It was a terrible scene when the police arrived at a residential complex in Minneapolis on June 13, 1993, to investigate the killing of 35 years old. Jenny Child’s. Her body was partially found under her bed, her bedroom was in a state of chaos, and there was blood in the walls and floor. Childs stabbed more than 60 times. When the investigators tried to collect what it was revealed, they found a rare idea in the bedroom: nude bloody feet.
“This caught my attention immediately … I mean, Wow,” said Bartettein, a retired forensic scientist, “48 hours”, Irene Morarti’s correspondent in “The fingerprint”, broadcast on May 17 on 9/10 on CBS on CBS and flowing on Paramount+. “You don’t see this at the crime scene in general, nude feet that went up to the blood,” Epstein said.
Investigators knew that the effects of feet had to belong to the Child’s killer because she was wearing socks at the time of her death. These effects had to be left there after the perpetrator entered her wet blood after the killing. The investigators documented and photographed the effects of the feet.
“So the feet of feet, besides being something that would tend to show guilt, it was also important to show people who might be at any doubt,” said retired Chris Bouchrds, who will later join the investigation.
According to the case file, investigators have compared the effects of the crime scene with several people, including a man named Arthur Gray, who Chields lived at the time of their killing. According to the police reports, the authorities found that the hair was stuck in the left hand of Chields and one of that hair matching.
But Boeckers says the issue against Gray is starting to collapse very quickly. “He had a really strong excuse that he was outside the city at the end of this week that others were supporting.” Gray, who enjoyed motorcycle, told the authorities that he was in Milwaukee. Forensic scientists also examined the effects of Gray and they decided that he had not left these effects on the crime scene.
Henipin County Court
Days turned into years and then contracts without finding the individual who left these effects. In 2015, the forensic scientist Andrea Villa, who was asked to conduct a DNA test on the elements collected at the crime scene, decided that there is an unknown file for the DNA that continued to repeat itself. He was found on the comforter, towel, towel, shirt and bathroom.
Then the investigators turned into genetic genealogy science to obtain answers. The world of criminal genealogy presented the unknown DNA definition of genealogy sites. “The criminal genealogy specialist indicated that she had a match with two possible brothers here in Minnesota,” said Bokerrs. One of these brothers was a businessman and Abu Hockey Jerry and Yastom.
Investigators were keen to confirm that the unknown DNA at the crime scene was actually Westoom, but to do this, they needed to follow it. In January 2019, the investigators Westum continued to the total hockey game for his daughter in Wisconsin and got a food handkerchief he used after eating in the square. They took the elements to the laboratory for the test and the results revealed that there is a match.
Henibin Sharif County Office
The following month, in February 2019, Westom was arrested for killing Childz. During an interview with the police, Westoom denied being in the apartment and knowing Child’s. The next day, the authorities collected the effects of his feet for comparison.
Although the Westrom DNA was at the scene of the accident, it was important to confirm the effects of its feet belonging to it because there was the other male DNA in the Child’s apartment that did not belong to Westom.
Mark Ulrick, a supervisor of the Mininapolis Police Forensic Department, examined the effects of feet. “In the state of Minnesota here, people are often not crimes with socks and shoes,” he said. He says he focused on the skin of the hills – the arrangement of the hills and the mosquitoes – unique to everyone. “The skin of the hills is found in friction … your fingers, the comfort of your hand, and the soles of your feet,” Ulrich explained. During his examination, compare the effects of unknown feet in the Westoom prints and those of the two alternative suspects.
The Westoum defense team has rented its forensic world, Alicia McCarthy, to check the work of Ulrik. What will experts conclude about the effects of feet? Watch the “fingerprint” on Saturday, May 17 at 10/9 ° C on CBS and flow on Paramount+.