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  • 11 May 2025 9:57 AM | Anonymous

    Do you have a stack of old family photo albums in the attic? A cookbook by your grandmother, scrawled with her handwritten notes? Your parents’ love letters to each other that you treasure?

    If so, consider yourself in possession of your family’s unique archives — and there are multiple tools and resources out there to help you preserve these important documents and memories.

    “Cultural heritage is incredibly important to our society,” said Elise Hochhalter, a book conservator at the San Francisco Public Library. “Preserving physical collections and digital collections is part of how we tell our stories as a culture.”

    SFPL recently held a workshop on safeguarding your family’s archives to mark Preservation Week: a national initiative from the American Library Association that’s chaired this year by Bay Area librarian Mychal Threets. San Francisco resident Jim Fong attended the SFPL workshop, hoping to one day make a documentary about his late mother — and stressed the importance of not waiting to start preserving your family’s history.

    For a project like his, “if you don’t have the source material from the early days, there’s nothing that you can count on,” Fong said. “So if anybody wants to make a documentary on their own life, or their family life, you have to start now.”

    The longer you wait to gather and preserve these kinds of documents, “you’re just missing out on all the family memories that you like,” Fong said.

    Wondering whether it’s “worth” taking action to preserve your own family’s archives? SFPL’s Hochhalter has a message for you: Something “may seem inconsequential or not substantial enough, but it actually is.”

    “Community archiving is a really important thing,” she said. “Things that happen outside of the institution — and in your family — do have value.” And when it comes to your own family, “you never know what will have value in 50 years, or what will help be evidence to fill in pieces of a puzzle later on,” Hochhalter said.

    KQED spoke to experts on how to best preserve documents, digitize records and how best to connect with organizations who may be interested in your archives.

    How can I safely store these physical materials?

    The American Library Association’s own guide to preservation emphasizes that people shouldn’t let “the pursuit of perfection be an obstacle to getting started.”

    “Step one is just getting an overview of everything that you have: Collecting all of your materials, collecting the shoe boxes, the various closets’ worth of things,” said Emilie van der Hoorn, the head of the SFPL’s conservation unit.

    Your next step will be assessing how and where each kind of material you’ve collected — paper, photos, books, etc. — should be stored, to preserve its life (more on this below). Make sure your hands are clean or wear gloves when handling your items generally.

    SFPL recommends you create an inventory of your collection and regularly update it as you add more items. But stay realistic and don’t get overwhelmed, van der Hoorn said. “Don’t anticipate that you’re going to have everything digitized, cataloged, housed, and looking like the Library of Congress in a week.”

    This is long-term work, she stressed, and “takes years to work on” — so “set yourself very small, manageable goals.”

    Make digital copies of old photos when possible. This will reduce how much your originals get handled, lowering the potential for damage. (Getty Images)

    Where should materials live in my home?

    Store paper items like letters and folders in a clean part of your home, somewhere free from extreme temperatures, humidity or dust. This is why the ALA suggests archives should not be stored in basements or attics, even though you might assume collections like these might naturally be housed in such locations.

    Be wary of areas with wild temperature swings, cautioned SFPL book conservator Savannah Adams. “You don’t want [the storage environment] to be getting really hot and really cold,” she said. “That could be worse than just it being in a consistently hot environment.”

    Prevent mold by storing materials in a place with humidity levels below 60% (you can purchase a low-cost humidity sensor to monitor this) and where items aren’t touching the ground. Jump to: What to do if materials get wet.

    Be sure to check on your materials once in a while to make sure everything is still in good condition.

    How can I store papers?

    Keep loose paper items in folders, SFPL said — and label everything with what’s inside.

    Folders can then be stored in office file folders, plastic tubs or bank boxes. You can upgrade and get professional archival equipment from suppliers like Gaylord ArchivalArchival ProductsUniversity Products and Hollinger Metal Edge.

    SFPL also suggests you avoid using Post-it notes, paper clips, staples, rubber bands or tape, which could damage your materials.

    What about photos?

    If you write on the back of photos and documents, be sure to include the full names of people involved, places and dates. Use a pencil, since pens can bleed and fade.

    Photos can be extra sensitive in storage, so make sure any folders you’re using have passed the Photographic Activity Test — that is, that they’re made of material less likely to damage negatives and delicate photos. (Yes, some photo albums do pass.)

    How can I store books?

    Not every book you preserve needs to be a first edition, and can be anything that has sentimental value to you personally.

    “It could be your favorite cookbook,” Adams said. “It could be a stack of paper that your grandmother wrote on, and you want to preserve that just for handwriting’s sake.”

