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  • 25 Apr 2025 1:34 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written by the folks at  Findmypast:

    • Over half a million new baptism, marriage, and records now available to search online

    • Exclusive to Findmypast, this huge new addition will give users a fresh opportunity to uncover their East Anglian ancestors

    • Records indexed in partnership with the Suffolk Family History Society, part of Findmypast's exclusive partnership with the Family History Federation

    • Plus, brand new Suffolk newspaper title, the East Suffolk Gazette comes online 

    Family historians with roots in Suffolk can look forward to delving deeper into their past with over 554,000 new parish records launched on Findmypast this week, alongside thousands of new newspaper pages from the county.

    This bumper set of new records are exclusive to Findmypast and offer users a fresh opportunity to uncover their East Anglian ancestors. Whether you're just starting your family tree or trying to knock down a stubborn brick wall, these additions open up exciting possibilities for discovering Suffolk roots.

    The new collections include:

    Suffolk Baptisms (1722–1855) – 364,307 records

    Added to the Suffolk Baptism Index, created by Suffolk Family History Society, which includes 351 parishes and 747,204 records across the East Anglian county. Records can be searched by name, baptism date, parish, place, father’s name, mother’s name, relationship, father’s occupation, notes county and country, source, and entry number.

    Suffolk Marriages (1753–1816) – 190,030 records

    Added to the Suffolk Marriage Index, Suffolk Family History Society, which includes 576 parishes with records that date back to 1536 and stretch through to the twentieth century. Records can be searched by name, marital status, parish, marriage date and place, spouse’s name, spouse’s marital status and spouse’s parish.

    Suffolk Graves and Memorial Inscriptions – 20,837 records

    This new collection includes over 20,000 new records relating to burials in the county, searchable by name, birth date, death date, location and cemetery. 

    New Suffolk newspaper pages

    With a special Suffolk focus this week, Findmypast has published one brand new title from the county and updated several of our existing Suffolk titles. The East Suffolk Gazette has been published online for the first time, with an initial run of 1,256 pages covering the years 1870, 1896 and 1897. The East Suffolk Gazette was established in the Suffolk market town of Beccles, in the east of the county, as its name belies. The paper was launched in 1857, and it was owned by Messrs William Clowes & Sons. 

    Updates include over 4,000 brand new pages from the late 1800s added to the Suffolk Mercury and new years added to the East Anglian Daily Times, Haverhill Echo, and the Newmarket Journal.

    Mary McKee, UK Archives Manager at Findmypast, said:

    We’re delighted to bring these records online with the help of the Suffolk Family History Society. These kinds of parish records are absolute gold dust for anyone tracing their family back before civil registration began. They offer new leads, fresh insights, and the chance to delve deeper into your ancestors’ lives.”

    Transcribed by local experts, these records bring centuries of Suffolk history right to users' fingertips, revealing names, dates, and places that can transform research.

    They’re available now to search and explore at www.findmypast.co.uk

  • 25 Apr 2025 1:30 PM | Anonymous

    I opened my email this morning and received quite a shock: There was an obituary for me: Dick Eastman.

    No, this isn’t an obituary for me. It is obviously for some other fellow named Richard (or Dick) Eastman. Otherwise, how could I be writing this?

    Richard 'Dick' Eastman Obituary

    Published by Legacy Remembers on Apr. 24, 2025.

    An avid outdoorsman, 'Dick' climbed many mountains in the Pacific northwest. A scratch golfer, he once shot a 65 at the age of 67. One of his better memories was his trip to St Andrews in Scotland. Dick also loved to salmon fish with the 'boys'. He loved a lot of things, but most of all his only wife Nancy Arlene. Along with his kids Gary, Mark, Stephani and Stacie. He also had 10 grandkids, 12 great grandkids and one great great granddaughter. Dick retired after 34 years at the Bureau of Public Roads (USDOT) as a computer programmer and surveyor.


  • 25 Apr 2025 1:22 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written by the folks at the (U.S.) National Genealogical Society:

    25 April 2025—The National Genealogical Society (NGS) is delighted to announce the appointment of genealogy educator, researcher, writer, and editor Sunny Jane Morton as the new editor of NGS Magazine. Her first issue will be the October-December 2025 issue. Morton takes over the reins from long-time editor Deb Cyprych, who is retiring after nine years of exceptional leadership.

