A woman found dead in 1991 in an Illinois cornfield is identified as
being from the Chicago area
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[September 18, 2024]
OTTAWA, Ill. (AP) — A person found dead in an Illinois cornfield
in 1991 has been identified as a Chicago-area woman more than a decade
after authorities began re-examining the cold case.
An investigation relying on a posthumous DNA sample led to the
identification of Paula Ann Lundgren last week. Now authorities hope
they can piece together more details about her life and the
circumstances of her death. |
La Salle County Sheriff Adam Diss, and La Salle County coroner Richard
Ploch, look at a map showing the exact site where Jane Doe was found
near the intersection of North 37th Road and East 30th in La Salle
County, Ill., Tuesday Sep. 7, 2021. (Scott Anderson/NewsTribune via AP) |
Over the years, numerous authorities have tried to identify the
woman.
Her body was exhumed in 2013 to obtain DNA and employ
investigative methods not in use in the early 1990s. And in
2019, a professor at Illinois Valley Community College used
investigative genetic genealogy to produce a list of the woman’s
possible living relatives.
The LaSalle County coroner’s office went through the list for
years trying to find a match before involving the FBI in
February. In July there was a break in the case.
“We have limited resources, so the FBI agreed to provide further
assistance with the case that eventually led to a living
relative,” Coroner Rich Ploch said Monday. “That person's DNA
was confirmed as a match to Paula.”
Lundgren, who had lived primarily in the Chicago area, would
have been 29 when a farmer found her body in September 1991 in a
cornfield in northern Illinois' LaSalle County, authorities
said.
The coroner’s office determined at the time that the woman had
died from cocaine intoxication. Her unidentified body was
eventually buried in an Ottawa cemetery with a headstone
reading, “Somebody's Daughter, Somebody's Friend.”
The LaSalle County sheriff’s office said now that Lundgren's
identity is known the agency hopes "new leads can be developed
as to how she came to be in the cornfield.”
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