    Books specifically should be stored in an upright position or flat on the side — but never slumped or leaning to one side, Adams said. “Books are largely made up of organic material, so they will eventually start to deform based off what position they’re stored in for long periods of time,” she said. You can prevent this by using bookends.

    Be careful also how you take books off a shelf, Adams said. Pull from the middle of the spine, rather than from the top of the book: that upper part of the spine can be particularly vulnerable, especially if it’s a leather-bound book.

    Dusting and tidying your books and shelves will also help prevent damage as well, Adams said. “The accumulation of dust that sits on the surface can actually become abrasive, depending on how long it’s there or what it’s sitting on,” she said — and dust can also be a food source for pests.

    Prevent mold by storing materials in a place with humidity levels below 60% and where items aren’t touching the ground. (Frank Rothe/Getty Images)

    What to do with water damage

    If your materials get wet, move them quickly: Mold settles after 48 hours in wet and humid conditions. Fan out the pages of wet books and stand them on their edge to dry out.

    If there is mold on your items, wear PPE like masks and goggles while you contain and quarantine the materials. At this point, you may need to contact a professional conservator to figure out options for restoration.

    The American Institute of Conservation also has several guides on storing other physical materials,including ceramic and glass objectsmetal items like jewelrytextiles and clothing and furniture.

    “There’s some importance to keeping tangible objects and sentimental materials in good condition,” Adams said. And a lot of that really just has to do with preventative care.”

    How can you digitize your personal archives?

    After you’ve safely organized and stored your materials, making digital copies of these items where possible will reduce how much your originals get handled, lowering the potential for damage. It’ll also allow you to more easily share your collection with other family members and people online.

    You can digitize items like:

    • Documents, like letters
    • Photographs
    • VHS videotapes
    • Floppy disks
    • Super 8 film
    • Slides
    • Photo negatives
    • Audiocassettes
    • CDs.

    Digitizing materials can be a time-consuming process, so remember: you don’t have to do it for every single item you’re archiving.

    As for where to store these materials digitally, cloud-based options include Google Cloud Storage, Apple’s iCloudMegapCloudSynologyNextCloud and Plex. Consider following the “3-2-1 Rule,” which sees you make three copies of each item: for example, one copy stored in the cloud, another on a hard drive and the third saved as a backup in a different geographical location, for safety.

    Wherever you store items digitally, be sure to come up with an easy-to-follow and descriptive file-naming practice, so you can find documents after some time.

    The Library of Congress has a thorough guide detailing the at-home digitizing process, including how best to scan your items and the recommended digital formats in which you should save materials.

    You can also seek help digitizing your materials from organizations like:

    Your local library may also have a “memory lab” to help you archive materials.

    Remember, digital archives aren’t always confined to scans of analogue items. Consider also archiving sentimental materials that were born digitally. Files can be saved as PDFs, and data as a .CSV document. Use a website crawler like the Wayback Machine and Preservica to save websites and social media posts, which you can also export as a WARC file. Want to archive meaningful emails? You can store these messages through MailStore or export them from your account as a .mbox file.

    Don’t forget about archiving digital photos either, SFPL’s van der Hoorn said: “It’s easy to overlook what you have on your phone, in your old drives.”

    More resources for starting a family archive

    Think: Could your family archives be valuable more widely?

    Maybe a family member lived through a notable period of history. Or perhaps you are part of an underrepresented community that you want to help build its own historical collections.

    If this is the case, you could consider donating your items to a library, local historical society, museum or archive. You can also donate physical materials to online platforms like the San Francisco-based Internet Archive.

    The decline in many areas of archiving online might also spur you to share your family’s collection in pursuit of a bigger cause. According to the Pew Research Center, “a quarter of all webpages that existed at one point between 2013 and 2023 are no longer accessible,” as lawsuits threaten the Internet Archive’s work. And at the federal level, agencies have been rapidly scrubbing visual and written references to people from historically marginalized communities from government websites, including women, people of color and LGBT+ communities — as the White House has attacked diversity, equity and inclusion curriculums in schools.

    Thinking about donating materials? Reach out to an organization first to see if they can even accept them, and if so, how they accept donations.

    Think: Whose information is this?

    Donating archives relating to other people can frequently raise issues of copyright — and privacy.

    The GBLT Historical Society in San Francisco’s Castro district reminds potential donors that they “share a responsibility with archival staff” about whose privacy you might inadvertently be affecting by sharing family archives (for example, around a person’s medical history or their out status.)

