Kansas cold case detectives connect two 1990s killings to the same suspect

bnew

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Kansas cold case detectives connect two 1990s killings to the same suspect​


This booking photo provided by Kansas City, Kan., Police Department shows Gary Dion Davis. DNA evidence led to the arrest of Davis, Kansas City Police Chief Karl Oakman and Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree said Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023. Davis is jailed on a $500,000 bond for two counts of second-degree murder, the Kansas City Star reported. (Kansas City, Kan., Police Department via AP)

This booking photo provided by Kansas City, Kan., Police Department shows Gary Dion Davis. DNA evidence led to the arrest of Davis, Kansas City Police Chief Karl Oakman and Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree said Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2023. Davis is jailed on a $500,000 bond for two counts of second-degree murder, the Kansas City Star reported. (Kansas City, Kan., Police Department via AP)

Updated 2:42 PM EDT, September 21, 2023

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KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas man has been charged with two counts of murder after detectives in a newly formed cold case unit connected him to the deaths of two women nearly three decades ago.

DNA evidence led to the arrest of 52-year-old Gary Dion Davis, Kansas City Police Chief Karl Oakman and Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree said Wednesday. Davis is jailed on a $500,000 bond for two counts of second-degree murder, the Kansas City Star reported.

Davis was a long-haul truck driver in the 1990s. He is accused of killing 26-year-old Christina King, who was found beaten to death behind an abandoned building on Christmas Day in 1996. He also is charged with fatally stabbing Pearl Barnes, whose body was found in a vacant house a month earlier.

Davis does not yet have a listed attorney. Two phone numbers listed for him were no longer in service, and a third had a full mailbox and wasn’t accepting messages on Thursday.

The circumstances behind the deaths are still being investigated, but police said they do not believe that Davis knew either of the women. Detectives are trying to determine if Davis could be responsible for other crimes.

The Kansas City Kansas Police Department’s cold case unit began operation in January 2022 and consists of three full-time detectives. Oakman said the department has “a lot of unsolved cases” and already had identified suspects in 11 homicide cases.

“So, it may not be today. It may not be tomorrow. In fact, it may not be this year. But there’s gonna be a time,” Oakman said. “You may be in a drive-thru line. You may be at the grocery store. We’re gonna eventually get you.”


Authorities also announced that two other unrelated cases were recently solved.


A 66-year-old inmate was charged in May after he confessed to killing 16-year-old Dion Estell, who was found shot to death in a creek bed in July 1997. The inmate, who was convicted of a 1998 killing and is now in hospice care, confessed to cold case detectives because he wanted closure for Estell’s family.


The oldest case cleared involved the death of an hours-old baby girl found in a dumpster behind an apartment complex in November 1976. DNA evidence led detectives to the mother of the child in 2022.


The woman accused her grandmother of taking the baby away shortly after she gave birth. The grandmother, who has since died, was identified as the primary suspect.
 

bnew

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geneological DNA searches are taking a bunch of criminals off the streets. Even if none of you immeidtae family members shared DNA with LEO or these ancentry DNA companies, they will end up buildign a family tree starting with a extended relative that has. at some point they crossed the rubicon and have enough data to find most people with a certain number of family members who have.
 

jj23

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The oldest case cleared involved the death of an hours-old baby girl found in a dumpster behind an apartment complex in November 1976. DNA evidence led detectives to the mother of the child in 2022.


The woman accused her grandmother of taking the baby away shortly after she gave birth. The grandmother, who has since died, was identified as the primary suspect.

That is some foul shyt...
 

bnew

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That is some foul shyt...

threw her own great-grandchild into the trash. :skip:

things like this is why I don't wax poetic about past generations. a lot of terrible people existed and their misdeeds/crimes went unpunished and undiscovered.
 

DonB90

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Ahhh.... the good old days folks like talking about am I right :troll:
 

CopiousX

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Did he try to hanging himself already? Those neck marks seem unnatural :ohhh:
 

Thavoiceofthevoiceless

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geneological DNA searches are taking a bunch of criminals off the streets. Even if none of you immeidtae family members shared DNA with LEO or these ancentry DNA companies, they will end up buildign a family tree starting with a extended relative that has. at some point they crossed the rubicon and have enough data to find most people with a certain number of family members who have.
Which creates privacy and safety issues in and of itself as you can debate whether law enforcement should have access to those databases as we've seen a few instances in where they got the wrong suspect or family member from it.
 
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