4 Cases That Were Solved In 2021 | Part 1

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Jean Tuggy Jean Tuggy was a 60-year-old woman who lived  alone in a small house on Irion Street in Pine   Grove Mills. Friends and family described  her as friendly, caring and kindhearted.   She was in charge of the library at the State  College Alliance church and worked two jobs;   One as a longtime bus driver and another  at a grocery store called Wegman.   On January 21, 2016, Jean failed to show up at  a friend's house. Her friends became worried as   this was out of ordinary for her. Her friends then  decided to check up on her and visited her house.   They found her door to be locked and her  blue Honda civic was in the driveway.   They soon found a basement door which was  left unlocked. They went inside and found   Jean lying dead in a pool of blood. They  immediately notified the police. Jean's   body was lying on the living room floor, her  sweatshirt pulled up to reveal her stomach   and her sweatpants pulled partially down. An autopsy was performed and it revealed that   Jean had been shot twice, one bullet was found in  the left side of her face near her neck which cut   through her spinal cord and embedded in her spine,  while the second bullet was found in her left hip.   A ballistics expert confirmed the bullets belonged  to a 9mm pistol. During their investigation,   two coworkers told detectives that Jean had  mentioned a male co-worker from Wegman's with   whom she had developed a friendship and that  he had become romantically interested in her.   However, the police were unable  to identify the male coworker.   Then in 2019, Peter Coray who was a friend  of Jean told investigators that Jean had once   told him about a male coworker of her that had  rubbed her back while visiting her at her home.   Peter said the man was named Chris and had  polish sounding last name that ended in ski.   The coworker was in his late 20s or early  30's and attended Local Lutheran church.   The investigators were soon able to identify  the male co-worker as 34-year-old Christopher   Kowalski through information from a  church he attended, internet searches   and address records. Christopher had worked at  Wegman from November 2007 to October 2015.   The police went through Jean's computer hard  drive and found Facebook chat logs between Jean   and Christopher in which they discussed their  friendship and their experience of loneliness.   In 2019, another friend of Jean told investigators  that she recalled a conversation with Jean where   Jean told her that she believed Christopher  wanted a more romantic relationship than she did   and that he got upset whenever  she refused his sexual advances.   Her friend said that Jean was planning to  invite Christopher to talk to him about their   relationship remaining platonic. The police did a firearm check on   Christopher in May 2019 and found that  Christopher had purchased six 9mm handguns.   One of the six handguns, a Walther CCP, was  purchased one month prior to Jean's death and then   sold off about eight months after her murder. The investigators tracked down the pistol to its   current owners, who had bought the pistol from  a Pennsylvania sporting goods store about 10   months after Jean was murdered. The gun was  owned only by 2 people since it was made.   The owners allowed the investigators to take the  gun for testing. A forensic testing was done on   the gun and the bullets recovered from the crime  scene. Although the results were inconclusive,   the test bullets and the bullets recovered  from the crime scene had similarities   and matched the bullets in all characteristics."  An expert stated that the minor differences in the   bullets could have been caused by someone cleaning  the barrel of the pistol with an abrasive tool.   Police found and interviewed Christopher  at his home in South Carolina.   He initially claimed he and jean were just  friends and nothing else. However, he later said   that he and jean were romantically involved. He told investigators that on the day Jean was   murdered, he went to her apartment to watch movies  together. He claimed that as he was taking off his   coat to hang it on the coat rack, his gun from  his coat pocket fell to the floor and discharged   a bullet that hit Jean in the hip. He then  allegedly picked up the gun and it was   jammed and when he tried to clear it, it fired  again and struck Jean in the neck. He stated   that blood was everywhere and claimed he did not  try to save her as he knew it was too late.   After the police told him that his story did  not make any sense, Christopher admitted to   shooting and killing her intentionally. He  allegedly said “The truth is, I killed her,   I killed her because I was depressed, down and  hopeless. I was having a mid-life crisis.” He   said he first shot Jean in the hip and she fell  over the couch. The gun jammed but he was able to   clear it and shot her again in the neck. He also  turned off her oxygen to make sure she was dead.   He said he pulled her pants down and had  planned to take pictures of her undressed,   but did not as he was afraid his  clothes might get blood on them.   He then picked up the shell casing, locked  the front door shut, left the house from   the basement door and disposed the casings  outside a restaurant. He told investigators   that he had planned to kill Jean before her  murder and that he chose to kill her because   she was an easy target. He moved to South  Carolina in 2016. Christopher was arrested   and charged with Jean's murder. He will be  extradited to Pennsylvania to be prosecuted. Felicia and DenNisha Howard   Felicia Howard was a 21-year-old woman  who lived with her 4-year-old daughter,   DenNisha in their second-floor apartment  at 3804 Washington St., Gary, Indiana.   