near an unoccupied house. badly decomposed. hands and wrists still bound together. 30 years ago, a young woman s body was discovered in the american midwest. nobody knew who she was. it s america s silent, mass disaster, that there are so many people without names. she became known as grace doe one of an estimated 250,000 unsolved murders in the us. i was going to keep looking. i did not care what it took, what i had to do. now, dna from genealogy websites is revolutionising cold case murder investigations like grace s, but at what cost? we have a multibillion dollar industry unearthing the secrets of our genes. you have an absolute right to privacy but, at the same token, we have a right to not get murdered and raped.
took, what i had to do. now, dna from genealogy websites is revolutionising cold case murder investigations like grace s, but at what cost? we have a multibillion dollar industry unearthing the secrets of our genes. you have an absolute right to privacy but, at the same token, we have a right to not get murdered and raped. so who was grace and can america s dna detectives find out who killed her? i m here in the middle of the us to follow a case that has stumped the police for more than 30 years now. and i m particularly interested in it because the police are using a technique involving dna tracing that s
hands and wrists still bound together. 30 years ago, a young woman s body was discovered in the american midwest. nobody knew who she was. it s america s silent, masked disaster, that there are so many people without names. it s america s silent, mass disaster, that there she became known as grace doe one of an estimated 250,000 unsolved murders in the us. i was going to keep looking. i did not care what it took, what i had to do. now, dna from genealogy websites is revolutionising cold case murder investigations like grace s, but at what cost?
without names. she became known as grace doe one of an estimated 250,000 unsolved murders in the us. i was gonna keep looking. i did not care what it took, what i had to do. now, dna from genealogy websites is revolutionising cold case murder investigations like grace s, but at what cost? we have a multibillion dollar industry unearthing the secrets of our genes. you have an absolute right to privacy but, at the same token, we have a right to not get murdered and raped. so who was grace and can america s dna detectives find out who killed her?
human remains, possibly a female, found lying near an unoccupied house. badly decomposed. hands and wrists still bound together. 30 years ago a young woman s body was discovered in the american midwest. nobody knew who she was. it is america s silent mast disaster, that there are so many people without names. she became known as grace doh, one of an estimated 250,000 unsolved murders in the us. i was going to keep looking, i didn t care what it took. now dna from genealogy websites is revolutionising cold case murder investigations like grace s, but at what cost? we have a multibillion dollar industry unearthing the secrets