Identified! FL - Pt Charlotte, Wht/HispMale, 25-45, Healed Face Fractures, Poss SK Victim, Feb'94- Jerry Lombard

Gardener1850

Timeline Guru (Still Remembering Cupcake)
Joined
Jun 9, 2016
Messages
42,107
Reaction score
117,238
Secrets of the dead: Charlotte Co. cold case detectives work to identify remains found in 1994
[...]

1994: In the woods behind a Charlotte County intersection, detectives find the remains of a man, mostly bones.

They have no clue as to who it is or what happened until they stumble on an unlikely coincidence.

“A couple years later when we started finding other bodies that were attributed to, at least one was attributed to Daniel Conahan, we were curious because it was the same general area that we had found two of our murder victims,” said Mike Gandy with the Charlotte County Cold Case Unit.

Curious because suspected killer Daniel Conahan is on death row for the gruesome murder of Richard Allen Montgomery, whose mutilated body was found just a few miles away from John Doe.

The Charlotte County Cold Case Unit is determined to find out who John Doe was and whether his death could be linked to the killer.

“A team went back and found what they believed to be rope marks or some sort of marks on the trees near where this body was found, and that was Daniel Conahan’s MO, was to use bondage and to tie his victims to trees under the ruse of being photographed in the nude for his sexual pleasure. They did find some marks that could have been made by ropes,” said Gandy.

Even though the clues in the woods appear to point to Conahan, detectives first have to identify the remains recovered here all those years ago. They’re hoping new information along with new technology will turn the tide.

“My thought is always fresh eyes can add something,” said FGCU Forensic Anthropologist Heather Walsh.

Charlotte Cold Case detectives brought John Doe’s remains to Walsh who examined his bones.

She estimates he’s a 25 to 45-year-old White or Hispanic man, between 5’5 to 5’9, between 125 to 175 pounds. He also had healed fractures in his face and what looks like a pin in his left leg from another injury.

Cold Case detectives took her detailed examination and John Doe’s skull to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office.

There, Expert Forensic Imaging Specialist Paul Moody will create a hi-tech image of his face.

Read more: Secrets of the dead: Charlotte Co. cold case detectives work to identify remains found in 1994

NAMUS Link: The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)

Circumstances of Recovery
Other Details: This death is believed to be in connection with another series of crimes known as the "Florida Hog Trail Murders." A man by the name of Daniel Conahan Jr. has received the death sentence for his role in these crimes.

Scar/mark
Left fibula had anorthopedic pin correcting fracture on the distal end. ( near ankle)
 
Case File 346UMFL

346UMFL.jpg

Reconstruction of Victim


Unidentified White Male

    • Discovered on February 1, 1994 in Punta Gorda, Charlotte County, Florida.
    • The body had been at the site for approximately one month.
Vital Statistics

    • Estimated age: 25 - 35 years old
    • Approximate Height and Weight: 5'9"; 150 - 160 lbs.
    • Distinguishing Characteristics: Brown hair. The victim had been injured sometime within four years prior to his death. An operation had been performed to repair the victim's lower left leg by inserting a stainless steel pin.

Case History

The victim was located on February 1, 1994 in an area just off Biscayne Boulevard. The victim had been mutilated. There were rope marks on the skin and mutilations to the neck and pelvic region. The genitals of the victim had been removed.

Daniel Conahan Jr. is a prime suspect in this case, as well as in at least five other murders for which he has not been tried.

On August 17, 1999 he was found guilty of first-degree premeditated murder and kidnapping in the homicide of Richard Allen Montgomery. He received the death sentence.

The homicides have been named "The Florida Hog Trail Murders".

The victims were all found within a ten-mile radius of one another and all were transients. All the bodies were found within 10 miles of Conahan's home.

The Doe Network: Case File 346UMFL
 
Scar/mark
Left fibula had an orthopedic pin correcting fracture on the distal end. ( near ankle)


If this victim was transient, he was likely from the Charlotte County area. That area had not been overwhelmed with tourists yet in 1994. It is still somewhat a sleepy little town along the water. Mainly due to the lack of industry.

This person had medical care at one time. Most likely at Charlotte Hospital which opened in 1947. It's name changed to became Charlotte Regional Medical Center. Now, it is called Bayfront Health Punta Gorda.

Lots of medical offices were computerized by 1994, even if the actual patient file was still paper, and have been destroyed, there may be basic info from historical surgeries in their database.

How many orthopedic surgeons were there in that area in 1994. They could possibly be retired by now but may have stayed in the area.
 
She estimates he’s a 25 to 45-year-old White or Hispanic man, between 5’5 to 5’9, between 125 to 175 pounds. He also had healed fractures in his face and what looks like a pin in his left leg from another injury.

I wonder if he was in a traffic accident. His head hit the steering wheel or windshield. Maybe his leg was injured in the wreck by another another car hitting the drivers side. Not quite a head on collision but similar.
 
