Current:Home > MyEffort to ID thousands of bones found in Indiana pushes late businessman’s presumed victims to 13 -GrowthProspect
Effort to ID thousands of bones found in Indiana pushes late businessman’s presumed victims to 13
View
Date:2025-04-13 18:18:14
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — A renewed effort to identify thousands of bones found at the Indiana estate of a long-deceased businessman suspected in a string of killings has pushed the number of his presumed victims to 13, a coroner said Tuesday.
Four new DNA profiles have been obtained through the push to identify the remains and they will be sent to the FBI for a genetic genealogy analysis to hopefully identify them, said Hamilton County Coroner Jeff Jellison.
Nine men were previously identified as presumed victims of Herb Baumeister, who killed himself in Canada in July 1996 as investigators sought to question him after about 10,000 charred bones and bone fragments were found at his sprawling estate, Fox Hollow Farm.
Jellison said investigators believe the bones and fragments could represent the remains of at least 25 people.
“We know that we have at this point 13 victims found on the Fox Hollow Farm property,” Jellison said Tuesday.
Investigators believe Baumeister, a married father of three who frequented gay bars, lured men to his home and killed them at his estate in Westfield, about 16 miles (26 kilometers) north of Indianapolis.
In 2022, Jellison launched a renewed effort to match Baumeister’s other potential victims to the thousands of charred, crushed bones and fragments that authorities found on his estate in the 1990s and then placed into storage.
Jellison continues to ask relatives of young men who vanished between the mid-1980s and the mid-1990s to submit DNA samples for the new identification effort.
“That is the most efficient way that we’ll be able to identify these remains,” he said.
So far, that effort has identified three men based on DNA extracted from the bones. Two of those turned out to be among eight men identified in the 1990s as potential victims of Baumeister: Jeffrey A. Jones and Manuel Resendez.
Jones was 31 and Resendez, 34, when they were reported missing in 1993. Jones’ remains were identified last week through a forensic genetic genealogy analysis performed by the FBI and Jellison’s office, the coroner said Tuesday. Resendez’s remains were identified using the same technique in January.
Last October, with the help of a DNA sample provided by his mother, other bone fragments were confirmed as those of 27-year-old Allen Livingston, also reported missing in 1993. At that time, Livingston’s identification made him the ninth presumed victim identified by investigators.
veryGood! (7384)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Amid Zach Wilson struggles, Jets set to sign veteran QB Trevor Siemian, per report
- Ohio high school football coach resigns after team used racist, antisemitic language during a game
- Retired police chief killed in hit-and-run died in 'cold and callous' way: Family
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- DeSantis purposely dismantled a Black congressional district, attorney says as trial over map begins
- Danielle Fishel meets J. Cole over 10 years after rapper name-dropped her in a song: 'Big fan'
- Connecticut lawmakers OK election monitor for Bridgeport after mayor race tainted by possible fraud
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- New California law bars schoolbook bans based on racial and LGBTQ topics
Ranking
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Public to weigh in on whether wild horses that roam Theodore Roosevelt National Park should stay
- 'They can't buy into that American Dream': How younger workers are redefining success
- How to get the new COVID vaccine for free, with or without insurance
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- 'Will kill, will rape': Murder of tech exec in Baltimore prompts hunt, dire warnings
- Las Vegas hospitality workers could go on strike as union holds authorization vote
- 8 people sent to the hospital after JetBlue flight to Florida experiences severe turbulence
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
WNBA player Chiney Ogwumike named to President Biden’s council on African diplomacy
'They can't buy into that American Dream': How younger workers are redefining success
More students gain eligibility for free school meals under expanded US program
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
'I never even felt bad': LSU women's basketball coach Kim Mulkey on abrupt heart procedure
Minnesota teen last seen in 2021 subject of renewed search this week near Bemidji
Cuba’s ambassador to the US says Molotov cocktails thrown at Cuban embassy were a ‘terrorist attack’