Felicia and her daughter, DenNisha had recently  moved from Indianapolis to Gary in January of   1992. They stayed with Felicia's father for  a few months but on June 7th she decided on   moving from her father's house and get her  own place on Washington Street. However,   her landlord would send her an eviction notice  on July 10th reportedly due to her "Lifestyle.   On July 11, 1992, Felicia picked up DenNisha  from her regular weekend stay at Felicia's   father's house. This was the last time her  father ever saw them alive. On July 15, 1992,   five days after sending the eviction notice,  her landlord brought prospective tenants to   show the apartment. When he opened the door of the  apartment, he found Felicia and DenNisha's body.   He immediately called the police. Both, mother and daughter had been shot to death.   Felicia had been shot in the chest. She had been  found lying nude in her bed and appeared to be   reaching for DenNisha, who had been shot in the  head. The investigators were able to collect DNA   of an unknown male from the crime scene. The  murders shocked the residents in and around Gary.   Several locals raised money to setup a reward  for any information regarding the murders.   Neighbours would later report hearing Felicia  screaming: "please don’t shoot me in front of   my daughter.” They also reported to have heard  a child standing on the balcony screaming "Help,   help" and "Stop, stop" for about half an hour.  However, no one came to help. No neighbor mentions   why police were not called despite obvious pleas  from the now deceased victims. With no leads and   no suspects, the case would soon go cold. In 2019, The FBI's Gang Response Investigative   Team or GRIT, reopened the case and began  investigating the case. With the help of   DNA technology and interviewing witness, they  finally were able to find a suspect in the case. In September, 2020, 56-year-old Victor  Lofton was questioned by detectives and   asked to give a DNA sample in Tennessee. During  their questioning, investigators showed Victor a   photo of Felicia and DenNisha and was asked if he  knew them. He reportedly bit his lip and admitted   to living with a relative in Gary in the 1980's  but said he did not know Felicia or DenNisha.   Victor's relative confirmed that Victor lived  with him for a couple of months in 1992.   He also told the investigators that Victor  owned a Browning .38-caliber handgun. The   spent shell casing found at the crime scene had  markings consistent with a .38 caliber handgun.   The U.S Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms  and Explosives was able to recover the handgun   owned by Victor and a forensic  analysis was conducted. However,   the analysis could not identify or exclude the  bullet to have been fired from the handgun.   Investigators analyzed the DNA recovered from  the crime scene of Felicia and the Unknown male.   The analysis showed that the unknown  male's DNA matched that of Victor.   Its DNA profile was 1 trillion times more likely  to originate from Victor than from another male.   On February 5, 2021, Victor Lofton was  arrested and charged with 2 counts of   murder. He is extradited to Lake  county and is awaiting trial. Claretha "Coco" Gibbs In the late night hours of June 26,  1984, Fort Myers police responded to   a complaint of gunshots heard near  Palm Avenue and Lincoln Boulevard. Lying on the ground at the side of the road at  2831 Lincoln Blvd was Claretha "Coco" Gibbs,   who was bleeding profusely from a single  gunshot to the abdomen. Coco was rushed to   the hospital but she succumbed to her injuries  and was declared dead by emergency physiciansl. Prior to that fateful night, Coco  had lived close by, on Mango Street. Born in Tampa Florida Coco moved to  Fort Myers from Houston, Texas, in 1979.   At only 31 years old Coco had had a rough life,  She was a street worker and therefore vulnerable   to the various dangers of such an illegal  late night trade with anonymous customers. Coco was last seen entering a vehicle possibly  a pickup truck, with two different paint colors.   Witnesses say that it was only moments after she  entered the vehicle that they heard a gunshot   and the car peeled out of the area,  leaving the bleeding woman on the sidewalk.   The driver of the vehicle was described as  a white male in his 30s with light brown or   dark blonde hair. He was described as having  a thin build and was approximately 5’10”   with a pale complexion, although the height was  hard to approximate as he was seated in a vehicle. Police said they recovered  a rag with the suspect’s DNA   but DNA testing was not common  or very advanced at that time. After full DNA profile of the suspect had  been created from the unknown type of dna   left in the rag, it was then entered into  CODIS, the FBI’s national DNA database,   but it did not provide a hit to any known samples. In March of 2019 Fort Myers Police  Department’s Cold Case Unit investigators   submitted the DNA evidence to Parabon Snapshot  in hopes that the advances made using genealogy   research in the last decades could pinpoint  a suspect who was most likely still at large. On July 22, 2020, Parabon completed a report  on the genealogy which indicated that the DNA   profile was linked through genealogy  databases to an individual identified   as James Glen Drinnon, 65, of Okeechobee. Investigators began to look into  the current life and past histories   of Drinnon and tried to get details on his  former link to The Fort Myers area and they   were one step closer to answers when they  found that he lived in Lee County in 1984   putting him geographically in relatively  close proximity to the area coco was found. Drinnon, who was a local  mechanic, acknowledged that   coco was a prostitute and he had invited her  into his truck to engage in her paid services. When police arrived at his house, Drinnon admitted  to the physical connection, but said that Coco had   actually pulled a gun on him in order to take his  money after he picked her up for a roundezvouz.   