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Hancock Jane Doe



http://www.doenetwork.org/cases/178ufms.html

Hancock County Jane Doe had suffered grievous injuries as a result of the hit-and-run: a broken neck, compression-contusion of the spinal cord, lacerated scalp, fractured right femur, lacerated liver, 21 broken ribs, deep lacerations of the right knee joint and left heel, and multiple deep abrasions to the abdomen, extremities, and face. There was hair resembling her own tangled in the fingers of her left hand. In 2013, the Hancock County Coroner obtained permission to exhume her remains to gather DNA to test against two missing women cases from Louisiana, Nelda Louise Hardwick and Faye Aline Self.
In December of that year, volunteers arrived in St. Joseph Cemetery and began digging under the gravestone marked 'Jane Doe'. To their shock, the body they exhumed was not Hancock County Jane Doe. The body, in addition to having a full mouth of teeth, was also male. As the county doesn't keep any burial records, investigators have no idea where Hancock County Jane Doe is buried. As a result, further exhumation plans have been halted.
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