ID of 1961 John Doe is Oldest NCMEC Case Ever Solved by Genetic Genealogy

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The Identifinders team has identified Bibb County, Alabama’s beloved 1961 John Doe as Daniel Paul ‘Danny’ Armantrout, born December 28, 1945 in Miami, Florida.

His identity was announced live Saturday, October 30 at 7PM Central on Gray Hughes Investigates. Gray and his YouTube audience of “Freaks” generously funded the expensive and time consuming investigation that required almost a year of work to gain viable DNA for a SNP profile.

Danny Armantrout’s identification represents the oldest case of a National Center for Missing and Exploited Children subject ever solved by genetic genealogy.

Watch the replay of the announcement at: Bibb County John Doe! 1961 – IDENTIFIED

Background

Bibb County, Alabama’s 1961 John Doe has been missing from his family for over six decades. The young man hitched a ride with motorist James White on Highway 25 south of Wilton, near the Shelby-Bibb County line in Alabama. He reportedly told Mr. White that his parents were going through a divorce and he had no specific destination.

Not long after picking up his young passenger, the driver struck a guardrail near River Bend bridge and the vehicle plunged into Cahaba River below. The driver survived, yet the boy was critically injured and drowned.

It is believed that the young man hitched rides with at least three different motorists prior to his death. One claimed that the traveler had stayed with relatives as he moved between Montevallo, Alabama and South Carolina trying unsuccessfully to find work. Another good samaritan claimed that he might have connections to the military service or have been an inmate at some kind of institution.

The clothing the boy carried with him indicated he may have been from the north. His cigarettes were from South Carolina.

After losing his life in a car accident, some of this unknown boy’s 1961 funeral expenses were raised by area schoolchildren. Beautiful floral sprays adorned his burial site. According to Ben Windham of Tuscaloosa News, “Some of Bibb County’s most prominent citizens, including a future County Commission chairman, a future Centreville mayor, a bank president, as well as Sheriff Dailey and Oakley, served as pallbearers.”

In June 2016, the Bibb County teen’s remains were exhumed, underwritten by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. After obtaining DNA samples he was reburied the same day.

Identifinders is grateful to Gray Hughes Investigates for underwriting this investigation on behalf of the Bibb County, Alabama Coroners Office.

Republished courtesy of Identifinders International. Photo: The community of Centreville, Alabama erected a burial marker for an unidentified victim of a 1961 car accident.

 

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