Text Excerpt 21: Waco Holocaust Electronic Museum Bits, Pieces, and Human Identities [Note to readers: Many of the official autopsy reports of the Branch Davidians, autopsy photographs, and official diagrams showing the locations of body recoveries are available for viewing at the Waco Holocaust Electronic Museum website. Unfortunately, this documentation cannot be included in a text excerpt.] The last identification of the Branch Davidian remains was that of 5-year old Serenity Sea Jones on August 17, 1994. According to Judge James Collier, the Justice of the Peace for Precinct 2 of McLennan County, Texas, no more identifications have been made to date (June, 1996). Review of the Identification Matrix provided by the office of the Justice of the Peace, McLennan County, reveals that identification of the Branch Davidian remains was conducted by dental examination, by fingerprint examination, and by DNA studies. Autopsy Reports show Dr. Rodney Crow supervised the identifications made by dental records. According to Dr. Peerwani's sworn testimony, he and Dr. Crow visited the concrete room on April 21 when the hole in the roof was 18 to 24 inches in diameter. Yet, Dr. Crow was the person who went on the Maury Povich show and said that the hole in the roof was eight feet in diameter, and that three of the children had blunt force trauma caused by the falling concrete. Dr. Crow's promotion of the false story does not inspire confidence in the identifications he supervised. Courtroom testimony leads us to believe that the fingerprint exams were conducted by FBI agents under assignment to Dr. Peerwani's office. The DNA exams were conducted by the FBI laboratory in FBI headquarters in the Washington, DC area. Yet this is the same laboratory that concocted evidence of a urea nitrate bomb in the World Trade Center bombing in New York City (visitors to the Museum can see the Dr. Frederic Whitehurst testimony on this subject.) Who would place trust in identification work performed by the FBI lab? In reviewing the identification process we find a number of different situations: (1) Whole bodies were assigned identities, (2) Body fragments were assigned identities, (3) Some identities have never been assigned bodies or body parts, and, (4) Some bodies and body parts have not been assigned identities. We also find (5) obviously mistaken identities. Whole bodies were assigned identities. Examples: * Julliete Martinez, Mt. Carmel Doe 54. * Crystal Martinez, Mt. Carmel Doe 57. Body fragments were assigned identities. Examples: * Chanel Andrade, Mt. Carmel Doe 62. * Melissa Morrison, Mt. Carmel Doe 74. Some identities have never been assigned bodies or body parts. Examples: * No remains have been identified for one-year old Startle Summers. She was white. * No remains have been identified for Paulina Henry; she was a black 24 year old British citizen. * No remains have been identified for Lisa Marie Martin, aged 13. She was black. * No remains have been identified for Sheila Renee Martin, aged 15. She was black. Some bodies and body parts have not been assigned identities. Examples: * Doe 31 C, described by Dr. Peerwani in sworn testimony as "a human leg." An Autopsy Report is not on file with the Tarrant Count Justice of the Peace. The ID Matrix does not mention it. * Doe 31 DE has never been identified. The remains consisted of a fragmentary skull with complete mandible of a child 11 to 14 years old. * Doe 50 and 61-- "Martin Child" has never been identified. * Doe 51A, the skull of a two-year old, has never been identified. * Doe 53--See section below on mistaken identities. * Doe 57--See section below on mistaken identities. * Doe 59 is the disarticulated head and torso, and articulated pelvis and legs of a fourteen to nineteen year old Caucasian female; wearing a Armitron brand watch stopped on 4/20/93 at 6:00 o'clock. * Doe 60 -- Arm/arm and jaw of 2 to 4 year old child * Doe 65-- Toddler--fragmented skull, cervical vertebra, left hand and ileum (hip bone). * Doe 67-7 -- Toddler, 2.5 years old, pelvis, legs, feet, and a bone from a left arm. * Doe 67-8 -- Infant, 13 months old, fragmentary skull. * Doe 72-- Child aged 4-5 years, female Caucasian; fragmented skull is disarticulated from body. We also find obviously mistaken identifications. Examples: * Doe 31F is a lock of Negroid hair braided into a dreadlock with attached scalp; the Autopsy Report says "See evidence collected for 31A for elements which may be applicable to 31F." The Autopsy Report for 31A identifies the remains as Aisha Gyarfas Summers, who was white. This identification of 31A was confirmed by DNA studies on February 8, 1994 (see ID Matrix, pg. 2). * Isaiah Martinez was a four year old (see Clive Doyle's Complete List of Mt. Carmel Deaths). On April 14, 1994, Doe 53 was identified as Isaiah Martinez by DNA testing (see ID Matrix, pg. 3). But the Autopsy Report for Doe 53 states Doe 53 was a girl of five and a half to six and a half years, not a boy of four. (Visitors to the Museum website can see the handwritten notation on the ID Matrix, "Unknown," written after the ID Matrix was typed. The remains were apparently buried as "unknown Martinez child" (see Inquest Report for Mt. Carmel Doe 53). * Crystal