    The logistics of donating your archives

    The Blackivists, an archival organization dedicated to Black American history, recommends that you always research any organization you’re thinking about donating to. Do your materials fit their mission? Are they even looking for donations right now? Do they have “a history of building community-based relationships and preserving their materials?”

    Make sure you can answer questions about your collection, like:

    • Who created the materials?
    • What types of materials are you donating? What are the formats or file types?
    • When were these items created?
    • Where and how is the material currently being stored?
    • Why do you consider your materials to be important or significant?

    Intent, trauma and care

    As The Blackivists’s guide notes, many communities are underrepresented in archival collections, including people of color, religious minorities and people experiencing homelessness — and that your materials could be “reflective of an important moment in history,”

    Because of that, the organization said, “They should be given to a repository that will be a good steward of what you’ve captured.”

    But you shouldn’t rush yourself, either. “There is potential trauma and grief attached to materials, and it may be too difficult and challenging to grapple with right now,” the Blacktivists’ guide said. “You can donate materials when you’re ready. Or not at all.”

  • 9 May 2025 7:11 PM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release issued by the (U.S.) National Archived and Records Administration:

    WHAT: Join National Archives experts for our annual online Genealogy Series on our YouTube channelThis educational series will teach participants how to use federal resources at the National Archives for genealogical research. Sessions are intended for everyone, from beginners to experienced family historians. 

    Lecture schedule, topic descriptions, videos, and handouts are available at the2025 Genealogy Series webpage.  

    WHEN: May & June 2025—sessions take place on select Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 1 p.m. ET

    • May 13: Revealing Ties to Espionage in the Office of Strategic Services Records
    • May 21: From the Territory of Montana to the Republic of Vietnam: Researching Native American Veterans in the National Archives, 1881–1966
    • June 3: Washington, DC, Law and Order: Cops and Robbers, 1861–1991
    • June 11: Disaster Preparedness and Response for Family Collections
    • June 17: Researching Immigrant Ancestors: Alien Registration (AR-2) Forms

    WHO: National Archives experts in government records will broadcast from facilities nationwide.

    • Molly Kamph is an archivist with the Textual Records Division’s Reference and Augmented Processing Branch at the National Archives at College Park, MD.
    • Cody White is a Subject Matter Expert for Native American Related Records and an archivist at the National Archives at Denver.
    • Kayla Dawkins is a reference archives specialist at the National Archives at St. Louis.
    • Rose Buchanan is a Subject Matter Expert for Native American Related Records and a reference archivist at the National Archives in Washington, DC.
    • Leo Belleville is an archivist at the National Archives at Chicago.
    • M Marie Maxwell is an archivist in the Special Access and FOIA Program at the National Archives at College Park, MD.
    • Sara Holmes is a conservator in the St. Louis Preservation and Conservation Branch at the National Archives at St. Louis.
    • Sara Leonowitz is a conservator technician in the Conservation Branch at the National Archives in Washington, DC.
    • Elizabeth Burnes is a Subject Matter Expert for Immigrant Related Records and an archivist at the National Archives at Kansas City.
    • John LeGloahec is an archivist in the Electronic Records Reference Branch at the National Archives at College Park, MD.

    WHERE: The series will be broadcast on the National Archives YouTube channel

    HOW: Watch the pre-recorded presentations on the National Archives YouTube channel. During each session's YouTube video premiere, the audience will be able to ask questions, and the presenter will respond in real time. Participants can watch individual sessions, ask questions, and interact with presenters and other family historians. No need to register—just click the links on the schedule to view the sessions! Videos and handouts will remain available after the event. For more details, go to the 2025 Genealogy Series webpage.  

    Captioning is available; just select the CC icon at the bottom of the YouTube video. Transcripts are available; send a request to KYR@nara.govIf you require an alternative or additional accommodation for the event, please email KYR@nara.gov.

    Share on social: Use #GenealogySeries2025 to join the genealogy conversation!

    Background: The National Archives holds the permanently valuable records of the federal government. These include records of interest to genealogists, such as pension files, ship passenger lists, census, and Freedmen’s Bureau materials. See Resources for Genealogists online.

    ###


  • 9 May 2025 7:03 PM | Anonymous

    In re: 23andMe Holding Co., et al.,

    Chapter 11 – Case No. 25-40976-357 (Jointly Administered)

    TO: All Current and Former Customers of 23andMe Holding Co. and its Debtor Subsidiaries (the “Debtors”):

    On March 23, 2025, 23andMe Holding Co. and 11 debtor subsidiaries (collectively, the “
    Debtors”) each filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, Eastern Division (the “Court”) (see Notice of Commencement). 