    Morton is currently the content director at Your DNA Guide and a contributing editor at Family Tree Magazine. She is a past editor of the Ohio Genealogy News, where she also succeeded Cyprych. With Harold Henderson, CG, she coauthored How to Find Your Family History in U.S. Church Records, which received a book award from NGS. Her book Story of My Life: A Workbook for Preserving Your Legacy is now in its second edition. Her forthcoming book, a guide for researching Catholic nuns and sisters in the United States, received research travel support from the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame. Her article "Delayed Birth Records in the United States" with Jeanette Sheliga appeared in NGS Magazine, Vol. 50, Number 1 (January-March 2024). She was also a contributor to theFamilySearch Blog from 2018-2023.

    In addition to her extensive writing and editing, Morton is an instructor at NGS's GRIP Genealogy Institute 2025 (Practical Family History Writing) and the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy Spring Virtual 2025 (Researching Women from 1850-1960).

    Morton is a longstanding member of NGS and the Ohio Genealogical Society and an associate member of Archivists for Congregations of Women Religious. She has a double B.A. from Brigham Young University in History and Humanities. Morton is a frequent speaker and lecturer at national, state, regional, and local genealogy events.

    Expressing her enthusiasm about her new position, Morton said, "My role is to reach out into the community and bring expert voices and unknown resources into reach for readers. I look forward to building on Deb Cyprych's legacy, supporting authors and finding exciting and timely topics forNGS Magazine, while contributing to the growth of our family history community."

    Executive Director Matt Menashes, CAE, shared his excitement about Morton's appointment, stating, "We are so glad to have Sunny as the next editor of NGS Magazine. Her experience will serve readers well. Working with feature authors and regular columnists, Sunny will continue our tradition of exceptional writing on methodology, technology, DNA, reference resources, genealogical societies' needs, and more."

    ###

    Founded in 1903, the National Genealogical Society inspires, connects, and leads the family history community by fostering collaboration and best practices in advocacy, education, preservation, and research. We enable people, cultures, and organizations to discover the past and create a lasting legacy. The Virginia-based nonpro?t is the premier national society for everyone, from beginners to the most advanced family historians. NGS Magazine has a circulation of approximately 8,000 individuals and over 500 organizations, including libraries nationwide.

  • 24 Apr 2025 2:28 PM | Anonymous

    Anzac Day is a time to reflect and remember — and this year, MyHeritage is helping families do just that by offering free access to all Australian and New Zealand records from April 24–29, 2025.

    Access the free records here

    Anzac Day

    With over 2.3 billion records, including WWI soldier portraits, obituaries, and newspaper archives, your readers can explore the lives of ancestors who served and the communities they came from. It’s a meaningful way to honor their families’ Anzac legacies.

    The collections are completely free to search and view during this time. All that’s needed is a free MyHeritage account.

  • 24 Apr 2025 2:21 PM | Anonymous

    New Hampshire PBS has partnered with the New Hampshire Society of Genealogists (NHSOG) to bring you a weekly five-session virtual “Intro to Genealogy” Course. The first session begins on Wednesday, April 23.

    In this 90 minute weekly workshop you'll learn:

    How to find vital records, including immigration & citizenship
    Researching the U.S. Census
    Tracing your family tree back to 1850—and beyond!
    FIVE Live Sessions (all from 6:30 PM-8 PM):

    April 23 (First Session!)
    April 30
    May 7
    May 14
    May 21
    Donate $110 and get:
    ✔️ Access to all five live & recorded sessions
    ✔️ An NHSOG membership, including their digital journal (3x/year)
    ✔️ An NHPBS membership + PBS Passport (if you're not already a member)

    Start your journey into the past—sign up today!

    Questions? Email us at events@nhbps.org

    Virtual (Zoom)

    $110

    06:30 PM - 08:00 PM, every day through May 21, 2025.

    Get Tickets

    Event Supported By

    New Hampshire PBS

    603-868-4430

    auction@nhpbs.org

    https://nhpbs.org

  • 24 Apr 2025 10:12 AM | Anonymous

    If you have Irish ancestry that you want to find out more about, there are lots of free Irish genealogy websites where you can discover all about your family history. 

    Accredited Genealogists Ireland (AGI) has published a list of ten useful websites where you can deep dive into your family history for free.

    Collating census records, parish registers, and more, these websites provide insightful information into Ireland’s historic population.

    Find out more about your family history – trace your Irish roots

    Explore census records and more through useful online resources.
    Credit: Flickr / Shelly

    There are lots of free Irish genealogy websites that let you discover your family history. Compiling information from key online resources from various institutions and digital archives, they provide a comprehensive view of Ireland’s past.

    Including useful information from census records, parish registers, land records, and military archives, the guides provide an overview of reputable sources that provide insights into researchers’ family history.

