Jake479
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See posts 717-720 regarding Suzanne/Sharon's brother PJB - it looks like he is likely alive and well:
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...-as-Suzanne-Sevakis-5&p=12909164#post12909164
http://www.heraldandnews.com/news/u...cle_77c239c6-9932-5287-bbd5-2385ffd4c5a9.htmlIn a press release Wednesday, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) said they believe the child may have been born or spent the first years of his life somewhere in the Northwest United States.
This determination was based on a study of isotopes in the childs body, which can connect a person to drinking water and other products in the region where they live. Further study determined the boy likely lived in the Southeast later in life. It is unknown if he was alive or deceased when he was brought to New York.
I think this should be checked against Phillip Brandenburg, (brother of Suzanne S. aka Sharon Marshall) who AFAIK is not in Namus.
I have no particular reason to think Floyd was in Rochester, but the blue clothing could suggest a boy baby and the age and timeline is roughly correct.
An unidentified child whose remains were discovered inside a storage trunk in upstate New York 40 years ago may have lived in western South Dakota, according to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
Investigators are asking for the public’s help in identifying the child, a boy believed to have been 3 to 5 years old when he died in the mid-’70s.
Results released this year found that the child was a boy, had brown hair and was not native to New York.
He is believed to have died between late 1975 and early 1976, Mancuso said in a phone interview.
His early years, until age 2, were likely spent in the northwestern part of the U.S. including western South Dakota, said Carol Schweitzer, supervisor of the National Center’s forensic services unit.
This was revealed through a chemical isotope test, which used samples of the child’s long bone and tooth to analyze the type of water and food he had ingested, she said. The results were then correlated with geographic regions in the country.
The boy is believed to have spent the latter part of his life in the U.S. southeast. It is not known if the child was alive when he was brought to New York.
“It takes several months for somebody to stay in one place to absorb that local level of isotope,” Schweitzer said in a phone interview. “If the child was alive when he came to New York, he would have been there for a very short time, like a few weeks or a few months.”
Examiners also found that the child had an abnormal bulge in the rear left part of his skull. This likely meant he had trouble walking and had developmental deficiencies, Schweitzer said. He also appeared malnourished and probably spent a significant amount of time on his back, she said.