in older
       cases of unidentified remains, DNA samples weren't taken, but
       with today's technology, DNA can be extracted from hair and
       bone.
       Lee also cautioned that getting DNA from the remains won't
       necessarily solve the East Haven mystery.
       "It is so many years ago, it would be hard to track down family
       to get the known DNA (for comparison)," Lee said. "If we don't
       know where the victim came from, we don't have known DNA to
       compare with, and that becomes shooting in the dark, and makes
       the case very difficult."
       Scobie said he doesn't believe Jane Doe was from the area, as he
       believes someone would have reported her missing, and she would
       have been recognized back then from publicity about the case. It
       is possible her parents are dead, he said.
       "The theory is she was killed elsewhere and then brought to that
       location," Scobie said. "I personally don't think the crime
       occurred very far away. She was pretty well bound, tied and
       gagged. Someone took their time with her. I think it was a
       premeditated killing."
       Doe possibly had a small mole on her chin, and she had pierced
       ears and wore small gold circular earrings, according to Scobie.
       "There was an item used to gag her which leads me to believe the
       homicide was committed locally," he said.
       Police don't want to be specific about the item used to gag the
       victim, because if police ever get a confession, only the killer
       could identify it, Scobie said.
       Police believe she had been there up to five days before her
       discovery.
       "Whoever put her there, did not want her found," Scobie said.
       "There are a lot of theories. I'm not sure a person who was just
       traveling through would take the time to conceal a body like
       that."
       Over the years, leads about her possible identity have come
       through the Doe Network, but they have all been ruled out
       through dental or medical comparisons, according to Scobie.
       According to Scobie, police have a suspect in Jane Doe's death,
       Glen Askeborn, who served prison time for a similar slaying in
       Maine. Askeborn, who dressed in women's clothes, used the name
       Samantha Glenner also, according to police.
       According to the Maine Department of Corrections, Askeborn was
       released from prison in September 2009.
       "The body in that (Maine) case was concealed and disposed of in
       a similar manner, and we went to interview (Askeborn) in a Maine
       prison," Scobie said. "He denied any knowledge of it. He lived
       in East Haven at the time of this (Jane Doe) incident, and there
       were a lot of similarities. Personally, I do think he was
       involved, but we have no direct evidence."
       Investigators in Old Saybrook have their own unsolved case.
       Fishermen discovered the badly decomposed body of a man floating
       in the Connecticut River in Old Saybrook on March 31, 1998.
       John Doe's case is on the Doe Network, and it was entered on
       NamUs in 2008. The NamUs site says his DNA is not available, but
       his dental information is available for comparison. The site
       estimates his age at between 30 and 35 and describes him as a
       white male, who was 5 feet, 8 inches tall. His remains were
       mostly skeletonized. He was wearing a coat with a purple zipper,
       and had remnants of black socks and pants, and he wore size 9˝
       FILA brand sneakers. He also had a silver lighter, the NamUs
       site shows. Officials estimate his death as between 1990 and
       1998. His remains were eventually buried as a John Doe.
       The man is featured in the state's cold case playing card deck,
       which is given to state prisoners, as the nine of hearts. The
       card describes him as an unidentified person, aged between 29
       and 32, and about 200 pounds. A drawing of him on the card
       depicts him as dark-skinned.
       Old Saybrook police Sgt. Charles Mercer said the investigation
       determined his body was in the water for years, and police
       believe he floated downriver to Old Saybrook.
       "The condition of the body indicates he was in a marshy area
       before high water moved the remains to the river," Mercer said.
       According to Mercer, the facial reconstruction of a dark-skinned
       male was done by the National Center for Missing and Exploited
       Children, and police believe it is an accurate representation of
       what he looked like, though Mercer said the skin color could be
       much lighter and is "at best a guess."
       "His bone structure suggests he probably was Hispanic or
       Caucasian, or of mixed race," Mercer said.
       Police have widely distributed the man's image, even featuring
       his case on America's Most Wanted's website. His dental records
       were submitted to the American Dental Association and the
       Department of Defense's dental unit, according to Mercer.
       Police do not know the victim's cause of death, so they don't
       know if there was foul play, Mercer said. They also do not have
       his DNA, Mercer confirmed.
       "We could not submit DNA as there were some restrictions at the
       time, and we really did not have a cause of death," Mercer said.
       Exhuming the body, such as for DNA testing, isn't likely until
       police can locate someone linked to him, according to Mercer.
       Police distributed descriptions of the man's clothing, and
       because of the lighter he had, even contacted the National
       Lighter Museum in Oklahoma, hoping for leads and clues to his
       identity. The lighter model was widely distributed, police said.
