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Albert DeSalvo in 1973 (AP) |
On October 20, 2001, Court TV reported that new DNA tests would be
performed on evidence taken from the remains of Mary Sullivan, one of
11 victims attributed to the alleged Boston Strangler, Albert DeSalvo.
Thomas Reilly, the Massachusetts Attorney General, told Court TV
that he had ordered the tests to be performed: “The family has
raised legitimate questions in terms of the way it was investigated,
they've asked us to look into things and we are.”
The family of Mary Sullivan has long argued that she wasn’t a
victim of the Boston Strangler and believes that her real killer is
still alive.
This latest development was a direct result of individual
investigations that were mounted by relatives of both Sullivan and
DeSalvo, which brought additional pressure on authorities to
reconsider their findings.
A week later, on Friday October 26, 2001, a report by Associated
Press described how Albert DeSalvo’s body had been exhumed from
a gravesite in Massachusetts and taken to a forensic laboratory in
York College Pennsylvania for examination. The following
Saturday an autopsy was conducted on the remains in the hope of
attempting to prove De Salvo’s innocence of the murders and
possibly, to identify his killer.
James E. Starrs, a professor of forensic sciences at George
Washington University, led the team of scientists who performed the
autopsy: Starrs is best known for his identification work on
other high-profile cases including the Lizzie Borden hatchet murders,
the Lindbergh baby kidnapping and the outlaw Jesse James.
He told AP: “The family has been unsatisfied all these
many years concerning the death of Albert DeSalvo and failure to find
anyone guilty of the death.”
On Thursday, December 13, 2001, Court TV reported that DNA evidence
taken from Mary Sullivan’s remains did not provide a match to Albert
DeSalvo. During a news conference, James Starrs told reporters:
“We have found evidence and the evidence does not and cannot be
associated with Albert DeSalvo.”
Starrs made it very clear that the evidence only clears DeSalvo of
sexual assault. While he did not give details of the analysis,
he told reporters: “If I was a juror, I would acquit him with no
questions asked.”
Mary Sullivan's nephew, Casey Sherman, who has always doubted that
DeSalvo killed his aunt or any of the other victims attributed to
him, said he feels vindicated by Starrs' finding: “If he didn't kill
Mary Sullivan, yet he confessed to it in glaring detail, he didn't
kill any of these women.”
Sherman also told reporters that, prior to De Salvo’s confession,
police had what they considered as “a prime suspect” in Sullivan's
murder but dropped the case after DeSalvo confessed. Sherman urged
police to “go after the real killer” who, according to him, is
still alive and living in New England.
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