    Speaking to Irish Central, AGI’s President Michael Walsh said, “Many people are unaware of the wealth of Irish genealogical information freely available online, while others think that all Ireland’s records were destroyed in the Civil War.

    “This guide brings together valuable free resources in one place. Therefore, making it easier for anyone to begin their Irish family history journey, regardless of their experience level.”

    The best free Irish genealogy websites – discover your family website 

    So, if you’re curious to find out more about your family history, check out these free Irish genealogy websites that let you discover your Irish roots.

    1. National Archives: Census records 1901, 1911, survivals 1821-1851.
    2. National Library of Ireland: Catholic Parish Registers, property records, newspapers, directories, and heraldic records.
    3. Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI): The official archive for Northern Ireland
    4. Virtual Record Treasury: A reconstruction of the Public Record Office of Ireland, with archives destroyed in 1922.
    5. IrishGenealogy.ie: Includes records on births from 1864 to 1924, marriages from 1864 to 1949, non-Roman Catholic marriages from 1845, and deaths from 1871 to 1974.
    6. Logainm.ie: Information on place names, useful if you know where your ancestors lived.
    7. Griffith’s Valuation: Land records from 1848 and 1864. Includes detailed information on where people lived in mid-19th century Ireland.
    8. FamilySearch.org: Free family records from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
    9. Irish Genealogy Projects: A volunteer-run website with genealogy resources by county.
    10. Military History: Records pertaining to Ireland’s military history.
  • 24 Apr 2025 10:06 AM | Anonymous

    In 1993, Sophie Sergie was sexually assaulted and murdered, her body found in a second-floor bathroom in Bartlett Hall at the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus.

    Thirty-two years later, the man found guilty of the crime is appealing his conviction.

    Steven Downs, 50, is currently serving a 75-year prison sentence for Sergie’s murder, handed down in September 2022, following a guilty verdict the previous February.

    For 25 years, the crime remained unsolved, until in 2018, when DNA evidence found at the scene of the crime was linked with DNA submitted by a family member of Downs to a genealogy website.

    Downs had attended UAF between 1992 and 1996, and lived one floor above where the body was found at the time of the murder.

    He attended telephonically at the Anchorage appeal on Monday, April 21, at 11 a.m.

    Downs’ lawyer is Assistant Public Defender Emily Jura, and Diane Wendlandt is representing the State of Alaska.

    Jura argued that the method investigators used in searching a genealogy database for a connection to the DNA found at the scene — a technique which was used in Downs’ conviction — should have constitutional oversight.

    She said the genetic connection established between Downs and his family member — including the specific locations of certain genetic markers — was private information, because Downs had not volunteered his DNA for the genealogy database.

    “As our Supreme Court said in Glass, ‘The right to privacy includes the right for people to determine for themselves when, how, and to what extent information about themselves is communicated to others,’ and that includes, certainly, sensitive information, such as whether a person’s been adopted, or is predisposed to certain diseases,” Jura added. 

    Law enforcement’s use of this technology, she argued, is at odds with “Alaska’s expectation of a free society.”

    “This is a singular investigative technique that is novel, and that we are all trying to gain purchase on, and in particular, ultimately, this court has to balance the utility of the investigative technique with the threat to our security and privacy,” Jura said. 

    Wendlandt began her argument by briefly tracing the course of the investigation and trial of Downs, including a roommate’s testimony that at the time of the murder, Downs had a gun with a make and model consistent with the bullet found in the victim.

    She argued that “there was nothing unconstitutional about the state’s use of genetic genealogy” in its investigation. 

    According to Wendlandt, the process used did not violate Downs’ privacy because the DNA submitted to the genealogy website was obtained from inside the victim at a crime scene, where “there is no reasonable expectation of privacy.” 

    Jura further discussed a 2009 call to Alaska State Troopers in which Karen Moto reported that her brother Kenneth had, in the fall of 1993, confessed to raping and murdering Sergie. 

    “Her report was not led or forced. It was never recanted. It was recorded and transcribed, and it was made to the law enforcement officers who were investigating this case, and who would have been expected to follow up on this report.” 

    Kenneth denied involvement in Sergie’s murder, and Karen had died by the time of the 2018 trial. 

    The trial court’s decision that this evidence did not meet the requirement of trustworthiness, Jura said, “was error, and it rose to the level of violating Mr. Downs’ right to due process as it excluded critical evidence based on credibility concerns that should have been left to the jury to resolve.” 

    Wendlandt called the trial court’s exclusion of Kenneth Moto’s reported confession proper, saying Moto had previously submitted to DNA testing before being excluded. 

