On March 26, 1986, Michella Welch was abducted from a vast, thickly-forested park in Tacoma, Washington.
The 12-year-old girl had been playing in Point Defiance Park with her two young sisters at the time of her disappearance.
After an extensive search of the area, a police dog located her body in a ravine later that night.
She had been sexually assaulted and then killed with a knife.
Despite finding her remains within hours of her disappearance, and the gathering of crucial evidence at the crime scene, the case quickly turned cold.
Now, 32 years later, police have arrested a suspect. Gary Hartman, 66, will face court on Monday, charged with the rape and murder of the Tacoma preteen.
Hartman’s arrest has been three decades in the making.
As Sky News reports, in 2006 police scientists were able reconstruct a DNA imprint from the items collected at the crime scene.
Unfortunately, at the time, the reconstructed DNA could not be linked to any known criminal in the United States.
This year, with improvements in genetic genealogy, police were able to track down the killer.
Th technology, and its massive databases and archives, led police to two brothers who had lived in the area at the time of Michella’s murder.