    The Court has entered an order (the “Bar Date Order”) setting deadlines (each, a “Bar Date” and collectively, the “Bar Dates”) for filing proofs of claim or requests for payment of certain administrative expenses in these chapter 11 cases.

    This notice (the “Notice of Instruction”) is being provided to all current and former customers of 23andMe Holding Co. and its subsidiaries, including Lemonaid Health (collectively, “23andMe”), and is intended to provide such customers with additional information to assist in determining if you have a claim and filing proofs of claim. This notice will also be filed with the Court and accessible via the public docket. Receipt of this notice does not necessarily mean that you have a claim.

    There are two claim packages (each, a “Bar Date Package” and collectively, the “Bar Date Packages”): the General Bar Date Package and the Cyber Security Incident Bar Date Package.

    IF YOU ARE RECEIVING THIS NOTICE AND BELIEVE YOU HAVE A CLAIM AGAINST ANY DEBTOR, YOU MUST SUBMIT THE APPLICABLE PROOF OF CLAIM FORMS IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE INSTRUCTIONS SET FORTH BELOW ON OR BEFORE JULY 14, 2025.

    THE FAILURE TO TIMELY SUBMIT ANY PROOF OF CLAIM ON OR BEFORE JULY 14, 2025 MAY RESULT IN THE WAIVER OF YOUR RIGHT TO ASSERT YOUR CLAIMS AGAINST THE DEBTORS AND YOUR RIGHT TO DISTRIBUTIONS ON ACCOUNT OF ANY SUCH CLAIMS UNDER A CHAPTER 11 PLAN IN THESE CASES.

    Each of the Bar Date Packages correspond to a specific type of claim. The following instructions are provided to determine which Bar Date Package applies to you:

    • Cyber Security Incident Bar Date Package. This package applies only if (i) you were a customer of 23andMe between May 1, 2023 and October 1, 2023, (ii) you received notice from 23andMe that your personal information was compromised in a data breach that was discovered and disclosed by 23andMe in October 2023 (the “Cyber Security Incident”), and (iii) you incurred monetary damages or non- monetary damages related to the Cyber Security Incident. In that case, you may hold a cyber security incident claim (a “Cyber Security Incident Claim”) and are a potential “Cyber Security Incident Claimant.” The Cyber Security Incident Notice, included herein as part of the Cyber Security Bar Date Package, provides instructions you must follow to submit this type of claim.
    • General Bar Date Package. This package applies if you believe that you have any other claim against 23andMe and/or its subsidiaries that is not a Cyber Security Incident Claim. The General Bar Date Notice, included herein as part of the General Bar Date Package, provides instructions you must follow to submit this type of claim.
      • If you believe you have a claim arising from or related to the Debtors’ DNA testing services (i.e., Ancestry Service, Health + Ancestry Service, 23andMe+ Premium and 23andMe+ Total Health), the Debtors advise that 23andMe, Inc. is the primary Debtor entity engaged in that line of business.
      • If you believe you have a claim arising from or related to the Debtors’ telehealth business, the Debtors advise that Lemonaid Health, Inc. is the primary Debtor entity engaged in that line of business.
      • If you believe you have a claim arising from or related to the Debtors’ mail order pharmacy, the Debtors advise that LPRXOne, LLC is the primary Debtor entity engaged in that line of business.
    • If you believe that you have a Cyber Security Incident Claim and any other type of claim against the Debtors, you must submit separate claims for your Cyber Security Incident Claim and any such other claim in accordance with the instructions below.


    Additional information for customers who believe they have a Cyber Security Incident Claim: Please note that a settlement has been preliminarily and conditionally approved in the multidistrict litigation currently pending before the Honorable Edward M. Chen in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, MDL No. 3098 (the “Cyber Class Action”). The Cyber Class Action is currently stayed as a result of these chapter 11 cases, not final, and the Debtors have not made a decision (and reserve all rights) with respect to the treatment of the prepetition settlement of the Cyber Class Action in these cases. To fully preserve your claim(s), a proof of claim must be submitted in accordance with the instructions provided in the Cyber Security Bar Date Package. Failure to do so may result in a waiver of your participation in any distributions on account of your Cyber Security Incident Claim.

    Additional information regarding 23andMe’s Chapter 11 filing, proceedings and claims process is available at https://restructuring.ra.kroll.com/23andMe. Questions about the claims process should be directed to the Company’s claims agent, Kroll, at 23andMeInfo@ra.kroll.com, or by calling (888) 367-7556 (Toll-Free in US/Canada) or +1 (646) 891-5055 (International).

