DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Severed leg found on remote California beach is traced back to missing banker

March 29, 2026
in News
Severed leg found on remote California beach is traced back to missing banker

A severed leg that washed ashore in 2022 has been identified and linked back to a man who went missing nearly three decades ago.

Authorities in Northern California have confirmed the remains discovered on a Sonoma County beach belong to Walter Karl Kinney, a former banker from Santa Rosa who vanished in the late 1999.

The identification marks a bizarre addition to a case that has seen the same man identified as a “John Doe” on two separate occasions, decades apart.

The saga began in August 1999 when Kinney, then 59 years old, disappeared without a trace. Later that same year, a single leg was discovered near Bodega Head, approximately five miles from where the most recent remains were found.

Aerial view of Salmon Creek Beach where it meets a river on the Sonoma County coastline.
The identification marks a bizarre addition to a case that began in 1999.
Collage of
Authorities have confirmed the remains discovered on a Sonoma County beach belong to Walter Karl Kinney. Instagram/@dna_doe_project_official

At the time, the only clue was a size 12 Rockport walking shoe containing a custom orthopedic insert.

Without a name to put to the remains, the case went cold until 2003, when a tip from Kinney’s daughter in Ohio led investigators to his medical records. X-rays of his feet matched the remains found in the shoe, and Kinney was officially declared deceased.

The mystery resurfaced in June 2022.

While walking along the picturesque Salmon Creek Beach, a family hunting for seashells stumbled upon a long bone protruding from the sand.

To their shock, the bone still had surgical hardware attached to it. Despite an intensive search of the shoreline, the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office was unable to find any other parts of the body or clues to the person’s identity.

Aerial view of Salmon Creek Beach, showing a sandy coastline, crashing waves, and a road along the cliffside.
The same man was identified as a “John Doe” on two separate occasions, decades apart.

For nearly four years, the “Salmon Creek John Doe” remained a statistical mystery. However, the investigation gained new momentum when local law enforcement partnered with the DNA Doe Project, a nonprofit organization specializing in forensic genetic genealogy.

In March 2026, the breakthrough finally arrived. By utilizing DNA profiles and tracing family trees back to San Diego, researchers identified a match. They were stunned to realize that the DNA from the 2022 leg bone was a perfect match for the man identified back in 2003.

“This case was unusual – it’s not often we see someone end up as a John Doe twice,” DNA Doe Project team leader Traci Onders said in a statement. “But thanks to investigative genetic genealogy, we were able to resolve this mystery and provide some answers to everyone involved in this case.”


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn California Post Sports Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X California Post Opinion California Post Newsletters: Sign up here! California Post App: Download here! Home delivery: Sign up here!Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


The post Severed leg found on remote California beach is traced back to missing banker appeared first on New York Post.

U.S. will let Russian oil tanker reach Cuba, breaking Trump’s effective fuel blockade
News

U.S. will let Russian oil tanker reach Cuba, breaking Trump’s effective fuel blockade

by Washington Post
March 30, 2026

With a Russian tanker loaded with crude oil nearing Cuba, President Donald Trump said late Sunday he would not enforce ...

Read more
News

‘Project Hail Mary’ Writer Drew Goddard Always Knew He Had to Have That Ending

March 30, 2026
News

Trump Says Iran Agreed to Allow 20 More Ships of Oil Through Strait of Hormuz

March 30, 2026
News

What is the ‘Midwest goodbye’ — and why does it take hours?

March 30, 2026
News

Oil Jumps to $116 a Barrel on Signs of Escalation of Middle East War

March 30, 2026
‘My favorite thing is to take the oil’: Trump goes off script on Iran war plans

‘My favorite thing is to take the oil’: Trump goes off script on Iran war plans

March 30, 2026
New Disney chief D’Amaro debuts on global stage at Disneyland Paris event

New Disney chief D’Amaro debuts on global stage at Disneyland Paris event

March 30, 2026
Road rage in Newport Beach bike lane leads to one arrest, seizure of BMW, police say

Road rage in Newport Beach bike lane leads to one arrest, seizure of BMW, police say

March 30, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026