
These 5 cold cases sat unsolved — until now. See the stories
Decades-old mysteries finally found answers thanks to new DNA breakthroughs. In one story, California deputies identified Jeffrey Thomas Rupen after a skull was dropped off at their sheriff's office in 2001. In Wisconsin, skeletal remains stuck in a music store's chimney were identified 34 years later.
Read the stories below.
Twenty three years after a human skull was brought into the main lobby of a sheriff's office, it has been identified, California deputies say. Photo from Sonoma County Sheriff's Office
NO. 1: SOMEONE WALKED INTO SHERIFF'S OFFICE WITH SKULL IN 2001, COPS SAY. NOW IT'S IDENTIFIED
Aside from missing a jaw, 'the skull was in good condition.' | Published April 24, 2024 | Read Full Story by Daniella Segura
Skeletal remains found in the chimney of a Madison, Wisconsin, music store have been identified 34 years later, officials say. DNA Doe Project.
NO. 2: MYSTERIOUS SKELETAL REMAINS IN MUSIC STORE'S CHIMNEY ID'D 34 YEARS LATER: WI OFFICIALS
Discovered in 1989, the case of the mystery skeleton fueled speculation and frustrated Wisconsin investigators for decades. | Published May 14, 2024 | Read Full Story by Mitchell Willetts
Melonie White was found dead on Aug. 27, 1994, police said. Photo from Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department
NO. 3: HIKERS FOUND WOMAN'S BODY 30 YEARS AGO, NEVADA COPS SAY. NOW THERE'S A SUSPECT
'She was just a really nice person,' the woman's brother said. | Published October 24, 2024 | Read Full Story by Daniella Segura
Tamara Mattson was found dead at Camano Island State Park on Dec. 9, 2003, Island County deputies say. Photo from Island County Sheriff's Office
NO. 4: MOM OF 7'S KILLING WAS MYSTERY FOR YEARS, UNTIL CIGARETTE OFFERED A CLUE, WA COPS SAY
The 39-year-old mother was found dead in Camano Island State Park in 2003, deputies said. | Published January 10, 2025 | Read Full Story by Daniella Segura
Lachelle 'Shelly' Waite was found dead inside her home on Jan. 16, 1986, Phoenix police said. Photo from Phoenix Police Department
NO. 5: 18-YEAR-OLD'S 'AMAZING FUTURE' CUT SHORT IN 1986 KILLING, AZ COPS SAY. NOW ARREST MADE
'She was just a genuinely nice, intelligent person,' a police detective said. | Published February 24, 2025 | Read Full Story by Daniella Segura
The summary above was drafted with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in our News division. All stories listed were reported, written and edited by McClatchy journalists.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
2 days ago
- Newsweek
Tech CEO Says He Was Sent Bloody Pig's Head Over Real Estate Deals
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The CEO of a tech company in Las Vegas said he was sent a bloody pig's head and a threatening note in the mail. Blake Owens, the founder and CEO of Agrippa, shared the contents of the note, in which an anonymous writer expressed anger at the company's use of AI to help people conduct real estate deals without brokers. The note said: "Don't get greedy because pigs get fat and hogs get slaughtered." Newsweek contacted the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department via email on Friday outside of regular working hours. Why It Matters The incident highlights the fears and hostility some people feel toward AI because of its potential to disrupt traditional industries like real estate. What To Know Owens is the CEO of Agrippa, which is an AI platform that connects people looking for funding for commercial real estate projects with potential investors, without using a broker. The CEO told the Las Vegas Review-Journal that the severed pig's head and note was mailed to a family member's house on July 29. Agrippa CEO Blake Owens said he was sent a bloody pig's head and a threatening note in the mail. Agrippa CEO Blake Owens said he was sent a bloody pig's head and a threatening note in the mail. Getty Images The note said: "'AI' is not going to replace brokers. Clearly you don't understand real estate wasn't built by developers or investors. And it sure as hell wasn't built by tech guys in Lululemon. It was built by brokers." The note, which described Owens as a "Clark Kent knockoff," was written anonymously and was sent along with a pig's head wrapped in plastic. "Perhaps this person watched too much of The Godfather," Owens told 8 News Now. "Needless to say, I still take it very seriously, but don't feel like I'm being truly threatened. It was a message." Owens expressed empathy for the person who wrote the note, and said that he understood it came from a place of fear about change. "I understand this person is probably just frustrated that business isn't going well for them, and then they see AI replacement stories on top of that," Owens told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "And I just so happen to be someone they can focus their frustration on." Agrippa facilitated the $45 million sale of a Las Vegas hotel casino in June using its AI tool to help manage bids for the property. What People Are Saying Agrippa CEO Blake Owens told 9 News Now: "I think a lot of people are afraid of change and what's coming with AI, because it really is a tsunami of change that people are trying to resist. But the more you embrace it, the better you'll do, the more skills that you'll accumulate more value you'll bring to the table." What Happens Next The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department classed the incident as a "non-threat," according to Owens. The CEO said that he would not pursue charges if the sender was identified.


