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       #Post#: 6796--------------------------------------------------
       WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will County, 
       IL wooded area - 30 September 1968
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:20 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/823UFIL_LARGE.jpg
       A highway department worker, picking up debris, found the
       victim's body was found near I-55 and Blodgett Road in an
       unincorporated area of Will County, Illinois, on September 30,
       1968. It was determined that her body was moved after death and
       concealed in a wooded area.
       #Post#: 6797--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:23 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://identifyus.org/en/cases/5211
       Case Information
       Status Unidentified
       Case number UN 68-01
       Date found September 30, 1968 00:00
       Date created May 13, 2009 20:23
       Date last modified June 05, 2017 21:53
       Investigating agency
       date QA reviewed May 14, 2009 06:16
       Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
       Agency Will Cnty Coroners Ofc
       Phone 815-727-8455
       Case Manager
       Name Gene Sullivan
       Phone 815.727.8455
       Exclusions
       The following people have been ruled out as being this decedent:
       First Name Last Name Year of Birth State LKA
       Ida Anderson 1937 Michigan
       Dixie Arensen 1948 California
       Audrey Backeberg 1942 Wisconsin
       Lynn Bandringa 1945 California
       Carol Batterman 1939 Oklahoma
       Carol Batterman 1939 Oklahoma
       Joan Bieter 1946 Minnesota
       Patricia Blough 1946 Indiana
       Mary Boston 1944 California
       Sandra Breed 1948 New York
       Linda Britton 1944 Ohio
       Linda Britton 1944 Ohio
       Darcy Brown 1943 Ohio
       Peggy Byars-Baisden 1941 Florida
       Mabel Chambers 1920 Delaware
       Jane Clement 1941 Louisiana
       Thelma Cobb 1916 Indiana
       Jean Czarnecki 1940 New Jersey
       Johanna de Haas 1936 Delaware
       Anita Drake 1948 Ohio
       Elizabeth Franks 1947 Ohio
       Sharon Giusti 1943 Washington
       Joan Hansen 1932 Washington
       Evelyn Hartley 1937 Wisconsin
       Edna Kaminski 1921 New York
       Mary Little 1940 Georgia
       Celina Lung Unknown Washington
       Olga Mauger 1913 Wyoming
       Mary Mclaughlin 1938 Michigan
       Ann Miller 1946 Indiana
       Avis Mooney 1927 Texas
       Pamela Nater 1946 Florida
       Darlene Polizzi 1947 New Jersey
       Donnis Redman 1943 California
       Alice Reeves 1947 Louisiana
       Ione Rehwinkle 1928 Minnesota
       Betty Roberts 1930 Maryland
       Betty Roberts 1930 Maryland
       Judith Ruggirello 1939 Michigan
       Judith Ruggirello 1939 Michigan
       Doris SCANDALIS 1930 California
       Bernice Selby 1935 Washington
       Beverly Sharpman 1930 Pennsylvania
       Bertha Smith 1913 Arizona
       Debra Spickler 1955 Connecticut
       Mary Ann Switalski 1946 Illinois
       Nadine Timm 1935 Illinois
       Floradean Walker 1925 Texas
       Diane Webb 1942 Arizona
       Mildred Zentner 1936 Michigan
       Grace Zoeller 1932 Arizona
       #Post#: 6798--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:24 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://identifyus.org/en/cases/5211
       NamUs UP # 5211
       ME/C Case Number: UN 68-01
       Will County, Illinois
       20 to 30 year old Native American Female
       Case Report - NamUs UP # 5211
       Case Information
       Status Unidentified
       Case number UN 68-01
       Date found September 30, 1968 00:00
       Date created May 13, 2009 20:23
       Date last modified June 05, 2017 21:53
       Investigating agency
       date QA reviewed May 14, 2009 06:16
       Local Contact (ME/C or Other)
       Agency Will Cnty Coroners Ofc
       Phone 815-727-8455
       Case Manager
       Name Gene Sullivan
       Phone 815.727.8455
       Demographics
       Estimated age Adult - Pre 40
       Minimum age 20 years
       Maximum age 30 years
       Race Native American
       Ethnicity Other
       Sex Female
       Weight (pounds) 135, Measured
       Height (inches) 65, Measured
       Body Parts Inventory (Check all that apply)
       All parts recovered
       Body conditions
       Recognizable face
       Probable year of death 1968 to 1968
       Estimated postmortem interval 2 Days
       Circumstances
       Location Found
       GPS coordinates N41*28.454' X W088*10.330'
       Address 1 I-55
       Address 2 Blodgett Rd
       City Unincorporated
       State Illinois
       Zip code
       County Will
       Circumstances
       This individual was discovered by a highway department worker on
       a Monday morning while picking up debris along the highway. Due
       to the social climate this person may have been from anywhere
       coming through the area.