    “Alaska, like every other jurisdiction, excludes hearsay unless it fits within a recognized exception, or it has sufficient circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness. These statements, Karen’s statements, did not fit within a recognized exception. Therefore, the question here was whether or not there was sufficient circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness that would allow the introduction of this evidence,” Wendlandt said. 

    Pointing out the 16 years that had elapsed between the murder and Karen’s report, and previous false statements she had made to law enforcement in the past, Wendlandt further argued that Karen had a motive to falsely accuse her brother. 

    It is unclear when the court will rule on the appeal.

  • 24 Apr 2025 9:59 AM | Anonymous

    618989.jpg

    Credit: Placer County Sheriff’s Office's Facebook

    The Placer County Sheriff’s Office (California) has officially identified the remains of a woman found on March 20, 2001 as Zania Lynette Williams, also known as Zenia Williams. Williams, 34 years old at the time of her disappearance, was last seen around Christmas of 2000 at her residence in Sacramento. Her skeletonized remains were discovered on Driver’s Flat Road in Foresthill, California, and had remained unidentified for over two decades.

    Initially, the case was handled by the Placer County Sheriff’s Office and classified as a Jane Doe cold case. Investigators were unable to identify the woman using the available technology at the time. Her dental records were entered into the missing and unidentified persons database in 2001, but no matches were found. Despite extensive efforts, the case remained unsolved until the formation of the Placer County Sheriff’s Office Cold Case Investigations team in 2023.

    This newly formed Cold Case Investigations team, comprising investigators from both the Placer County Sheriff’s Office and the Placer County District Attorney's Office, reopened the case. The team utilized advancements in forensic technologies, including genetic genealogy, to assist in the investigation. In 2024, the Sheriff’s Office sent a DNA profile obtained from the remains in 2009 to Othram, an accredited forensic lab in Texas to generate a suitable sample for genetic genealogy.

    Additionally, the Placer County Sheriff’s Office partnered with the Investigative Genealogy Center at Ramapo College to develop leads on potential relatives. Through this collaboration, detectives located a possible relative and obtained a DNA sample for comparison with the California Department of Justice’s database. In 2025, a match was confirmed, linking the decedent’s DNA to that of the relative.

    In March 2025, the remains were officially identified as Zania Williams. Williams had never been listed as a missing person. While the circumstances surrounding her death are still under investigation, we hope the identification brings a sense of closure to her surviving family members after nearly 25 years of uncertainty.

    The Placer County Sheriff’s Office is continuing its investigation into the circumstances of her death and is urging anyone with information to contact us at PCSOTipLine@placer.ca.gov.

  • 23 Apr 2025 9:23 AM | Anonymous

    The Alaska Court of Appeals heard oral arguments Monday in the case of a 50-year-old Maine man convicted of the 1993 rape and murder of a University of Alaska Fairbanks student.

    Steven Harris Downs was convicted in 2022 of the rape and murder of 20-year-old Sophie Sergie and sentenced to 75 years in prison. Investigators cracked the cold case in 2019 after a relative submitted her DNA to a genealogy website that matched DNA from the crime scene.

    Downs’ attorney, Assistant Public Defender Emily Jura, argued Monday that the Alaska Court of Appeals should reverse Downs’ conviction. Assistant Attorney General Diane Wendlandt represented the state.

    Chief Judge Marjorie Allard and Judges Tracey Wollenberg and Timothy Terrell heard the oral arguments at the Boney Courthouse in Anchorage. Each side had 30 minutes to present its case.

    DNA search

    DNA taken from Sergie’s body shared 23% of its profile with a match found in a genealogical database. An employee at the private genealogy company used public records to map out the individual’s family tree and identified Downs as a potential or likely match to the family member who had submitted her DNA.

    Jura argued that the search of the genealogical database, GEDmatch, without a warrant violated Downs’ and his relatives’ right to privacy and should be subject to constitutional oversight.

    “The investigative technique used here is both a method of surveillance and a search of private information,” Jura said.

    She emphasized that Downs and his family member have a significant privacy interest in their shared DNA, and that “the information that DNA can share is information that our society recognizes as private.”

    Jura contended that searching a consumer DNA database enabled surveillance and was inconsistent with a reasonable expectation of privacy.

    Wendlandt focused her argument on the legality of the DNA search, describing forensic DNA as “the gold standard of forensic evidence.”

    She argued that a private company developed a detailed DNA profile from the crime scene, found a familial match, and that a genealogist then used public records to build a family tree that placed Downs at UAF during the time of the murder.

