Friday, September 18, 2015

Reports: Authorities ID Body Of "Baby Doe," Little Girl Found Dead At Boston Harbor

The young girl, whom authorities had named “Baby Doe,” was identified months after her body was found in a bag, according to multiple reports.

A computer-generated composite image depicting the possible likeness of Baby Doe.

Suffolk County District Attorney via AP, File

Authorities have identified a young girl months after she was found dead in a trash bag on Boston harbor's Deer Island, multiple news outlets reported Friday.

The June discovery of the body of Baby Doe, as she was dubbed by police, received widespread social media attention, with her composite image being shared by tens of thousands of people online in a bid to identify the child, who authorities believed was 3- or 4-years old.

The Massachusetts State Police and the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office did not immediately return requests for comment, but a number of local news reports cited anonymous sources saying an identification had now been made.

Police had reportedly been in contact with the girl's family.

Acting on information they received, Boston police searched a home in the city's Mattapan section Thursday, officials told the Associated Press.

This appeared to be the first break in the case for police in their months-long attempt to identify the girl and to determine how she died.

Baby Doe's body was discovered in a trash bag by a woman walking her dog along the western shore of Deer Island on June 25. She had brown eyes and brown hair and was wearing a pair of white leggings with black-and-white polka dots. Her body was found with a zebra-print fleece blanket that investigators believed may have been special to her.

An autopsy by the state's medical examiner could not immediately determine the cause of death. Forensic tests showed the girl may have been from the New England area. The testing of pollen samples from her blanket indicated she may have spent time in the Greater Boston area prior to her death. Investigators believed she died somewhere in the area and not in a distant location.

Authorities had appealed to her family to come forward and identify the child. "Based on what we believe her age to be, this little girl should be enjoying the innocent childhood pursuits of summer, and, in a few weeks, perhaps, preparing to start school – perhaps the first day of school ever in her life," Colonel McKeon of Massachusetts State Police said in July. "Instead, she lies unnamed in the Medical Examiner's office. Someone knows her. To that person, we know that for whatever reason, you have not come forward yet."

Police had ruled out more than 200 missing girls in their search for Baby Doe's identity.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/1FS5Xln

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