Posted on Sep 5, 2019
Alaska's DNA detectives make an arrest 41 years after a teen's killing
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Thank you, my friend SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser that Anchorage, Alaska's DNA detectives solved a 1978 rape and murder crime of the murder of 16-year-old Shelley Connolly.
Donald McQuade moved back to Oregon and thank Oregon's police "took him into custody Friday. He’s charged with first- and second-degree murder and will be brought to Alaska for trial."
Hopefully, Donald McQuade will confess about how he was involved in this case since his DNA matches.
"After more than 40 years, Alaska State Troopers have arrested an Oregon man in the cold-case mystery of an Anchorage teenager’s killing.
Judy Connolly at the Alaska State Troopers press conference on Sept. 3, 2019, announcing they had a suspect in her daughter's murder.
Shelley Connolly, 16, went missing January 7, 1978. The next day, her body was discovered by hikers down the embankment of a highway pullout south of Anchorage.
Tuesday, Alaska State Troopers announced the arrest of 62-year-old Donald McQuade for Shelley Connolly’s killing.
The night she disappeared, Shelley Connolly had told her mother she was going roller skating. But the teenager had instead gone to Chilkoot Charlie’s, a local bar, and was later seen eating at Leroy’s Diner.
The discovery of her body the next day and a subsequent autopsy revealed Shelley Connolly had suffered greatly in the hours leading up to her death. She’d been raped, beaten and dragged from a moving car.
“They had thrown her over an embankment, and she tried to crawl up because her fingernails were all broken and full of debris,” Judy Connolly, Shelley’s mother, told KTUU in 2016.
After being tossed from the car, Shelley Connolly lay dying for hours in freezing winter temperatures.
“A mother’s always supposed to be there to protect her children,” Judy Connolly said, explaining the difficult feelings that linger. During that interview in 2016, Connolly said she’d come terms with the fact she might never see her daughter’s killer brought to justice.
She was wrong. Friday, she got the remarkable news: a suspect, a DNA match and an arrest.
“I really was flabbergasted,” Judy Connolly said after a press conference about the arrest Tuesday.
Beginning in December 2018, using a relatively new type of DNA technology - genetic genealogy analysis - investigators began the search for relatives of an unknown individual who’d left DNA on Shelley Connolly’s body.
Until this new approach, traditional DNA testing had ruled out prior suspects. Crime databases yielded no matches.
Within months, the DNA search led investigators to Donald McQuade, who lived in Anchorage at the time of the murder, drove a car similar to the one Connolly was seen getting into and whose DNA would match DNA found under Shelley’s nails, on her jeans and on her body.
Oregon police took him into custody Friday. He’s charged with first- and second-degree murder and will be brought to Alaska for trial.
Donald McQuade’s brother, Richard McQuade, expressed doubt to KGW that his brother was capable of committing such a crime.
"I have my own belief which I can't substantiate, but I know my brother," he said. "And if anything, he might've been in the car, not at the time the crime was committed.
"We have never noticed that type of behavior in Donald McQuade," he added.
Meanwhile, Judy Connolly said the quest for clues and answers “seemed like it was a dead end.” Donald McQuade’s arrest, “totally unexpected,” brought “great relief,” she said.
According to investigators, McQuade has denied having anything to do with the murder. An affidavit filed in support of his arrest reveals his only admission came when speaking to a long-time friend during a secretly recorded phone call. During that call, investigators say Donald McQuade confided he made many mistakes while drunk.
"I can't begin to imagine how painful it has been over the years knowing what happened to Shelley, and for her case to remain seemingly unnoticed. While I can announce this outcome today, it does not make up for the years of pain they faced," Alaska State Trooper Col. Barry Wilson said during Tuesday's press conference.'
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen LTC Greg Henning LTC Jeff Shearer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price Maj Marty Hogan CPT Scott Sharon CWO3 Dennis M. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSG William Jones SGT (Join to see) SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski PO1 H Gene Lawrence PO2 Kevin Parker PO3 Bob McCord SFC Jack Champion TSgt David L.
Donald McQuade moved back to Oregon and thank Oregon's police "took him into custody Friday. He’s charged with first- and second-degree murder and will be brought to Alaska for trial."
Hopefully, Donald McQuade will confess about how he was involved in this case since his DNA matches.
"After more than 40 years, Alaska State Troopers have arrested an Oregon man in the cold-case mystery of an Anchorage teenager’s killing.
Judy Connolly at the Alaska State Troopers press conference on Sept. 3, 2019, announcing they had a suspect in her daughter's murder.