Martinez was three years old (see Clive Doyle's Complete List of Mt. Carmel Deaths). On April 14, 1994 Doe 57 was identified as Crystal Martinez by DNA testing (see ID Matrix, pg. 3). But the Autopsy Report for Doe 57 indicates Doe 57 was six years old. The autopsy photo also suggests the child was about six years old. Note the handwritten notation on ID Matrix, "Unknown," made after the ID Matrix was finalized. The remains were apparently buried as "Crystal Martinez" (see Inquest Report for Mt. Carmel Doe 57). * Doe 61 was identified by (FBI) fingerprint comparison on May 6, 1993 as Rosemary Morrison. Then, on May 26, 1994, Doe 61 was re-identified by (FBI) DNA analysis as "Martin Child." * Doe 75 was identified (FBI) DNA testing on April 14, 1994 as Rosemary Morrison. The Autopsy Report for Doe 75 states: "External genitalia are those of an adult female with Caucasoid hair." But Rosemary Morrison was black . . . As we have already seen, the FBI's flagrant mishandling of the evidence began long before the evidence arrived at the FBI labs. By standard procedure in such cases, the forensic anthropologists should have been on hand during recovery of the remains, applying standard recovery practices. (These practices are described in "How Pros Recover Bodies and Solve Murder Mysteries," to be found at the Museum website.) But disrelated body parts were apparently picked up and casually transported to the morgue. Several Autopsy Reports contain references to an "extra parts" bag. The Autopsy Report for Rosemary Morrison is poignant in this regard: "The body bag also contains unrelated body parts including an extra radius and ulna and incomplete radius and ulna which will be assigned to other bodies by the Senior Anthropologist. In addition, long brown detached scalp hair are also present." Visitors to the Museum's website saw in "How the Pros Identify Corpses" that facial reconstruction was done in an attempt to identify the victims of serial murderer John Wayne Gacy. Why were Gacy's murder victims treated so differently from the Branch Davidians? For example, there is no indication that facial reconstruction was attempted on the skull of two-year-old Mt. Carmel Doe 51 A. Had a reconstruction been attempted, perhaps sketches could have been circulated to the families of the Branch Davidians for identification. Why were the remains of this youngster not worth the effort? In attempting to identify John Wayne Gacy's victims, anthropologist Clyde Snow drew up charts listing 35 characteristics of the skull. Then he compared every characteristic of each skeleton to the photographs, descriptions, x-rays, and family accounts of old injuries their children had suffered. There is no indication that similar efforts at identification were made in Waco. Again, what made these victims different? Nor is it easy to understand how many unassigned body parts remain unmatched with bodies. Visitors to the Museum's website have read in "How the Pros Manage Disaster Scenes" that anthropologists can estimate how tall someone was by measuring bones and then consulting regression equations. These regression tables have been developed over decades of research. Bone suites should not have been hard to create from these remains of the Branch Davidians. While unmatched body parts are troubling, the presence of an almost complete body of a teenage girl (unidentified, Mt. Carmel Doe 59) is truly unsettling. The remains were that of a white person, with a head. Cheekbone structure provides a definitive clue to racial background (Ubelaker, pg. 91). The two teenagers for whom no remains were found, Sheila Renee Martin and Lisa Marie Martin, were black and thus are no match for these remains. Who was this person, and how did her remains come to rest in the concrete room? What happened to the 3-year old Crystal Martinez and the four-year old Isaiah Martinez that Clive Doyle knew when they were all living at the Mt. Carmel Center? And what of the remains called Does 53 and 57? If the remains were not those of Crystal and Isaiah, who were these children? The renowned forensic anthropologists from the Smithsonian Institution, Drs. Ubelaker and Owsley, who were helping Dr. Peerwani in his efforts, are certainly familiar with state-of-the-art techniques for identification. Like Clyde Snow, they are authorities in the field. Going to extraordinary lengths to identify the dead is routine practice among forensic anthropologists. Yet comparatively little was done to identify the victims of the Waco Holocaust. Next: Excerpt 22, Who Were Those People, Anyhow? --------------------------------------------------- Entire set of text excerpts from the Museum available with anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.public-action.com/wm2-0txt.zip Excerpted by Carol Valentine. Images omitted. Visit the Museum at http://www.Public-Action.com/SkyWriter/WacoMuseum. SkyWriter@Public-Action.com Copyright 1996-2000 by Carol A. Valentine, on loan to Public Action, Inc. All commercial rights are reserved. Full statement of terms and conditions for copying and redistribution is available in the Museum Library. "Waco Holocaust Electronic Museum," "SkyWriter," and the skywriting logo are trademarks of Public Action Inc.