       "It is all to no avail," Mercer said. "I had always hoped to
       identify him before I retire. A lot of time was expended, but
       with no results, I'm afraid."
       Milford police are still investigating two unidentified remains
       cases that date back to the early 1990s.
       On Aug. 21, 1992, people walking in the woods off Oronoque Road
       in Milford found the body of an Asian man in his early to mid
       20s. The victim had been shot multiple times and rolled up in a
       rug. His case is listed on the NamUs database. The site
       indicates DNA testing was not done, but investigators do have
       his dental X-rays. He is also on the Doe Network.
       Also in Milford, on March 24, 1994, a city public works crew
       found a male headless torso in a bag, also near Oronoque Road by
       the Housatonic River. The torso case hadn't been entered into
       NamUs as of Friday.
       Officer Jeffrey Nielsen, spokesman for the Milford police, said
       both cases are active investigations. Investigators received an
       inquiry on the torso case as recently as December from Canada,
       but the remains didn't match, according to Nielsen, who said the
       torso case likely hasn't been put on NamUs because of the lack
       of identifying information.
       "We are hopeful any open investigation can be solved," Nielsen
       said. "One of the obstacles for the torso case is that there are
       no dental records or fingerprints to go off of, no limbs with
       tattoos, which are all helpful in identifying. When these cases
       happened, DNA databases weren't available."
       "You need to have identifying information on the people -- you
       need things for comparison," Nielsen said.
       Lee said he was involved in investigating the Milford
       dismembering case.
       "That victim was more than likely not from Connecticut," Lee
       said. "No missing person matched that individual. Either the
       person was from another place and came to Connecticut and was
       killed here, or was murdered someplace else and dumped in
       Milford."
       According to Lee, while technology has improved for identifying
       remains, investigators still face obstacles such as time and
       staffing. "Technology has changed tremendously -- we now have
       databases," Lee said. "Police departments are pretty busy and
       have new cases. Sometimes, when nobody in a family is pushing
       and police have new cases, and the laboratory people have a big
       backlog, a lot of cases fall through the cracks, with nobody
       really pursuing them. It is possible, if they were focused on,
       they would be solved. Reviewing the cases takes a lot of time
       and manpower."
       Lee noted that the National Cold Case Center at the Henry C. Lee
       Institute of Forensic Science at the University of New Haven has
       had success at solving old cases, but investigators have to ask
       for their assistance.
       State police spokesman Lt. J. Paul Vance said he doesn't know
       exactly how many unidentified remains cases there are in the
       state.
       Vance said he doesn't think staffing at the laboratory is an
       issue.
       When asked why it is so difficult to identify these people,
       Vance said, "Sometimes there are no identifiers, or there is
       nothing on file to compare them to, even if the information is
       entered into a database."
       Kenna Quinet, associate professor of criminal justice, law &
       public safety at Indiana University-Purdue University, said some
       long unsolved cases may fall under the category of the "missing
       missing," or unidentified people who were never reported
       missing.
       These individuals often are prostitutes, homeless, drug addicts,
       children who have been kicked out of their homes, undocumented
       immigrants, or people who lost contact with family and friends,
       according to Quinet.
       "There's really two levels, one group of people who are never
       missed by anyone, and others who are eventually missed but there
       is a significant delay in the missing report -- days, weeks,
       months, even years," Quinet said. "That obviously makes for a
       difficult investigation for police."
       "I think we are underestimating the number of homicides and the
       number of serial murders in the U.S. because we are not counting
       the 'missing missing,' and some people are not only never
       reported as missing, but we never find the body," Quinet said.
       Visit the Missing in Connecticut Facebook page at
       Facebook.com/MissingInCT.
       Call Michelle Tuccitto Sullo at 203-789-5707. Follow her on
       Twitter @nhrinvestigate.
       #Post#: 3714--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:38 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://defrostingcoldcases.com/oronoque-rd-john-doe/
       Oronoque Rd John Doe
       June 11, 2018 By Alice
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/gJGRROO.jpg
       Milford Police in Connecticut is asking for your help to
       identify this man. I have named him Oronoque Rd John Doe as this
       was where the unidentified man was found in August 21, 1992.
       Milford Police Detective Mitchell Warwick told News8 the
       following: on August 21,1992 two pedestrians found skeletal
       remains wrapped in a blanket across the street from train tracks
       not far from the Housatonic River.
       The state medical examiner said that the unidentified man was
       shot twice in the head. The article does not state the caliber
       or the side of the head. It also doesn’t specify whether the man
       had any other trauma. The man’s DNA showed him to be of Asian
       heritage, between 18-25 years old, and between 5’3 to 5’6 inches
       tall.
