Body found in Arizona identified as L.A. man 27 years later - Los Angeles Times
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Body found in Arizona desert identified as L.A. Army vet after 27 years

The sun sets behind a cactus in Buckeye, Ariz.
Sun Valley Parkway in Buckeye, Ariz. Human remains found in the Arizona desert in 1996 have been identified as belonging to a Los Angeles man and U.S. Army veteran, authorities said.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
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Human remains that were found in the Arizona desert 27 years ago have been identified as those of a Los Angeles man and U.S. Army veteran, authorities said.

The body of Sherman George was identified using advanced DNA testing, according to Othram, a lab in Woodlands, Texas, that assisted in George’s case and uses forensics grade genome sequencing to solve similar cold cases.

In 1996, two men out with their dogs discovered a set of human remains in a shallow grave under a juniper tree just a few miles outside of Kingman, Ariz., Othram said Monday on its website, DNAsolves.com. The Mohave County Sheriff’s Office responded to the scene. The man appeared to have died from a gunshot wound to the head, authorities determined.

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Anthropologists from the University of Arizona concluded the remains belonged to a Black man between 30 and 40 years old and between 5-foot-10 and 6-foot-1, Othram said. But few other details emerged, and the case otherwise remained unsolved.

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But in February, Sheriff’s Office investigators sent forensic evidence to Othram’s lab, which established a detailed DNA profile of the man and helped identify him as George. According to Othram, George served in the Army — records indicate he was stationed at Ft. Liberty, formerly known as Ft. Bragg, in North Carolina — and was known to go into the desert in California and Arizona with friends.

George was not reported as a missing person and was estranged from his family, whom he had last seen in 1994, Othram said.

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Confirmation testing is underway, Othram said. Othram did not respond to requests for comment.

Bryce S. Dubee, a public affairs specialist for the Army, said the department does not currently have a file for George in its system and that records for soldiers who left the service more than 15 years ago are transferred to the National Archives.

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The Times submitted a records request to the National Archives.

The Mohave County Sheriff’s Office did not respond to a request for comment.

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