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Police say DNA evidence now ties Albert DeSalvo to the last of the Strangler murders

DA Dan Conley with Mary Sullivan's photo behind him.DA Dan Conley with Mary Sullivan's photo behind him.Updated with press-conference info.

Modern DNA techniques and dogged work by a detective who followed around a member of Albert DeSalvo's family last year have resulted in evidence that pretty conclusively ties DeSalvo to the last of the Boston Strangler murders in 1964, police and prosecutors announced today.

Still, just to be absolutely sure, prosecutors yesterday obtained a court order to exhume DeSalvo's body from a Peabody cemetery to optain samples with which to compare samples taken from the body and blanket of 19-year-old Mary Sullivan after her rape and murder in her Charles Street apartment, Suffolk County District Attorney Dan Conley said at a packed press conference this morning.

Conley said no similar DNA evidence exists for the remaining Strangler victims. DeSalvo's jailhouse confession was thrown out and he was convicted for another series of rapes.

Conley and Police Commissioner Ed Davis said earlier attempts at DNA analysis on the Sullivan samples in the early 2000s failed, but improvements in DNA technology meant police could attempt a new analysis last year. Conley said DNA from dried semen on Sullivan's body and blanket matched each other, proving they came from the same person. Next, they said, was proving a link to DeSalvo. They said that proved difficult because they were unable to find any testable samples from DeSalvo's files or his time in state prison until his 1973 murder.

So, Conley and Davis said, they turned to another route: The fact that men's Y chromosomes almost never change from one generation to the next. Last year, Davis said, a detective from the BPD fugitive squad began trailing one of DeSalvo's nephews, in the hopes he would touch something and then discard it in the trash - at which point the detective could retrieve it without asking for permission or a search warrant. Finally, Davis said, the detective watched the unnamed nephew drink from and discard a water bottle - which provided enough of a sample to show a match with the Y-chromasome data from the Sullivan samples.

Conley said investigators never simply asked the DeSalvo family for samples, in part because they were concerned it would produce unneccessary stress on the family - especially if it turned out the samples didn't match.

Casey Sherman, Sullivan's nephew, struggled with tears as he expressed gratitude for the police work after decades of an often lonely battle by his family to try to find out what really happened to Sullivan, who had moved into her Beacon Hill apartment just four days before her murder.

He added he realizes the answer won't be definitive until after DeSalvo's body is exhumed and samples tested.

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Comments

was feeling left out and decided to fess up

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it's breath taking!

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I think the guy who claimed his buddy died while they were hiking in the desert, and who is now serving time for his murder [forget his name, but he lived in West Roxbury] killed her.

There was another suspect who apparently committed suicide, but I think the guy above killed and dismembered her.

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It would be good to know that either the murderer is dead or that somebody would be caught and put away from society.

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I remember when that happened. I was too young for clubs then, but I remember it being in the news and my older cousins who lived nearby all knew who she was.

I think about that case every once in a while and google around to see if there are any developments, but there's never anything new. The police reaction (and inaction) makes me wonder if the theory about the woman's supposed cop boyfriend was the correct one.

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a random dumpster fire at the workplace of the husband/father of the family that she was working for just a few days after the murder?? i always remember that and wondered if there was some affair or something else.

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you describe people the way my parents describe movies: "you know, the one with that guy, and he runs a lot."

but i think you mean:

http://articles.philly.com/1999-08-12/news/2548277...

that second one i have no clue on

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Well to be fair, the David Coughlin murder did loosely inspire a movie.

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I thought he got acquitted. Am I wrong?

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And served some time.

I actually had him as a student the one time I taught a college class - on database-driven journalism at Northeastern. He seemed like a bright kid.

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One additional suspect for a time was the lead singer of the band Sleep Chamber, John Zewiz, who used to appear at ManRay. The dumpster was not far from his home, and he was considered more than a little strange by the cops.

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After 49 years, why now? It wouldn't be because Dan Conley wants some free face time, now would it? Just another reason to vote for anyone but Conley.

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have occurred in Suffolk county in the past 8 years? How many botched prosecutions, questionable plea deals, people let off easy for dubious reasons? Maybe Conley should have a press conference on those rather than taking credit for re-solving a decades-old case that was pretty much solved already.

I guess I have something of an irrational dislike for this guy. He's always rubbed me the wrong way for some reason- I hope he doesn't become mayor.

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Not to be cynical, but would this be related to the candidacy for mayor for Dan Conley?

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exhuming the body, to get full evidence that it was him means... another press conference down the road!

well played!

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...worked for the last lawyer DeSalvo had (an associate of F. Lee Bailey). They were convinced he was as guilty as sin of the crimes (she got to see all of the files), no matter what he said. And they were his defense.

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If I'm not mistaken, this victims nephew has written a book about the murder and insists that DeSalvo was not the murderer of his aunt.

That may be why there is this intest.

If someone knows more, please correct me if I am wrong.

Any of us old timers remember those days? I was just a tot, but do remember the terror that griped the area between Lynn and Boston. It definately was something to remember.

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They exhumed DeSalvo in 2001 and took DNA samples. His brother Richard had also supplied DNA for comparison to a private firm, and subsequently offered to provide the results to the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth refused to look at them.

New technology doesn't mean the previous samples, which I assume weren't thrown away - are obsolete, it's not as if they're going to be fresh if they get more this time.

And with family members previously volunteering test results, why are they stalking random water bottles?

(I'm going to test this DNA till it matches, godamnit!)

And I was a little kid in those days - I remember every time the furnace in the cellar kicked on, I was sure it was the Strangler down there making noise.

The Boston Strangler was my first Boogey Man.

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would they spend time and the taxpayer's money conducting DNA testing to prove that a now-dead man who confessed to comitting a murder 40 years ago actually did it.

Talk about government waste.

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Its all deflection from the current scandals that they dont even acknowledge until the news media spot lights them. Then they try to minimize the scandals, and when that doesnt work, deflect the attention away. The deeply rooted rotted EBT card comes to mmind , but that just showcases the general levels of incompetence, and betrayals of trust out there.

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The thing I find most amazing about this story is that back then a 19-year old could afford her own apartment on Beacon Hill.

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In 1964, Boston was just coming out of an economic downturn that had lasted decades. Even Beacon Hill was not unaffected by that.

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