By ROBIN
FITZGERALD
rfitzgerald@sunherald.com
GULFPORT
- "Jane Doe" looked like a toddler you might see waiting to
have her picture taken at a portrait studio or sitting in a booster seat
at a restaurant.
She had strawberry blond hair and 12 baby teeth when she was found dead
in a pink-and-white dress that buttoned in the back.
Her body, found in 1982, was in the Dog River beneath a westbound lane
of I-10 in Escatawpa. Authorities believe she was thrown off the bridge a
couple of days earlier.
She is one of nine unidentified victims found in Mississippi from 1982
through 2003, six of them in South Mississippi. They are among 840 people
profiled on The Doe Network, a Web site that allows volunteers to help law
enforcement identify the nameless victims.
The Doe Network's 400-plus volunteers include forensic artists who draw
sketches of the victims or use forensic reconstruction to show what a
victim probably looked like.
"We want these people to have their names back and their families to
know what happened to them," said Ellen Leach of Gulfport.
Leach, a cashier at Home Depot in Biloxi, is state director of The Doe
Network. She spends a couple of hours a day searching the Internet and
making phone calls to help solve the mysteries.
The Doe Network has solved 22 cases and helped solve at least eight
others since 1999. Leach said she solved one of the cases and assisted in
another confirmed by DNA evidence.
"It's a good feeling to know you've helped families get the answers
they need," said Leach.
Investigators such as Jackson County Sheriff's Sgt. Ken McClenic say
they reach out to every available resource to help identify victims.
One of McClenic's investigations, a capital murder case from 2001, is
listed on The Doe Network. The male victim's body was found wrapped in
carpet on Old Stage Road. The suspect, Steven Leon Andrews, remains in
custody without bond, awaiting prosecution.
"I've been doing this about 20 years and this is the first time I've
put somebody behind bars in a murder case involving a victim without a
name," said McClenic. "It's aggravating. It's frustrating."
"I hope to not retire until I know who this guy was. I'd like to talk
to his family. Find out about his life. Try to understand why nobody ever
reported him missing."
The man's fingerprints have not been found in national fingerprint
databases.
But one of his tattoos - a peacock or a phoenix - is a symbol commonly
associated with Columbian cocaine traffickers, said McClenic.
"I believe this guy was the victim of a drug deal gone bad," he
said.
Several national databases are available for police use. The Doe
Network is used by volunteers for research, but the online files with
sketches also give families and friends of missing persons a way to do
what they can do to help find a loved one.
The nameless victims
The Doe Network lists nine unidentified people whose bodies were found
in Mississippi from 1982 through 2003. The victims, by case file number,
county and date found:
1: 274UMMS,Lamar County, March 3, 1991. White male, 18 to 23,
5-feet-11 to 6-feet-1, gunshot victim, skeletal remains found in a ditch
near I-59. Wore a 14K gold heart-shaped pendant on a chain. Believed to
have been shot in 1988.
2: 231UMMS, Jackson County, June 1996. White male, 45 to 55,
5-feet-3 to 5-feet-6, brown hair, missing most of his teeth. Skeletal
remains found in a wooded area near Vancleave. Wore a brown leather belt
with two Confederate flags and the words "We shall rise again." Initials
"ED" etched on the back of the belt buckle.
3: 491UMMS, Harrison County, Jan. 17, 2001. Black male, 32 to
42, height 5-feet-eight to 6-feet-1. Found in woods being cleared near
Biloxi. Believed to have died one to five years before his body was
discovered.
4: 649UMMS, Forrest County, Dec. 1, 1998. White male, 22 to 28,
6-feet-2, 170 pounds. Red hair with red beard and mustache. Was struck by
a drunk driver while hitchhiking on I-59 north of U.S. 49 in Hattiesburg.
Told paramedics his name was Steve Hex or Hicks of West Virginia, but no
identity has been confirmed.
5: 644UMMS, Perry County, Sept. 3, 2002. Black male, 35 to 40,
5-feet-10, about 150 pounds. Died of gunshot wound 3 or 4 months before
found in Petal off Grady Morgan Cutoff Road. Possible fracture to left
hip.
6: 414UFMS,Hancock County, May 21, 2003. White female, 32 to 42,
5-feet-1 to 5-feet-4, found in the NASA buffer zone three days to three
weeks after her death. Her clothing had been burned off. Wore two gold
bands on her right hand and a silver heart-shaped ring with a hollow
center on her left thumb. May have been killed in Louisiana or Pearl River
County.
7: 429UMMS, Jackson County, June 18, 2001. White or Hispanic male, 25
to 35, 5-feet-5 to 5-feet-7, 250 pounds. Head shaved, scar on center of
forehead, possible old gunshot wound to left wrist and scar on the left
side of nose. Tattoos: large bird, possibly a peacock or phoenix, on right
shoulder with long feather and flowers, "John" on right upper chest, Old
English-script "E" or "F" on inside left forearm.
8:178UFMS, Hancock County, May 8, 1998. White female, 37 to 42,
5-feet-3, about 130 pounds, curly reddish-brown hair. Hit by a vehicle on
I-10 near mile-marker 4. Had given birth at least twice and had a
C-section, suffered from black lung disease, emphysema and chronic
bronchitis.
9: 45UFMS,Jackson County, Dec. 5, 1982. White female, 2 years old, 25
pounds, strawberry blond hair, 12 baby teeth. Found in the Dog River near
an I-10 bridge in Escatawpa. Wore a "Cradle Togs" pink and white dress
buttoned in the back and a disposable diaper.