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    OSBI identify victim of 1983 Pottawatomie County cold case

    By Mario Gonzalez/KFOR,

    2024-08-08

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1KKhfA_0urBUhpM00

    EARLSBORO, Okla. ( KFOR ) — The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) has identified the human remains of a 1983 cold case victim, 19-year-old Melody Ann Jones.

    According to OSBI, the Pottawatomie County Sheriff’s Office requested assistance from OSBI to investigate the suspicious disappearance of Melody Ann Jones , who mysteriously disappeared on May 5, 1983.

    PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Oklahoma investigators comb through 10-acres of land, hoping for answers in 1983 cold case

    Officials say on the morning of May 5, Jones did not show up for work and a family member visited her residence in Earlsboro to check on her.

    However, upon visiting Jones’ house, 20-year-old Paul Richard Jones, husband of Melody, was found deceased inside of the home and was determined to have suffered injuries related to homicide. Melody was reported missing after she was not found at the home.

    After searching the area on foot, horseback, and helicopter, Oklahoma investigators could not find any clues or locate Jones.

    OSBI say in October of 1998, skeletal remains were found in rural Seminole County and were taken to the Oklahoma Chief Medical Examiners Office to determine the cause of death and positive identification.

    On Wednesday, the Medical Examiner’s Office positively identified the remains as Melody Jones.

    OSBI says the investigation is still ongoing and if anyone has additional information on this cold case, you are asked to contact OSBI at tips@osbi.ok.gov or 1-800-522-8017.

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

    For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to KFOR.com Oklahoma City.

    Comments / 1
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    Amanda Lynne
    08-10
    bout time we pump some more damn money into our ME programs! She was found 26 years ago, with the ability for the last 10 for transfer to other facilities in Texas for advanced DNa testing! She was found rolling on verging 30 years with no name! we can't be lacking in this side because we have more missing humans than any other state and zero help of funding for the MEs office for swifter IDing, lack of resources and money for LE! It's a war zone for those MEs picking up bones for the last several years without ID and there are very few forensic anthropologists employed by the state! Every police dept that gets funding should have it cut by nickles and sent to the MEs office, where they assist LE at any given time, doing that would give the funding push they need for more help!
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