Shelley Connolly, 16, went missing January 7, 1978. The next day, her body was discovered by hikers down the embankment of a highway pullout south of Anchorage.
Tuesday, Alaska State Troopers announced the arrest of 62-year-old Donald McQuade for Shelley Connolly’s killing.
The night she disappeared, Shelley Connolly had told her mother she was going roller skating. But the teenager had instead gone to Chilkoot Charlie’s, a local bar, and was later seen eating at Leroy’s Diner.
The discovery of her body the next day and a subsequent autopsy revealed Shelley Connolly had suffered greatly in the hours leading up to her death. She’d been raped, beaten and dragged from a moving car.
“They had thrown her over an embankment, and she tried to crawl up because her fingernails were all broken and full of debris,” Judy Connolly, Shelley’s mother, told KTUU in 2016.
After being tossed from the car, Shelley Connolly lay dying for hours in freezing winter temperatures.
“A mother’s always supposed to be there to protect her children,” Judy Connolly said, explaining the difficult feelings that linger. During that interview in 2016, Connolly said she’d come terms with the fact she might never see her daughter’s killer brought to justice.
She was wrong. Friday, she got the remarkable news: a suspect, a DNA match and an arrest.
“I really was flabbergasted,” Judy Connolly said after a press conference about the arrest Tuesday.
Beginning in December 2018, using a relatively new type of DNA technology - genetic genealogy analysis - investigators began the search for relatives of an unknown individual who’d left DNA on Shelley Connolly’s body.
Until this new approach, traditional DNA testing had ruled out prior suspects. Crime databases yielded no matches.
Within months, the DNA search led investigators to Donald McQuade, who lived in Anchorage at the time of the murder, drove a car similar to the one Connolly was seen getting into and whose DNA would match DNA found under Shelley’s nails, on her jeans and on her body.
Oregon police took him into custody Friday. He’s charged with first- and second-degree murder and will be brought to Alaska for trial.
Donald McQuade’s brother, Richard McQuade, expressed doubt to KGW that his brother was capable of committing such a crime.
"I have my own belief which I can't substantiate, but I know my brother," he said. "And if anything, he might've been in the car, not at the time the crime was committed.
"We have never noticed that type of behavior in Donald McQuade," he added.
Meanwhile, Judy Connolly said the quest for clues and answers “seemed like it was a dead end.” Donald McQuade’s arrest, “totally unexpected,” brought “great relief,” she said.
According to investigators, McQuade has denied having anything to do with the murder. An affidavit filed in support of his arrest reveals his only admission came when speaking to a long-time friend during a secretly recorded phone call. During that call, investigators say Donald McQuade confided he made many mistakes while drunk.
"I can't begin to imagine how painful it has been over the years knowing what happened to Shelley, and for her case to remain seemingly unnoticed. While I can announce this outcome today, it does not make up for the years of pain they faced," Alaska State Trooper Col. Barry Wilson said during Tuesday's press conference.'
FYI COL Mikel J. Burroughs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen LTC Greg Henning LTC Jeff Shearer Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. "Bill" Price Maj Marty Hogan CPT Scott Sharon CWO3 Dennis M. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSG William Jones SGT (Join to see) SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski PO1 H Gene Lawrence PO2 Kevin Parker PO3 Bob McCord SFC Jack Champion TSgt David L.
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LTC Stephen F.
FYI Sgt John H.PVT Mark Zehner1sg-dan-capri
SGT Robert R.CPT Tommy CurtisSGT (Join to see)
SGT Steve McFarlandCol Carl WhickerSP5 Billy MullinsSFC David XantenSGT Mark AndersonCW4 Craig UrbanSSG Michael NollSFC(P) (Join to see)CPT Daniel CoxSFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTMSFC Jack ChampionA1C Ian Williamsaa John ZodunCpl James R. " Jim" Gossett Jr
SGT Robert R.CPT Tommy CurtisSGT (Join to see)
SGT Steve McFarlandCol Carl WhickerSP5 Billy MullinsSFC David XantenSGT Mark AndersonCW4 Craig UrbanSSG Michael NollSFC(P) (Join to see)CPT Daniel CoxSFC David Reid, M.S, PHR, SHRM-CP, DTMSFC Jack ChampionA1C Ian Williamsaa John ZodunCpl James R. " Jim" Gossett Jr
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I have no problem using dna to solve crimes SPC Britanny *Winnie* Balthaser my dna is on ancestry and if it’s used to bust one of my relatives, oh well!
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