       Physical
       Hair color Black
       Head hair
       Straight collar length, color ranges from red to medium brown
       with indications of certain Mongoloid features.
       Body hair
       Brown
       Left eye color Brown
       Right eye color Brown
       Deformities
       The left ear is darker in color than the rest of the body. The
       left little finger is crooked. No further description is
       available.
       Piercings
       both ear lobes were pierced
       Other medical
       information
       Blood type 'O' . Indications of possible prior toxoplasmosis.
       Fingerprints
       Status: Fingerprint information is available elsewhere
       Clothing and Accessories
       No clothing or accessories
       Clothing on body
       None
       Clothing with body
       None
       Footwear
       None
       Jewelry
       None
       Eyewear
       None
       Other items found
       with body
       No related items found on or near the body.
       Dental
       Status: Dental information / charting is available and entered
       DNA
       Status: Sample submitted - Tests complete
       Images
       There are currently no images available for this case.
       #Post#: 6799--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:25 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://justicefornativewomen.blogspot.com/2016/06/will-county-jane-doe-discovered-in.html
       Justice for Native Women
       Will County Jane Doe, discovered in Illinois in 1968.
       There are no images or forensic reconstructions available of the
       Will County Jane Doe
       Jane's remains were discovered on September 30th, 1968, near
       I-55 and Blodgett Road by a highway department worker in an
       unincorporated area of Will County, Illinois. Authorities
       believe Jane was murdered between the ages of 20 and 30 and died
       from asphyxiation. She had been moved to that location following
       her death and an attempt was made to conceal her body in a
       wooded area. Jane had brown eyes and black hair with graying
       roots. Her left little finger was crooked and her left ear was a
       darker skin color than the rest of her body. She had extensive
       dental work including gold caps. Namus states that due to the
       "social climate" of the area there were many people from all
       over moving in and out of that part of Illinois so it's possible
       Jane was not local. DNA and Dental comparisons can be made with
       this decedent and she remains unidentified.
       If you have any information regarding the death or identity of
       the Will County Jane Doe, you are encouraged to contact the Will
       County Cornoer's Office at 815-727-8455.
       Tribal Information: Jane is though to be White with possible
       Fillipina or Native American ancestry. As she is unknown, so are
       her people.
       Sources:
       NamUs
       Doe Network
       #Post#: 6800--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:27 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/823ufil.html
       Case File: 823UFIL
       The Doe Network
  HTML http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/images/823UFIL_LARGE.jpg
       Reconstruction of the victim.
       Date of Discovery: September 30, 1968
       Location of Discovery: Will County, Illinois
       Estimated Date of Death: 2 Days prior
       State of Remains: Recognizable face
       Cause of Death: Strangulation
       Physical Description
       Estimated Age: 20 - 30 years old
       Race: White; possibly Filipino or Native American
       Sex: Female
       Height: 5'5"
       Weight: 135 lbs.
       Hair: Black, straight, collar length; color ranges from red to
       medium brown with indications of certain Mongoloid features.
       Roots showed signs of graying.
       Eye Color: Brown
       Distinguishing Marks/Features: Left ear is darker in color than
       the rest of the body. Left little finger crooked. Both ear lobes
       pierced. Blood type 'O' . Indications of possible prior
       toxoplasmosis (parasitic disease, usually asymptomatic).
