Forensic techniques that weren’t available before have easily cracked open the 30-year-cold case of Roxanne Wood, who was discovered brutally murdered and sexually assaulted inside her Michigan home in 1987
The case of Roxanne Wood perplexed law enforcement and true crime buffs for years.
The woman’s body was found in the kitchen of her home, and it turned out she had been sexually assaulted, battered with a frying pan, and was bleeding profusely from a neck wound. Police believed the wound was inflicted with a filet knife.
The case was blown open by top investigative genetic genealogist Gabriella Vargas, who was able to trace back family DNA to the 1700s, working with the best labs to test the small pieces of DNA evidence found at the scene.
“We found out there was, what I would call, a gnat’s eyebrow of DNA left,” said Colleen Fitzpatrick, president and founder of Identifinders. About three percent of what we normally use. That was the lowest amount of DNA we’ve ever had to work with to solve a case.