    “The express purpose of that website is to allow people to upload DNA profiles and compare it with anyone else who uploads their DNA profile, thereby finding family matches, which is what the police did here,” she said. “There is no reasonable expectation of privacy of DNA that is left at a crime scene.”

    Wendlandt also argued that Downs, as a third party, could not assert his family member’s privacy rights, especially when the DNA was voluntarily submitted. She said law enforcement complied with GEDmatch’s requirements and terms of service.

    “Privacy law, yes, I agree with counsel, needs to keep up with changing technology,” Wendlandt said, “but if you’re in a situation where you have a voluntary disclosure for the specific purpose of finding family matches, then what you have here is not an unreasonable search and seizure.”

    Alternate confession

    Downs’ defense attorney also argued that the trial court should have allowed the jury to hear recorded statements from Karen Moto, who told law enforcement in 2009 that her brother, Kenneth Moto, had confessed to killing Sophie Sergie. Kenneth Moto testified at trial that he did not commit the murder.

    “This ruling was error, and it rose to the level of violating Mr. Downs’ right to due process as it excluded critical evidence based on credibility concerns,” Jura told the judges.

    Jura said Karen Moto’s story never changed in the three interviews she gave to law enforcement, that her actions did not reflect fear of her brother, and that her statement could be corroborated by other witnesses. She also claimed other evidence tied Kenneth Moto to the crime, including what she described as “unique” information that he had a history of being a peeping tom in women’s bathrooms on campus.

    Wendlandt argued that Karen Moto’s recorded interview did not meet the legal standards for hearsay exceptions.

    “The bottom line is that Karen’s description of her brother’s alleged confession was not trustworthy,” Wendlandt said.

    She noted a 16-year delay between the alleged confession and Moto’s interview, past instances of Karen lying to police, and a potential motive to shield family members from harm by keeping her brother in jail.

    “The right to present a defense does not override the normal rules of evidence,” Wendlandt said.

    Handgun possession

    Law enforcement found a .22-caliber H&R revolver in Downs’ home in 2019. A Maine gun seller testified that he had sold a similar revolver to a man he believed was Downs in 2015.

    Jura argued the trial court erred in allowing evidence about the revolver. She said the state’s theory — either that Downs was more likely to have owned such a gun in 1993 because he owned one in 2019, or that it might have been the murder weapon — was speculative and prejudicial.

    “By allowing evidence and argument, including forensic evidence, to suggest a purpose that could not be established, this encouraged the jury to convict Mr. Downs based on speculation,” Jura said.

    Wendlandt downplayed the importance of the revolver evidence.

    “This case, as argued by the state, was a case about DNA. That’s what this case was about,” she said. “That was the core of the state’s case here, and it’s simply not possible that this gun evidence would have affected the jury’s verdict.”

    The Alaska Court of Appeals will issue a decision at a later date.

  • 23 Apr 2025 9:17 AM | Anonymous

    Authorities in Florida have arrested a suspect in the 34-year-old cold case murder of a single mother who was brutally stabbed and left to die on the side of the road.

    The St. Cloud Police Department announced the arrest of Gene Stuller, 72, who is now charged with the murder of 27-year-old Julia Wilbanks in 1991.

    Police Chief Douglas Goerke said at a news conference that advancements in DNA technology — in this case genetic genealogy — allowed police to match the DNA found on Wilbanks' body to Stuller.

    Wilbanks died after being "brutally stabbed approximately 17 times, including fatal wounds to her heart," Chief Goerke said.

    She had been dead on the side of the road for over 24 hours before a group of motorists noticed her body and then flagged down a passing police officer, Goerke said.

    The news of Stuller's arrest for this crime shocked a number of his neighbors in Apopka, a city located approximately 20 miles northwest of Orlando.

    "Nice fella… I don't know what happened," Gerald Lamm said in an interview with WESH.

    Lamm went on to call Stuller "outgoing" and "jolly" before adding: ""I like the guy, he's always been a good guy… I'm going to miss him."

    Chief Goerke said that the case had been reopened back in 2012, but it was not until earlier this year that police found a possible match to the DNA found on Wilbanks' body.

    Officers then conducted surveillance on Stuller and were able to obtain a straw he used, which provided them with enough DNA to make a match, Choef Goerke said,

    Stuller is now charged with second-degree murder and disturbing a body.

    He is set to make his first court appearance this week. It was not immediately clear if he has retained an attorney or entered a plea.

    "The St. Cloud Police Department is committed to seeking justice for Ms. Wilbanks and her family, as well as other unsolved cases," said Chief Goerke. "As science becomes more advanced, it gives us opportunity to solve cases that couldn't be solved in the past."

    Read the original article on People

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