San Francisco Chronicle
3 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Sonoma County sheriff's office seeks public's help finding 1996 homicide suspect
The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office is asking the public's help in its search for the suspect in a 1996 homicide, in which a man was found fatally shot in a shallow grave, a case that went cold. Antonio Bravo Marquez is suspected of killing Alfonso Reyes Martinez, whose body was found in a grave near the Alexander Valley Bridge, north of Healdsburg, on May 20, 1996., the sheriff's office said. Marquez, known also as Antiono Marquez Bravo or Antonio Brava, remains to be found and likely fled to Fresno or Mexico, according to the sheriff's office. The sheriff's office described Marquez as 61, with a height of 5'3'', medium build, short black hair, brown eyes and possibly a light mustache. At the time of the killing, Marquez was employed as a vineyard laborer and lived in an encampment near the intersection of Highway 128 and Alexander Valley Road, the sheriff's office said. Marquez was known to drive a white or tan 1973 Ford Maverick that featured a brown vinyl top, according to the sheriff's office. One man was convicted as an accessory in the killing, but Marquez 'vanished,' the sheriff's office said. 'If you know something — even if it seems small — now is the time to come forward,' said the sheriff's office in a statement. People with information about the shooting can contact the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office's cold case unit at (707) 565-2727.

USA Today
4 days ago
- USA Today
New 911 calls reveal mother's concerns about NYC shooter Shane Tamura
A trove of new documents and 911 calls give insight into Shane Tamura's mental health before he shot and killed four people in a Manhattan skyscraper. In the years before 27-year-old Shane Tamura walked into a New York City skyscraper and fatally shot four people, he had several run-ins with police and his mother had twice called authorities to report he threatened to kill himself, newly released records show. In 2024 and 2022, Tamura's mother called 911 in Las Vegas telling dispatchers she was worried her son would take his own life. She said he had a firearm and had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and suffered from insomnia, depression and sports-related concussions. Authorities have said Tamura, a former high school football player, had a history of mental health issues, but the 911 recordings and police reports made public by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department give new insight into Tamura's life in the years before the shooting. On July 28, police say Tamura carried out a mass shooting in New York City, which they believe targeted the National Football League's headquarters. Officials say he drove across the country, walked into a Manhattan skyscraper and opened fire with a rifle, killing four people, including an off-duty police officer and several building workers. He died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. After the rampage, investigators discovered that he left behind more ammunition, firearms and a three-page note in which he said he suffered from CTE, a brain condition experienced by people who have repeated blows to the head, often through contact sports such as football. The note criticized the NFL, saying it "knowingly concealed the dangers to our brains to maximize profits" and he asked his brain to be studied – a request that is being fulfilled by New York City's Office of Chief Medical Examiner as part of a full autopsy and neurological analysis. The new 911 calls and police reports released by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department include another mental health intervention in 2024, an arrest a year earlier for trespassing at a casino and a traffic violation. The shooting remains under investigation and a full autopsy could take several weeks. Tamura threatened to take his own life in motel room, mother told police In September 2022, his mother called 911 in Las Vegas and told a dispatcher that Tamura started slamming things and threatened suicide while at a motel. She said she was calling from her car but still had a key to the hotel room. Tamura's mother told the dispatcher he had sleeping pills and kept a gun in his backpack. "He didn't say he made a plan, he said that he just can't take it anymore," she told the dispatcher. "I'm afraid to leave." His mother said Tamura was under a doctor's care for depression, sport-related concussions, chronic migraines and insomnia. After officers and a paramedic arrived on the scene an officer filed an emergency request for the former high school football player to be admitted to a mental health facility. A year before shooting, Tamura hospitalized for mental health crisis In August 2024, police and local paramedics went to Tamura's apartment after his mother reported he had threatened suicide. The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department released body camera footage showing the responding officer's interaction with emergency medical responders and Tamura. When the officer walked into the apartment, Tamura was sat shirtless while paramedics checked his vital signs. A paramedic at the scene spoke to the officer, telling him that Tamura "called his mom, made some statements about not wanting to be here anymore." The paramedic said Tamura told them he had a gun in his backpack but has been cooperative. The encounter was calm with the officer and paramedics following him as he put on a shirt and grabbed a few items to take with him to a hospital. They walked downstairs and Tamura was put on a stretcher and wheeled into an ambulance. An officer filed an application to admit him into a mental health facility or hospital for treatment related to a mental health crisis, records show. Tamura's police encounters: Traffic violations, trespassing arrest In the two years before Tamura carried out the deadly mass shooting, he was arrested for trespassing at a casino and was issued a citation for driving without a valid license. In May 2024, he was pulled over by a Las Vegas Metropolitan police officer because he did not have a license plate on the back of his car. "I know," he told officers, body camera footage shows. "I'm sorry guys. I know I shouldn't be driving." After checking his license and registration information, an officer approached Tamura and told him he would receive a citation and his car would be towed because his license had been suspended. The officer and Tamura spoke calmly as the officer told him to park his car and get a ride home. About seven months earlier, in September 2023, Tamura had a more aggressive interaction with police and was arrested on a charge of trespassing after he refused to leave a casino, a police report related to the incident said. Police wrote that Tamura had been gambling at a table when an employee asked for his identification. Tamura refused to show it and he was asked to leave the property, according to police. He walked to the cashier clerk and asked to collect $5,000 in winnings. She asked for his ID, as is common practice with such amounts, and he refused again. Police say he got into a heated conversation with security at the casino and at one point attempted to grab one of the security officials He was put on a wall and brought to a holding cell before police brought him outside and said he was free to go as long as he left the property. He refused to leave and was arrested on a trespassing charge, records show.