After 30 years, Austin city leaders announced on Monday, Sept. 29 that the infamous Yogurt Shop Murders had been solved.
Old-fashioned detective work and advances in forensic science led to the identification of a suspect in the killings of four ...
Police in Austin, Texas, said DNA technology has helped them finally identify the man who killed four teenage girls at a ...
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DNA, multi-state investigations brought answers in Yogurt Shop Murders
Austin cold case investigators used new DNA technology to match samples with other cases. The man believed to have committed ...
Moving beyond hype, we explore how genetic testing truly impacts canine health, from breeding decisions to personalized dog ...
After 34 years, the Austin Police Department announced Friday it linked a suspect to the murder of four girls who were found ...
Newly released data shows Customs and Border Protection funneled the DNA of nearly 2,000 US citizens—some as young as 14—into ...
Jennifer Harbison, Sarah Harbison, Eliza Thomas and Amy Ayers were attacked in the shop and all shot in the head, lead ...
For years, Customs and Border Protection agents have been quietly harvesting DNA from American citizens, including minors, and funneling the samples into an FBI crime database, government data shows.
On Friday, September 26, Austin Police revealed a significant breakthrough in the case linked a now-deceased serial killer to ...
Investigators say they believe they have solved the infamous killings of four Austin teenagers in 1991, thanks to DNA testing ...
Robert Eugene Brashers — who died in 1999 — was named as a suspect in the 1991 quadruple murder in Austin, Texas, the subject ...
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