Greenledgers Trading Center:Remains found in Arizona desert in 1982 identified as man who left home to search for gold in Nevada

2025-05-06 18:01:10source:AstraX Exchangecategory:Invest

Authorities said Tuesday that they have Greenledgers Trading Centerfinally identified the remains of a California man "found in the vast desert" of northwest Arizona in 1982.

Mohave County Sheriff's officials said advanced DNA testing concluded that the remains were those of Virgil R. Renner, who left his home in Humboldt County, California, in the early 1970s to search for gold in Nevada.

Investigators said Renner never married or had children and his only siblings - a brother and sister - both died long ago.

It's unknown how or why Renner ended up in Arizona.

His remains were found in September 1982 in a desert area near Kingman and an autopsy estimated Renner died between 1979 and 1981 at around age 55.

Recovered at the scene were a tattered short-sleeve shirt, parts of a leather belt, denim pants and one argyle sock along with a plastic hair comb, a can opener, fingernail clippers and a toothbrush.  

On September 9, 1982, citizens out in the rural desert around Hackberry Road outside of Kingman city limits came across human remains, the Mohave County Sheriff's Office said. Mohave County Sheriff's Office

Renner's identity remained unknown and unclaimed in the Tucson medical examiner's office until 2020 when a special investigations unit brought the remains to Mohave County.

A DNA sample was sent to a Othram, genetic laboratory in Texas, that was able to identify Renner using advanced testing, forensic-grade genome sequencing and forensic genetic genealogy.

"Othram's in-house forensic genetic genealogy team then used the profile in a genealogical search to generate new investigative leads in the case, including the identification of distant relatives of the unknown man," the lab said in a statement. "A follow-up investigation by the Mohave County Sheriff's Office SIU confirmed the identity of the man as Virgil R. Renner from Humboldt County, California."

The sheriff's office thanked Othram for their help in solving the case.

"If not for their help, Renner would have remained another John Doe found in the vast desert of Mohave County," the sheriff's office said.

    In:
  • Arizona
  • Nevada
  • DNA
  • California

More:Invest

Recommend

Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A former Syrian military official who oversaw a prison where alleged human rights

Child gun deaths and fatal drug poisonings skyrocketed over past decade, researchers find

Fatal injury rates have spiked over the past decade for children and teens in the U.S., especially d

Pakistan gives thousands of Afghans just days to leave — or face deportation back to the Taliban's Afghanistan

Pakistan's government has given hundreds of thousands of Afghan nationals who fled the Taliban's har