       “They determined the victim had probably been in that area up to
       1 or 2 months prior,” said Warwick. “The investigators ran down
       many leads, all ended in dead ends.” With the help of a forensic
       artist a 3D skull reconstruction was made in hopes that if
       people see it, they will recognize the man.
       Milford Police also hopes to solve another cold case from the
       same area on Oronoque Road. This one is from March 1994. Milford
       Public Works employees saw a green military style duffel bag
       down a bank along the Housatonic River.
       Police found inside a male torso that was wrapped in plastic
       bags and in a motel-style comforter. The head, arms and legs
       were missing and never found. A piece of the chest was cut out
       in what police believe was a way to remove a tattoo or mark that
       would identify the victim. This victim is of Hispanic heritage,
       between 20-27 years old, approx. 5’5 inches tall, and weighing
       120-130 pounds.
       Det. Warwick is not ruling out a connection between the cold
       cases but “the manner and means of which the men were killed and
       their bodies disposed show significant differences.”
       If you have any information please contact Detective Mitchell
       Warwick at [email protected] or call (203) 878-6551.
       #Post#: 3715--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:40 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       Milford, Connecticut
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/wB3T1jq.jpg
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/0gIaIaS.jpg
       #Post#: 3716--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:43 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://unidentified.wikia.com/wiki/New_Haven_County_John_Doe_(1992)
       New Haven County John Doe (1992)
       New Haven County John Doe was a male found murdered in
       Connecticut in 1992.
       Sex Male
       Race Asian
       Location Milford, Connecticut
       Found August 21, 1992
       Unidentified for 26 years
       Postmortem interval 6 months prior
       Body condition Skeletal
       Age approximation 18-30
       Height approximation 5'5 - 5'6
       Weight approximation 120-130 pounds
       Cause of death Gunshot (homicide)
       New Haven County John Doe was a male found murdered in
       Connecticut in 1992.
       Gallery
       1714UMCT1 LARGE
       1714UMCT3 LARGE
       1714UMCT2 LARGE
       #Post#: 3717--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:45 pm
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://www.wtnh.com/news/news-8-investigators/3-d-image-could-provide-new-answers-to-25-year-cold-case/1159952624
       Exclusive: 3-D Image could provide new answers to 25-year cold
       case
       Milford Police hope newly released 3-D sketch will provide
       answers to cold case.
       By:  George Colli
       Updated: May 04, 2018 05:27 PM EDT
       Milford - Milford Police hope a newly released 3-D sketch will
       provide answers to a more than 25-year old cold case.
       The image shows what police believe is the face of a still
       unidentified man found dead along the side of the Oronoque Rd in
       August 1992.
       Milford Police Detective Mitchell Warwick says police were
       called to the area on August 21,1992 after two pedestrians found
       skeletal remains wrapped in a blanket.
       The state medical examiner determined the victim was shot twice
       in the head and dumped across the street from train tracks not
       far from the Housatonic River. DNA analysis estimates the victim
       to be an 18-25 year old Asian man standing 5’3 to 5’6 inches
       tall.
       “They determined the victim had probably been in that area up to
       1 or 2 months prior,” said Warwick. “The investigators ran down
       many leads, all ended in dead ends.”
       Recently, a forensic artist used images of the victims skull to
       create a rendering of what the victim possibly looked like.
       Warwick hopes the release of the sketch will bring new leads to
       the case.
       It’s not the only cold case murder Milford Police are
       investigating from the same area of Oronoque Road from March
       1994.
       That day, Warwick says a couple Milford Public Works employees
       noticed a green military style duffel bag down a bank along the
       Housatonic River. Upon inspection, the workers noticed what
       looked like a human bone.
       Police discovered a male torso, wrapped in plastic bags and a
       motel-style comforter. The head, arms and legs were missing and
       never found. A piece of the chest was cut out in what police
       believe was a way to remove a tattoo or mark that would identify
       the victim.
       The victim is believed to be a 20-27 year old Hispanic standing
       5'5 inches tall and weighing 120-130 pounds.
       Warwick says he is not ruling out the two are murders connected,
       but the manner and means of which the men were killed and their
       bodies disposed show significant differences.
       He’s hoping for the public’s help in finding out who these men
       were.
       “There’s family members, a mother and father possibly sister and
       brother who never knew what happened to their son or brother,”
       said Warwick. “So the first step would be to identify these
       victims and try to provide some answers to the family.
       Anyone with any information are asked to contact Milford Police.
       #Post#: 3718--------------------------------------------------
       Re: ORONOQUE ROAD JOHN DOE: MA, 18-25, found near Milford railro
       ad tracks - 21 August 1992
       By: Akoya Date: March 13, 2020, 12:47 pm
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