Across the country, the unidentified bodies of sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers, are buried in unmarked graves or sit locked away in medical examiner’s offices. There are more than 40,000 of them—enough to fill all the seats in Wrigley Stadium or overflow Fenway Park.
Log in to the National Missing And Unidentified Persons System (NamUs, for short), a nationwide database, and you can read through the terse summaries, sometimes accompanied by images of what the unidentified persons may have looked like. The facts are chilling:
Other entries describe children’s decomposing bodies being discovered in fields and murder victims dumped along the side of the road. Robbed of their lives, they suffer the double indignity of being stripped of their identities in death.
One researcher dubbed the tens of thousands of unidentified bodies across this country as “the nation’s silent mass disaster.” Many in law enforcement don’t even know about the problem, a problem exacerbated because states handle missing persons cases differently. Of the 40,000 unidentified bodies across the country, fewer than 25% have even been entered in NamUs, according to news reports. NamUs allows individuals across the country to access the cases—both law enforcement and civilians who may be searching for a loved one.
Thomas McAndrew, a veteran investigator who has a passion for solving cases involving unidentified bodies, says law enforcement officers have a critical role in combatting this national issue. He urges police officers across the country to get involved. “The fact that for decades police did not do thorough missing person investigations is exactly why we have as many as 40,000 unidentified decedents in this country,” says McAndrew, a detective with the Homicide Task Force of Lehigh County District Attorney’s Office in Pennsylvania and retired from the Pennsylvania State Police Criminal Investigation Assessment Unit.
The inconsistent way coroners and law enforcement agencies across the country deal with unidentified bodies is a key part of the problem. McAndrew supports standardizing the approach, mandating coroners to keep DNA samples and dental records and to add details of any unidentified body’s discovery to NamUs.
McAndrew outlines the five steps all law enforcement officers should follow when responding to a missing persons report. Taking these simple actions will help you and other investigators down the road and help bring closure to families.
Law enforcement, families of the missing and interested community members who want to help all have access to the NamUs database, with different permissions. The more information you enter, the more likely unidentified missing persons cases will be solved.
Taking these few steps could mean the difference between a family getting closure or living haunted for decades, never knowing what happened to their loved one. Imagine someone you loved was lying unrecognized in an unmarked grave. You would want to bring them home and put them to rest. With a few simple steps, you can increase the odds that will happen for victims and those who mourn them.[strategem_author][vc_custom_heading text=”Law Enforcement Response to People in Crisis
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