Police discover missing teen was slain in 1954
Cold CaseFocus shifts from identification to finding the killer
Published: November 8, 2009
PHOENIX — A murdered young woman buried as Jane Doe in Colorado 55 years ago. An Arizona family puzzled and saddened as Dorothy Gay Howard’s disappearance stretched into decades.
Multimedia
Focus shifts to killer
Ainsworth said it was gratifying to tell Howard’s family what had happened to her, but he now has a new focus.
"We know who she is, but there’s still another mystery and that may be the biggest mystery of all, and that’s who did it,” Ainsworth said.
He said his gut tells him it was serial killer Harvey Glatman, who was executed in 1959 in California. Glatman, who confessed to killing three women, had served time in a Colorado state prison for violent assaults on women, including one about a quarter of a mile from where Howard’s body was found.
Because of marks on her body, evidence at the scene and a passing reference Glatman made to a California police detective, Ainsworth’s theory is that Glatman hit Howard with his car as she tried to get away. Now, Ainsworth just has to prove it. Ashman said all she wants is justice for her sister.
She said Howard was extremely strong-willed and lived quite a life in her 18 years, including marrying twice.
Howard was the oldest of three sisters born in the Texas Panhandle. The girls’ parents moved the family to Phoenix in 1942 for "greener pastures.”
Howard was working as a live-in nanny in Phoenix the last her family heard from her; they reported her missing when she didn’t show up to take one of her sisters to the movies.
Because Howard was so willful and had run away from home once before, Ashman said the family thought she just didn’t want to see them again. "We always waited to hear from her,” she said.
Lead investigator
Related Topics:
Murder and Homicide, Crime


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