4.5 • 3.2K Ratings
🗓️ 25 December 2024
⏱️ 101 minutes
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0:00.0 | The |
0:07.0 | The Hello, everyone, and welcome to our fourth special Q&A episode of The Trail Went Cold. |
0:40.9 | I'm your host Robin Warder, and since today just happens to be December the 25th, |
0:45.2 | I hope you appreciate getting this extra gift in your Christmas stocking. |
0:49.3 | We previously released Q&A episodes on three separate occasions, so I think it's about time |
0:53.9 | we did another one. |
0:55.2 | So without any further ado, let's get started. So our first question was left to me on |
1:00.4 | Instagram by a Morden Mark, and that's, of all the unsolved cases you have broadcast, which do you |
1:06.7 | strongly feel will be solved? Well, I'm answering this one first because I've actually been asked |
1:11.8 | this same question on previous Q&A episodes, and in both cases, I wound up making an accurate |
1:17.5 | predictions, so I'm hoping that the third time is the charm. Back in 2019, I was asked this question, |
1:23.9 | and I predicted that the Jane Doe, formerly known as Orange Sox, would soon be |
1:29.0 | identified since I knew they were doing DNA testing and several months later she was identified |
1:34.8 | as a woman named Deborah Jackson. At the end of 2020, I got the same question and my prediction |
1:41.5 | was the murdered couple known as the Sumpter County Does, |
1:45.7 | since once again I knew that DNA testing and genetic genealogy was being done, and sure enough, |
1:51.1 | within a couple weeks of the episode being released, they were identified as James Frood and Pamela Buckley. |
1:57.5 | So this time around, my prediction is going to be the unidentified murdered child known as the St. Louis, Jane Doe, who was found beheaded inside an abandoned apartment building in St. Louis in 1983. And I'm making that prediction because I do know that efforts are being made to identify her, that C.C. Moore, the renowned genetic |
2:19.0 | genealogist, has started working on this case and is trying to link her DNA to genetic |
2:24.4 | relatives. And I know that a documentary was released about it a couple years ago called Our |
2:29.7 | Precious Hope, the St. Louis Jane Doe revisited. So I am confident that sooner or later that they're going |
2:36.2 | to link DNA to her relatives and finally figure out who this poor girl was. So yeah, that's pretty |
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