Texas man Edward Morgan arrested for 1984 cold case Dallas murder
A 60-year-old Dallas man has been nabbed in a grisly slaying
38 years ago after DNA testing linked him to the cold case, prosecutors said.
Edward Morgan was busted in the 1984 killing of Mary Jane
Thompson, who was found strangled near out-of-use train tracks, Dallas County
District Attorney John Creuzot said in a statement Friday.
Thompson was 21 years old when she took a bus to a medical clinic
that turned out to be closed, The Dallas Morning News reported.
Two days later, her body was discovered near the railroad
tracks behind a warehouse.
She had been sexually abused and strangled with her own leg
warmers, the paper said.
Thompson, who worked two jobs, in a florist shop and a
restaurant, had moved to Dallas just six months before she was killed after
living in Houston and Los Angeles. She had aspired to be a model.
Dallas police had reopened her case in 2009 and conducted
DNA testing on swabs from the original autopsy, but the results matched an
unknown male DNA profile, the Morning News reported.
The case was reopened a second time in 2018, and new testing
techniques similar to those used to identify California’s notorious Golden State
Killer, including tapping into ancestry databases, were able to match the DNA
to Morgan, NBC News reported.
Investigators did not say how they narrowed down their
search to Morgan, but said the case was submitted in 2020 for forensic genetic
genealogy analysis and Morgan was identified as the suspect.
“It is not every day we are able to solve a 38-year-old
cold-case capital murder,” Dallas County Assistant District Attorney Leighton
D’Antoni said. “It takes a singular dedication and authentic commitment to
justice to see it through.”
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