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A CLOSER LOOK CASE # 2516 UMVT 1935 W 13 YO 15 YRS.

16 Nov

WHO:   This white person of unknown gender was 4’10” to 5’0″. Tooth-straightening devices on teeth, described as gold bands (brackets) encircling the teeth in the upper jaw (ribbon arch appliance).

WHAT:   Pearl buttons (similar to those used on pajamas at the time), feathers (possibly from a pillow), rope fragments, a blanket, and a green and buff-colored canvas awning with wheel pulleys still attached.

WHEN AND WHERE:   May 15, 1935 in: Middlebury, Addison County, Vermont. Estimated Date of Death: 1932 to 1934.

HOW:     On May 15, 1935, the skeletal remains of three persons were found off of a remote, old, logging road leading to the Brookins/Blackmer hunting camp in East Middlebury, Vermont. A woman named Grace Dague and her daughter, Inez Perry Masterson, were looking for flowers in the forest when they stumbled upon the skeletal remains of the three murder victims. The victims had been there for some time; a small tree root, about a 1/2 – 3/4″ thick, had grown over the leg of one of the victims. Each victim had been killed with a shot to the head, most likely with a Colt automatic which fires .38 caliber bullets. It is suspected that they were dumped in that location as far back as November 1932, based on the testimony of Edward Munso, who was hunting in the area and “missed his deer because just then he detected a terrible odor,” but didn’t investigate further.

THE REST OF THE STORY:   The location recently has been identified as off of Burnham Drive, a road that did not exist at the time. The three skeletons found together were of a female, age 35 to 45, a juvenile teen age 13 to 15, and a child age 9 to 11. The DNA (despite being listed as “insufficient”) of the middle child and the adult female suggested a parent-to-child relationship, whereas the youngest victim’s DNA could not be analyzed. However, they are believed to be related to one another.

Harvard anthropologists George Woodbury and Earnest A. Hooton suspected at the time that the victims were of Armenian descent with “skillful and costly dental work.” The anthropologists also wrongly thought that this was the remains of a Mrs. Cora Golden and her two children who were missing from Milton, Vermont in 1923. Instead, Mrs. Golden and her son had run off with a local farmhand, Joseph Carter, and started a new life. Her daughter had been discovered with an adoptive family in Hartford, Connecticut.

Please note: all cases in which the gender of the victim is unknown are assigned and filed as male.

NO IMAGE

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Posted by on November 16, 2018 in Male Medical / Teeth, MALES

 

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