       Identifiers
       Dentals: Available; Tooth #2 broken, #4, #5 and #30 had
       cavities, #8 and #9 were chipped, #14 and #31 had gold caps, and
       #3 was porcelain filled.
       Fingerprints: Available.
       DNA: Available.
       Clothing & Personal Items
       Clothing: None.
       Jewelry: None.
       Additional Personal Items: None.
       Circumstances of Discovery
       A highway department worker picking up debris found the victim's
       body was found near I-55 and Blodgett Road in an unincorporated
       area of Will County, Illinois on September 30, 1968. It was
       determined that her body was moved after death and concealed in
       a wooded area. Due to the social climate this person may have
       been from anywhere coming through the area.
       Investigating Agency(s)
       Agency Name: Will County Coroner
       Agency Contact Person: Gene Sullivan
       Agency Phone Number: 815-727-8455
       Agency E-Mail: gsullivan@willcountyillinois.com
       Agency Case Number: UN 68-01
       NCIC Case Number: U705881578
       NamUs Case Number: 5211
       Former Hot Case Number: 1734
       Information Source(s)
       NamUs
       Admin Notes
       Added: Prior to 2013; Last Updated: 7/30/2018
       #Post#: 6801--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:29 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://www.chicagotribune.com/subur...onian-will-county-st-0209-20160208-story.html
       Will County turns to Smithsonian to help identify victims
       Gene Sullivan, deputy chief with the Will County Coroner's
       Office, recently sought the help of the Smithsonian Institution
       and sketch artists in identifying three unidentified persons
       whose remains were found years ago. Sullivan shows what a man
       whose remains were found in 2008 might have looked like just
       before he died, and in his younger years. (Alicia Fabbre / Daily
       Southtown)
       Alicia FabbreDaily Southtown
       The photo hanging on Deputy Chief Gene Sullivan's bulletin board
       at the Will County Coroner's Office is only a part of the puzzle
       behind the remains that were found in a Will County Forest
       Preserve in 2008.
       The man, believed to be in his 50s or 60s when he died, was
       found hanging from a tree. Investigators estimate he was there
       for three months before his remains were found. In the eight
       years since his body was discovered, however, no one has come
       forward to identify him.
       "He (could be) somebody's dad," Sullivan said. "And they may be
       out there wondering (what happened)."
       The man is one of 11 John or Jane Does whose remains were found
       in Will County according to NamUs, a national data base for
       missing and unidentified persons. Investigators are working to
       identify them.
       "People have a right to be properly buried and to be returned to
       their families," Will County Coroner Patrick O'Neil said.
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/eQrttoY.jpg
       Sullivan recently sought help from the Smithsonian Institution
       and sketch artists with the hope of clearing up the mystery
       behind three of the county's unidentified persons cases. The
       other two cases both involve females who are believed to be
       homicide victims. In one case, the woman, believed to be in her
       20s or 30s, was found in a wooded area off Interstate 55 near
       Blodgett Road in 1968. Investigators believe she was strangled.
       In the other case, the woman, believed to be in her early 20s to
       mid 30s, was found in 1981 off Interstate 80 near Route 30 in
       New Lenox.
       Testing done on human remains at the Smithsonian helped provide
       a better picture of where the unidentified people were from, and
       a sketch artist was able to show what the people may have looked
       like when they were younger.
       It's that same combination that helped a regional system
       administrator for NamUs identify a John Doe from Knoxville
       Tenn., in 2013. The man, who was 30 when he was last seen alive,
       was found dead in 1982. He had been shot to death a year
       earlier.
       Amy Dobbs, who was a cold case investigator for Knox County,
       enlisted help from the Smithsonian to conduct isotope testing on
       the man's remains in 2013. A sketch artist also helped show what
       the man looked like in his younger years through an
       age-regression sketch.
       Armed with test results from the Smithsonian showing the man had
       lived most of his life in Knox County and the age-regression
       drawing, Dobbs turned to media for help. Shortly after, another
       man saw the sketch and recognized the John Doe as his brother.