He claimed that they fought over the weapon and  that Gibbs was shot accidentally. Drinnon fled   the scene and said that he subsequently threw  the murder weapon out the window of his truck. In addition to the murder of Coco in the  eighties, there were a known total of 16   women who in that same trade that were killed over  a 20 year period in the Fort Meyers area alone. While there is no concrete evidence that  Drinnon was connected to these crimes,   he died of unknown causes at his residence  in Okeechobee before police could continue   to question him of arrest him for cocos death ,  while no details were released, it is suspected   he took his own life after realizing his  past crimes were coming back to haunt him. Annette Schnee and Barbara "Bobbie" Jo Oberholtzer 21-year-old Annette Schnee and 29-year-old Barbara  "Bobbie" Jo Oberholtzer were just starting their   lives in a most adventurous way when it was  tragically cut short for the both of them. On January 6, 1982, 29-year old Bobbie Jo was  hitchhiking from her home in Alma, Colorado   to her job in the nearby town of Breckenridge.   Unlike today, in that part of the country  in the early eighties, hitchhiking was not   seen as a dangerous act as it is today, and  both drivers and would-be passengers were far   more comfortable with the idea of riding with a  stranger than one would be in todays millennium. At 6:20 PM, Bobbie made a call to her husband,  Jeff Oberholtzer, to tell him that she was going   out for cocktails with friends at a local bar and  not to worry because she would find her own ride   home. But Bobbie never made it home that night.  When her husband Jeff questioned Bobbie’s friends,   they were surprised she never returned home  as she had left the pub alone at 7:50 PM. The next day, Jan 7th, Bobbie’s  husband received a call from a   rancher who found Bobbie’s driver’s  license on the ground his property.   On his way to investigate and get more  information on his wife’s whereabouts,   Jeff was shocked to see his missing wife’s  backpack laying in a field alongside her gloves,   which upon further examination had blood on them.  There were also some bloody tissues next to the   bag. DNA testing was so infantile in 1982 that the  only information gleaned from the evidence left   behind was the blood-type, which matched that of  Bobbie, but little else was known. That afternoon,   around 3pm, Bobbie’s was discovered, deceased, at  the summit of a lookout point called Hoosier Pass,   located 10 miles south of Breckenridge. She was  found about 20 feet off of the highway and was at   the bottom of a snow embankment. The 29 year old  had been shot twice in the chest. She had plastic   zip ties around one of her wrists and the other  was free. Also found on the scene was an orange   sock that investigators did not think belonged  to the victim. Evidence shows, police said,   that Bobbie attempted to escape the vehicle and  put up a fight before being shot and succumbing   to her injuries: Her self-defense key ring, a tool  with a metal hook made for her by her husband, was   found in the parking lot at the summit which was  approximately 300 feet from where she was found,   suggesting that she might have escaped and  then was again confronted by the assailant. That same day that Bobbie was reported missing,  Annette Schnee, a 21-year old resident of the   nearby town of Frisco, was also reported missing.  The young woman was last seen inside a pharmacy   in Breckenridge at 4:45 PM the evening of the  6th. She was seen speaking to a dark-haired   woman who police requested come forward but  never did. Annette was scheduled to be at   work at 8 p.m. that night at the Flip Side bar  in Breckenridge and was known to hitchhike to   get to her job. Though she went missing on the  same day as Bobbie, family and friends had to   wait much longer for answers, and some still  held out hope that she would be found alive. The death of one woman and another missing  presumed dead alarmed those who resided   nearby. The randomness of the two seemingly  unconnected girls unnerved the public and   some spoke of a possible serial  killer descending upon the area. Almost six months after she was reported missing,   on July 3, Annette’s body was found  in the shallow waters of a creek   located near a remote side road, in rural Park  County about 20 miles south of Breckenridge. The snow and cold had preserved the body and  investigators were able to ascertain many details   regarding her death. Much like Bobbie, Annette  had been shot to death, with the bullet going   through her chest and exiting with no leftover  fragments, and police estimated that it was the   bullet hole of a .38 a .357 or a 9mm handgun.  They believed she was killed where she was left.   