Upstate man credited with helping identify John and Jane Doe in Sumter County
Matthew McDaniel is a volunteer with a passion of representing the voiceless. He now has his sights on a new non-profit to further his mission. Author: Alicia Neaves Updated: 11:24 PM EST January 21, 2021
SUMTER COUNTY, S.C. An upstate man is being credited for helping learn the identities of John and Jane Doe in Sumter County after 44 years.
Victim s Advocate Volunteer Matthew McDaniel is from Clemson, SC. He works on his own time digging into missing persons and unidentified persons cases from around the nation.
For the last eight years, he s worked with the Sumter County Sheriff s Office to track down leads in a mystery Sumter double murder case from 1976.
Upstate man credited with helping identify John and Jane Doe in Sumter County Alicia Neaves
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An upstate man is being credited for helping learn the identities of John and Jane Doe in Sumter County after 44 years.
Victim s Advocate Volunteer Matthew McDaniel is from Clemson, SC. He works on his own time digging into missing persons and unidentified persons cases from around the nation.
For the last eight years, he s worked with the Sumter County Sheriff s Office to track down leads in a mystery Sumter double murder case from 1976.
Wednesday, Sumter County Sheriff Anthony Dennis says a man and woman found shot to death on a dirt road of I-95 in Lynchburg was 25-year-old Pamela Mae Buckley and 30-year-old James Paul Freund.
Investigators identify victims of 1976 cold case out of Sumter County
The victims have been linked to missing person reports in Colorado and Pennsylvania.
Investigators identify victims of 1976 cold case out of Sumter County By Caroline Coleburn | January 21, 2021 at 1:58 PM EST - Updated January 22 at 8:47 AM
SUMTER, S.C. (WIS) - After more than 40 years, Sumter County Sheriff’s Office has identified the remains of two victims that were shot to death and found off I-95 on August 9, 1976.
Sumter County Sheriff Anthony Dennis says the bodies of Pamela Buckley of Colorado Springs, Colo., and James Freund of Lancaster, Pa. were discovered by a truck driver.