       Additional testing proved the suspicion true and Dobbs was able
       to positively identify the man known only as John Doe for more
       than 30 years.
       "They were stunned," Dobbs recalled of the man's family, noting
       the age-regression sketch played a key role in identification.
       "I can remember (the man's brother) putting his head down in his
       hand and saying 'Thank you, I always thought he had
       (voluntarily) left us,'" Dobbs said, noting the family did not
       know their loved one's disappearance involved a homicide.
       Dobbs, who know manages a regional area for NamUs that includes
       Illinois, was the first to turn to the Smithsonian for isotope
       testing on human remains to aid in cold case investigations.
       Sullivan is believed to be the third to do so.
       Isotope testing of human remains can help show a person's diet,
       where they spent most of their lives and where the lived most
       recently. Archaeologists have used this testing on recovered
       artifacts or remains to provide information about that
       particular civilization.
       For cold case investigations, isotope testing can provide
       details critical in helping identify people. Teeth, for example,
       can help provide an area where the person lived as a child,
       Dobbs said. A person's hair and fingernails provide information
       on where the person lived at the time of their death.
       "Technology continues to get better as far as the science behind
       DNA," Patrick O'Neil said.
       In the case of the John Doe found in Will County, testing done
       by the Smithsonian narrowed the possible locations he lived to
       Canada, Alaska, the Northeastern United States, Minnesota or
       North Dakota. When the man was first found, investigators
       believed he may have been from Poland. In the case of the two
       women, the Jane Doe found in 1968 may have grown up in Canada,
       Newfoundland, Alaska or the Northeastern United States. Testing
       also showed that in her last year alive, she may have traveled
       through the Midwest and Southwest. The woman found in 1981
       likely grew up in the Upper Midwest, Southwest and Northeastern
       United States and spent a large portion of her life in the
       Northeastern United States, Southeast Canada and possibly Nova
       Scotia and the Upper Midwest.
       [img]
  HTML http://www.trbimg.com/img-56ba0524/turbine/ct-ctlh-ct-sta-smithsonian-will-county-s-2-jpg-20160208/264/264x149[/img]
       Will County authorities have turned to the Smithsonian
       Institution and sketch artists in hopes they will help identify
       the remains of people found years ago. This is a sketch of what
       they believe a woman found dead along Interstate 80 in New Lenox
       in 1981 might have looked like. - Original Credit: Daily
       Southtown
       (namus.gov / HANDOUT)
       Sullivan hopes the information — which was added to the NamUs
       data base — will aid in finally identifying the John and Jane
       Does from Will County. He noted the NamUs data base also is used
       to help secure information about missing persons and that
       information from unidentified persons often is cross-referenced
       with missing persons reports to see if there is a match.
       "The more information we get and the more information the police
       departments get in (the data base), the better the chance that
       this program will make a match," Sullivan said.
       Information about the unidentified persons cases can be found at
       www.namus.gov.The three Will County cases mentioned are filed
       under unidentified persons case numbers 5211 (unidentified
       female found in 1968), 3153 (unidentified female found in 1981)
       and 5263 (unidentified male found in 2008).
       Alicia Fabbre is a freelance reporter for the Daily Southtown.
       #Post#: 6802--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:31 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML http://www.worldatlas.com/img/us-county/1875-will-county-illinois.jpg
  HTML http://www.firesprinklerassoc.org/county_maps/will%20county.gif
       #Post#: 6803--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:32 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
       I-55, Will County
       NB I-55 near Blodgett Road.
       [img]
  HTML https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQcpxfgrgxFYMgTn87OgXYdI3VQsKfYxhzZlJzjTTZ50MjHa5IMJw[/img]
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/eQrttoY.jpg
       #Post#: 6804--------------------------------------------------
       Re: WILL COUNTY JANE DOE (1968): NF, 20-30, found in a Will Coun
       ty, IL wooded area - 30 September 19
       By: Akoya Date: June 17, 2020, 11:34 am
       ---------------------------------------------------------
  HTML https://i.imgur.com/dYnOBau.gif
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