suitanim
07-11-2012, 10:05 AM
One of the dirtbags probably murdered a 21-year-old woman...
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/occupy-wall-street-dna-unsolved-murder-132043253.html
Investigators in New York say they may have stumbled into a break in the unsolved murder case of Sarah Fox, a Juilliard student who was dead in a Manhattan park in 2004.
According to an unnamed law enforcement official (http://news.yahoo.com/official-dna-ties-04-nyc-death-occupy-protest-031036311.html), DNA found at an Occupy New York-affiliated protest match genetic material found at the crime scene. The 21-year-old drama major and aspiring actress disappeared after she left to go running on May 19, 2004. Fox's body was found six days later in a heavily-wooded area of Inwood Hill Park, her clothing removed and larynx fractured. No arrests were made in the killing, though at the time police said Dimitry Sheinman, a nearby resident who admitted to having "visions" about Fox, was their "no. 1 suspect."
DNA samples collected from a chain left behind a March 28 protest in Brooklyn matches the DNA found on a pink CD player found near Fox's body, the law enforcement official told the New York Post (http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/ows_link_to_gal_slay_2O6i1NY2Htt2kArXSv2jOI).
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/occupy-wall-street-dna-unsolved-murder-132043253.html
Investigators in New York say they may have stumbled into a break in the unsolved murder case of Sarah Fox, a Juilliard student who was dead in a Manhattan park in 2004.
According to an unnamed law enforcement official (http://news.yahoo.com/official-dna-ties-04-nyc-death-occupy-protest-031036311.html), DNA found at an Occupy New York-affiliated protest match genetic material found at the crime scene. The 21-year-old drama major and aspiring actress disappeared after she left to go running on May 19, 2004. Fox's body was found six days later in a heavily-wooded area of Inwood Hill Park, her clothing removed and larynx fractured. No arrests were made in the killing, though at the time police said Dimitry Sheinman, a nearby resident who admitted to having "visions" about Fox, was their "no. 1 suspect."
DNA samples collected from a chain left behind a March 28 protest in Brooklyn matches the DNA found on a pink CD player found near Fox's body, the law enforcement official told the New York Post (http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/ows_link_to_gal_slay_2O6i1NY2Htt2kArXSv2jOI).