Edward Humes discusses ‘The Forever Witness,’ DNA murder case


On the Shelf

The Forever Witness: How DNA and Genealogy Solved a Cold Case Double Murder

By Edward Humes
Dutton: 384 pages, $28

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It was the coldest of cold cases. And then, when the time was right, an unassuming woman with no police experience solved it in an evening.

In 1987, a young Canadian couple, Jay Cook and Tanya Van Cuylenborg, headed toward Seattle for a quick trip mixing business and pleasure and never returned. Soon their bodies were found — in separate locations, dead of different causes. The killer disappeared into the mist of the Pacific Northwest.

Thirty years on, a relentless cold case detective, Jim Scharf, learned about the budding field of genetic genealogy and reached out to CeCe Moore, an expert in the field, who spent much of her time helping people piece together their family trees. (Genetic DNA matching was what had proved that Thomas Jefferson had fathered the children of his slave, Sally Hemings.)

Using the killer’s DNA from the crime scene, Moore reverse engineered both sides of a family tree until she found the connecting point; Scharf then collected DNA tossed from a truck by the suspect she named, proved it matched the crime scene, and, voila, case closed.

The first murder trial to utilize genetic genealogy caught the attention of Edward Humes, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist living in Seattle at the time.

“I was enthralled by the idea that this revolutionary means of identifying people and uncovering secrets was disdained at first by the forensic community,” he said during a recent phone call. “This was developed by hobbyists working on family trees. Moore is a musical theater actress and former Barbie impersonator and she has now solved more cold cases than anyone.”

Humes’ previous book, “Burned,” eviscerated the use of junk science in criminal cases, mostly focusing on the arson “evidence” used to erroneously convict JoAnn Parks of murder after her children died in a 1989 L.A. County fire. (She was granted clemency just last year.)

This time around, as Humes explores in his latest book, “The Forever Witness,” the science is solid and the potential is vast. Just before Moore solved the Seattle case, another pioneering researcher, Barbara Rae-Venter, used the technique to help police finally catch the Golden State Killer. But as Humes also notes in his book on the breakthrough, the use of genetic information raises hackles for some, who wonder about the potential for intrusions on privacy and police overreach.

The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Beyond the crime itself, you write about how Moore finds results for people that shocked or dismayed them — the “that’s not your real father” kind of thing. What’s your feeling about ancestry searches?

It can trigger unforeseeable events when someone gives you a gift, “Hey, I bought this on Amazon for you.” People have found out things that were really hurtful. I saw it at a genealogy conference where a woman in her 70s learned that her family wasn’t what she thought it was. It’s shockingly common and quite traumatic.

And one of those things may be — when a detective comes knocking on your door. “Oh gee, my fourth cousin is a killer.” It’s a true Pandora’s box. There’s also the privacy issue. You’re putting your DNA out in the universe.

Have you ever put your spit in a tube?

I have not. I’m ambivalent — I’m not sure the safeguards are there yet — but finding out about your roots is an alluring, powerful idea. If I do it, I’ll be going in with my eyes open. The jury’s out on me doing it, let’s just say that.

Barbara Rae-Venter has her own book coming in 2023. Is this an encouraging sign for expanding people’s understanding of the method?

Genetic genealogy has been reported on, but it often isn’t really explained in the news coverage, and I think it makes people’s eyes glaze over. Books can ease people into understanding the science behind it while framing it in a human story. That will bring a lot more understanding.

Forty million people have done these DNA tests in the U.S. People don’t think about the fact that you might be contributing to the discovery of a criminal in your own family, even if it’s somebody you don’t know. It’s something that should be part of the conversation. How should we feel about that? Should it be more closely regulated? These books can help stimulate that conversation.

Are the concerns about police using family trees legitimate or overblown?

The science is super-solid and it’s not just science — it’s old-school genealogy using documents and social media and other resources for the family-tree building.

But the bigger point is that nobody is arrested on the basis of a genetic genealogy finding. CeCe Moore reverse engineered the family tree from the DNA at the crime scene of the presumed killer, but they didn’t go out and arrest the suspect. They acted like it was a tip someone phoned in. They investigated and got a DNA sample from a discarded coffee cup and used the tried-and-true method of DNA fingerprinting.

DNA has been the corrective to all the junk science since the 1980s — it’s just a fingerprint inside our cells. That’s the evidence used for probable cause to arrest and charge the killer.

What’s your position on the police collecting a person’s DNA without a warrant as they did here?

The argument goes that DNA is special because it contains so much information, so you should need a warrant. But there’s a lot of conflating of problems and some of the critiques feel disingenuous.

If the police hacked into one of these ancestry databases, that would be a problem. Then they are getting genomic information on the characteristics of a person and that’s your most secret and private information. Your credit card gets hacked, you get a new credit card. You cannot get a new DNA code.

But the police aren’t doing that.

Is there a need for regulation in terms of what these DNA companies can and should share with police or other citizens?

You don’t want to handcuff the police when there’s something that can potentially save people’s lives, but there’s not a lot of oversight now. Only three states have regulations, but mostly there are no limits. Maryland had a pretty good model as a good starting point for others.

What’s also problematic is these databases are all in private hands. The national fingerprint database is controlled by the U.S. Justice Department, and it’s not a for-profit enterprise.

I’m not taking a position, but it’s odd to have this key forensic database in private, unregulated hands. It should be part of the discussion of how we move forward. There are issues with DNA, where people can pick up something of yours and sell your DNA information to insurers or lenders or potential employers. It can be a tool for espionage or blackmail. That’s what people should be afraid of. I see private bad actors being more likely to do that at this point. It will be interesting to see how that evolves. I don’t think the subject gets the attention it needs. So if these books bring more brain power to the possible risks, that would be great.



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