New sketch of unidentified murder victim is key breakthrough in cold case

John-doe.jpg


A new sketch is key in a breakthrough about a cold case murder thought to be the work of a serial killer in Southwest Florida.

The victim’s body was found in the woods and after challenges Id’ing the person, he was labeled John Doe number one.

26 years later and cold case detectives are hoping the new image will help them crack the case.
 
New sketch of unidentified murder victim is key breakthrough in cold case

John-doe.jpg


A new sketch is key in a breakthrough about a cold case murder thought to be the work of a serial killer in Southwest Florida.

The victim’s body was found in the woods and after challenges Id’ing the person, he was labeled John Doe number one.

26 years later and cold case detectives are hoping the new image will help them crack the case.
He looks much younger in the new photo, more in line with the age bracket. If they can publicize this photo in SW FL, perhaps on a billboard along I-75, I bet they could get a lot of tips.
 
I also think they need to put up an enclosed, locked bulletin board on Caspersen Beach (red circle) near the Venice Airport. Every victim of serial killer Daniel Conahan should have their missing poster in it. That park/beach area is well known for casual hookups. I strongly suspect thats where the initial encounters took place. At some point they ventured to a less populated area and were murdered.

Nudists cause a stir at Caspersen Beach
 

Attachments

  • 4EB5160E-66FE-464E-A238-30391030BB92.jpeg
    4EB5160E-66FE-464E-A238-30391030BB92.jpeg
    86.2 KB · Views: 3
PUNTA GORDA, Fla. (WWSB) - Police now have one more piece to help them solve a decades-old cold case murder in Southwest Florida. The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office was able to use new technology as a way to get an updated sketch of what this victim looked like.

In February of 1994, 26 years ago, a man was found dead in the woods in Punta Gorda. He had no clothing, no teeth and absolutely nothing to identify him or even know what happened to him. Since then, he’s been known as John Doe and the first of many bodies discovered from the Hog Trail Murders.

https://www.mysuncoast.com/2020/02/06/hog-trail-murders-new-technology-helps-create-sketch-that-may-help-identify-potential-victim/
 
PUNTA GORDA, Fla. (WWSB) - Police now have one more piece to help them solve a decades-old cold case murder in Southwest Florida. The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office was able to use new technology as a way to get an updated sketch of what this victim looked like.

In February of 1994, 26 years ago, a man was found dead in the woods in Punta Gorda. He had no clothing, no teeth and absolutely nothing to identify him or even know what happened to him. Since then, he’s been known as John Doe and the first of many bodies discovered from the Hog Trail Murders.

https://www.mysuncoast.com/2020/02/06/hog-trail-murders-new-technology-helps-create-sketch-that-may-help-identify-potential-victim/
This link is for the Sharon Gill murder. Is this the link you intended to attach or is there another one?

CHARLOTTE COUNTY, Fla. -- Investigators have announced two new developments in the 1990 cold case murder of Sharon Gill in the Deep Creek area.

According to the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, new tests using DNA technology have developed a new DNA profile in the case. Additional testing is still required to determine how this new DNA profile may assist in solving this case.
 
This link is for the Sharon Gill murder. Is this the link you intended to attach or is there another one?

CHARLOTTE COUNTY, Fla. -- Investigators have announced two new developments in the 1990 cold case murder of Sharon Gill in the Deep Creek area.

According to the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office, new tests using DNA technology have developed a new DNA profile in the case. Additional testing is still required to determine how this new DNA profile may assist in solving this case.


Try this link:

Hog Trail Murders: New Technology Helps Create Sketch That May Help Identify Potential Victim

I think ABC 7 changed something in their original link...
 
This man has now been identified as Jerry Lombard...

Science, detective work identify victim of 27-year-old Charlotte County murder

SARASOTA, Fla. (WWSB) - Some modern scientific lab tests, along with some old-fashioned detective work, has identified the victim of a 27-year-old murder case in Charlotte County, authorities said Wednesday.

The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office announced that a body found in the woods in northern Charlotte County in 1994 has finally been identified as Jerry Lombard, a drifter from Massachusetts.

Deputies think Lombard’s murder was connected to four other murders in the mid-1990s, and the work of Daniel O. Conahan, who remains on Florida’s death row for murder in one of those cases.

...
 
Fabulous. So he wasn't local like I initially thought he would be. His family mentions he was a drifter from MA and was identified from family DNA. Maybe he came down here to get out of the cold winters.

It is not surprising they think he was connected to the Hog Trail murders. I copied this article over to that thread. Thanks for posting this!!

FL - FL - 'Fort Myers 8' (5 still UID) WhtMales Buried in Woods, Mar'07
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
183
Guests online
2,859
Total visitors
3,042

Forum statistics

Threads
595,797
Messages
18,034,341
Members
229,780
Latest member
ambermotko
Back
Top