I will second that Kathy and Rick! We called him the East Area Rapist and he 
struck in my neighborhood! He is the reason that we installed a burglar alarm 
and why my husband put a baseball bat under our bed that is still there today 
41 years later! My youngest daughter was born 41 years ago today and that was 
the week he announced that he would kill his next victim! We slept with all of 
our children in our bedroom. I knew one victim personally and knew who three 
others were! I say any means they could use to capture this man bravo! He 
honestly took a lot of innocence with him including the carefree days of our 
children playing outside. Sorry for the off topic rant but anyone who commits 
crimes like these deserves to be caught by DNA or any other means. 

Susan Vargas Murphy

Sent from my iPhone

> On Apr 27, 2018, at 8:03 AM, Kathy Andrade Cardoza <kmacard...@me.com> wrote:
> 
> I agree, Rick. I don’t see this as any invasion of privacy. It identified and 
> helped to capture a very bad person who committed unspeakable crimes against 
> innocents. It’s just another tool in the arsenal of law enforcement.
>  
> Kathy
>  
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Visit the Azores GenWeb Project:
>                 http://www.worldgenweb.org/azrwgw/
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>  
> From: <azores@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Richard Francis Pimentel 
> <rfrancispimen...@comcast.net>
> Reply-To: <azores@googlegroups.com>
> Date: Friday, April 27, 2018 at 7:43 AM
> To: <Azores@googlegroups.com>
> Subject: [AZORES-Genealogy] Golden State Killer Caught with DNA
>  
> I read this article this morning and found it most interesting on the capture 
> of the Golden State Killer. This was a Cold Case file that was solved with 
> DNA.
>  
> The article raises many concerns about privacy and how law enforcement used 
> GED Match to solve this case.  For years law enforcement has used finger 
> prints to identify persons and we have accepted this as no invasion of our 
> privacy. If you consider that DNA is just another finger print then I have no 
> problem with it being used by law enforcement.
>  
> I am happy they caught this person and he will be brought to justice.
>  
> The article also tells how DNA was used to identify a Jane Doe that was 
> murdered in 1981.
>  
> You can read the article here. 
> http://thednageek.com/genealogy-and-the-golden-state-killer/
>  
>  
>  
> Rick
> Richard Francis Pimentel
> Epping, NH
>  
> Researching, Riberia Grande, Riberinha, Achada Grande,  Bretanha, and Ponta 
> Delgada,  Sao Miguel, Acores
>  
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