What conclusively linked the crime scenes of both  women was the presence of a second orange sock.   While an orange sock had been found  at the crime scene of Bobbie’s death,   police never believed the  sock actually belonged to her   and it was to their surprise that they saw that  Annette was in fact wearing the other sock- an   orange sock similar to the one that was found near  the scene of Bobbie’s murder. It became apparent   that this was indeed a match to the orange sock  from Bobbie’s murder scene. On her other foot   was a striped sock and the matching pair to  that sock was stuffed in Anette’s jacket hood. Police theorized that the killer probably first  picked up Annette who had been hitchhiking   and murdered her prior to picking up Bobbie,  also while hitchhiking a few hours later and   murdering her as well. Investigators wondered if  one of Annette’s orange socks, already separated   from their owners in a violent and brutal act,  possibly fell out of the killer’s vehicle and   landed erroneously at the scene that Jeff would  soon come upon while looking for his wife Bobbie. This is the reason that this crime was dubbed  the “Orange Sock Murders” in the media.   Not to be confused with the  murder Debra Louise Jackson,   who before the body was idenfified was  informally known as "Orange Socks”. Later, Annette’s backpack would be discovered in  another location off of Route U.S. 285. Police   were puzzled to find that her bag contained a  picture of a man who was unrecognizable to friends   or family of Anett. The photo was never identified  by police. Even stranger, Anette’s wallet also had   Bobbie’s husband, Jeff Oberholtzer’s, business  card in it. When questioned by authorities,   Jeff was shocked to recall, upon thinking deeply  about it that he had actually previoulsy picked   up the 21 year old Annette back when she had been  hitchhiking months prior to the day of her murder.   He recalled that he had given Annette his business  card, but starkly swore that he had never seen   her again. Because of this strange and seemingly  unlikely coincidence, Bobbie’s husband Jeff was   looked at as the prime suspect for both murders.  While Jeff did have an alibi for that night,   he was in Alma hosting a friend, it wasn’t  until December of 1990 that the friend who   had visited that night was finally tracked down  and questioned by police to verify Jeff’s alibi.   Shortly thereafter, as DNA profiling became  more accurate and detailed, DNA testing was   performed on the blood from Bobbie’s glove,  and found it was that of a male, not a female,   and concluded that the blood was left  presumably when Bobbie fought back   and likely punched her attacker in the nose which  perhaps explained the bloody tissues as well.   The lab results showed that the blood belonged to  a male donor, but not to Jeff. The new DNA results   finally exonerated Jeff, the long-grieving husband  falsely accused due to a shocking coincidence,   but police were then faced with a shortening  list of other possible suspects. At one point   they suspected self-proclaimed serial killer  Thomas Luther, who had supposedly bragged of   taking the lives of two women in the Breckenridge  area, but when police questioned him in prison,   he ominously said “They aren't my girls”. Metro Denver Crime Stoppers helped fund the   use of genetic genealogy in this particular case.  They funded it in hopes that the relatively new   technology would helped bring closure as it had  done for at least five local cases in the past   two years. This case would be no different  as new capabilities and databases enabled   detectives to finally find a match to the  DNA left long ago at the scene of the crime. Testing and analysis indicated a possible  link to 70-year-old Alan Lee Phillips,   a semi-retired mechanic and resident of Clear  Creek County to,aw enforcement spent over six   weeks investigating and conducting surveillance  before finally arresting the the now elderly   and disheveled man on Feb. 24 without a struggle  during a traffic stop made in Clear Creek County. Phillips was remanded to the Park County  Jail,without bail, on Chargers of Kidnapping,   Assault with a deadly weapon and, Murder  after deliberation. He has lived in Colorado   continuously since the killings and was  never considered a suspect previously.  His last court date was scheduled for  March 8th 2021 but so far no details have   come out in the media and it may have  been postponed due to current events. Much of this work can be attributed to  Denver police detective Charlie McCormick,   who has been working on this case since 1989  and was skeptical that closure would ever come. In the chaos of the news, friends and family  still strive to remember the people lost:   "All I know was she loved  people," a freind said of Anette,   who is now forever 21 years old: . "She was  a fun loving person to be around. She was a   wonderful person. That's all I can say, because  she didn't have a chance to do anything else."
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Channel: Merc Docs
Views: 545,476
Rating: 4.8626928 out of 5
Keywords: documentary, list, missing persons, jane doe, john doe, disappearance, unsolved, mysterious, unsolved mystery, mystery, mysteries, unsolved mysteries, merc docs, solved in 2021, cases solved in 2021, recent cases solved, solved mysteries, mysteries solved in 2021
Id: N88Vhxh0QxU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 24min 34sec (1474 seconds)
Published: Mon Mar 15 2021
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