Current:Home > reviewsA woman wearing high heels and a gold ring was found dead by hunters in Indiana 41 years ago. She's now been identified. -MoneySpot
A woman wearing high heels and a gold ring was found dead by hunters in Indiana 41 years ago. She's now been identified.
View
Date:2025-04-24 12:00:56
The remains of a woman wearing high heels and a gold ring who was found dead in rural Indiana in 1982 have been identified as those of a Wisconsin woman who was 20 when she vanished more than four decades ago, authorities said.
The remains are those of Connie Lorraine Christensen, who was from the Madison, Wisconsin-area community of Oregon, said Lauren Ogden, chief deputy coroner of the Wayne County Coroner's Office.
Hunters discovered Christensen's then-unidentified remains in December 1982 near Jacksonburg, a rural community about 60 miles east of Indianapolis, Ogden said. She had died from a gunshot wound and her homicide case remains unsolved.
According to the DNA Doe Project, a nonprofit that works to identify cold case victims, the woman's clothing "did not indicate she was out for a walk." The group said that when she was found, the woman wore high-heeled wooden soled clogs, a blue, long-sleeved button up blouse, gray slacks, long knit socks and a blue nylon jacket. She also wore a gold ring with an opal and two diamonds, according to the DNA Doe Project.
Christensen was last seen in Nashville, Tennessee, in April 1982, when she was believed to have been three to four months pregnant, Ogden said. She had left her 1-year-old daughter with relatives while she was away and they reported her missing after she failed to return as planned to Wisconsin.
Christensen's remains were stored at the University of Indianapolis' forensic anthropology department when the coroner's office partnered with the DNA Doe Project to try to identify them.
After Indiana State Police's forensic laboratory extracted DNA from them, forensic genetic genealogy determined that they closely match the DNA of two of Christensen's relatives, Ogden said.
Coincidentally, at the same time that the identification efforts were underway, her family was working on creating an accurate family tree using ancestry and genealogy, Ogden said.
"Due to the fact that several of Connie's living relatives had uploaded their DNA to an ancestry website, the genealogists at the DNA Doe Project were able to provide our office with the name of a candidate much more quickly than we expected," she said.
Ogden said Christensen's now adult daughter was taken last Tuesday to the location where her mother's remains were found so she could leave flowers there. Authorities also gave her a gold ring set with an opal and two diamonds that was found with her mother's remains.
"Our hearts go out to Connie's family, and we were honored to bring them the answers they have sought for so long," Missy Koski, a member of the DNA Doe Project, said in a news release. "I am proud of our dedicated and skilled volunteers who were able to assist law enforcement in returning Connie Christensen's name after all this time."
- In:
- Cold Case
- DNA
- Indiana
veryGood! (39)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Former NFL Player Alex Collins Dead at 28
- Maui wildfires death toll rises to 99 as crews continue search for missing victims
- Hundreds still missing in Maui fires aftermath. The search for the dead is a grim mission.
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- COVID hospitalizations accelerate for fourth straight week
- West Virginia Public Broadcasting chief steps down in latest shakeup at news outlet
- Capture the best candid shots with bargains on Nikon cameras at B&H
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Ex-Mississippi law enforcement officers known as Goon Squad plead guilty to state charges in racist assault
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Michael Oher's Adoptive Brother Sean Tuohy Jr. Denies Family Made Millions From The Blind Side
- Watch this dramatic, high-stakes rescue of a humpback whale as it speeds through the ocean
- Duke Energy prefers meeting North Carolina carbon target by 2035, but regulators have final say
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Election board finds no pattern of nomination signature fraud in Rhode Island US House race
- 6 migrants dead, 50 rescued from capsized boat in the English Channel
- Where the 2024 Republican presidential candidates stand on abortion
Recommendation
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Body of man found floating in Colorado River in western Arizona identified
Read the full text of the Georgia Trump indictment document to learn more about the charges and co-conspirators
In ‘Bidenomics,’ Congress delivered a once-in-generation investment — with political promise, peril
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Labor Day TV deals feature savings on Reviewed-approved screens from LG, Samsung and Sony
See Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in Netflix's first 'Maestro' teaser trailer
Arraignment set for Mar-a-Lago property manager in Trump’s classified documents case