    Nothing herein is an admission as to the amount of, basis for, or validity of any claim against any Debtor entity and all rights of the Debtors and other parties in interest are fully preserved as to any potential claims and proofs of claims filed in these chapter 11 cases.

  • 9 May 2025 8:00 AM | Anonymous
    Cardinal Robert Prevost Elected As Pope Leo XIV

    Robert Francis Prevost, who was selected as the Catholic Church’s first American pope Thursday and took the name Leo XIV, has a family history that some were celebrating as uniquely diverse, with one genealogist claiming he has ties to “free people of color” in New Orleans.

    Pope Leo XIV’s maternal grandparents, along with his mother’s older siblings, were “identified in records as Black or mulatto,” Honora told Forbes, but the family “passed … into a white racial identity” when they relocated to Chicago, where the pope’s mother—Mildred Martinez—was born in 1912.

    The pope’s grandparents resided in New Orleans’ Seventh Ward, an historically Black neighborhood, before moving to Chicago, Honora said.

    Pope Leo XIV was born in Chicago on Sept. 14, 1955 to Martinez and Louis Prevost, a World War II veteran of French and Italian descent.

    Martinez’s descent has been widely reported as Spanish, and Pope Leo XIV does not appear to have made major public statements regarding Creole heritage—the Diocese of Chiclayo, where Pope Leo XIV served as bishop between 2015 and 2023, did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Forbes.

    WHAT DO RECORDS SHOW ABOUT POPE LEO XIV’S FAMILY?

    Honora said in a Facebook post Thursday “Our Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, has Creole of color roots from New Orleans on his mother's side!” He told The Times-Picayune a marriage license shows Joseph Martinez and Louise Baquié, the pope’s grandparents, married in 1887 at Our Lady of Sacred Heart church in New Orleans. Those records show Joseph Martinez listed Haiti as his birthplace, Honora told the newspaper. He added the family was listed as living at 1933 North Prieur St. in the city’s Seventh Ward, an area that was demolished during the construction of the Claiborne Avenue overpass, which critics say significantly disrupted vibrant Black neighborhoods in the city.

    KEY BACKGROUND

    Pope Leo XIV, 69, was born in Chicago to his mother, Mildred Martinez, a librarian, and his father, Louis Prevost, a World War II Navy veteran and school superintendent. He also has two brothers, Louis Martín and John Joseph. He studied mathematics at Villanova University and earned a graduate degree in divinity from the Catholic Theological Union of Chicago. Ordained in 1982, his religious career took him to Rome and Peru, where he was naturalized as a citizen in 2014 around the same time the late Pope Francis appointed him apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Chiclayo, where he became bishop. He took his position in the Vatican overseeing the appointment of new bishops in 2023, the same year he was made a cardinal. Pope Leo was elected following four ballots on the papal conclave’s second day of voting. He is viewed as more of a centrist than Francis, and has been an advocate for migrants and the poor, with possible recent social media posts suggesting he has been critical of President Trump’s actions toward migrants.

  • 9 May 2025 7:35 AM | Anonymous

    As President Donald Trump's administration purges public records since storming back to power, experts and volunteers are preserving thousands of web pages and government sites devoted to climate change, health or LGBTQ rights and other issues.

    Resources on AIDS prevention and care, weather records, references to ethnic or gender minorities: numerous databases were destroyed or modified after Trump signed an executive order in January declaring diversity, equality and inclusion programs and policies within the federal governmentto be illegal.

    More than 3,000 pages from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention site were taken down and more than 1,000 from the Justice Department's website, Paul Schroeder, president of the Council of Professional Associations on Federal Statistics, told AFP.

    Some websites have disappeared altogether, such as that of the US development agency USAID, which has been effectively shuttered as Trump slashes US aid to poor countries. 

    And the National Children's Health Survey page displays a "404 error" message.

    Federal agencies must now avoid hundreds of words such as "woman," "disability," "racism", "climate crisis" and "pollution" in their communications, the New York Times reported.

    "The focus has been on removing language related to environmental (or) climate justice on websites, as well as removing data and tools related to environmental (or) climate justice," Eric Nost, a geographer at Canada's University of Guelph and member of the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative (EDGI) told AFP. 

    "This Trump administration moved more quickly and with a greater scope than the previous Trump administration," he said.

    EDGI, a consortium of academics and volunteers, began safeguarding public climate and environmental data after Trump's first election in 2016.

    Among the tools used are the WayBack Machine from the non-profit Internet Archive, or Perma.cc, developed by the Library Innovation Lab at Harvard Law School.

    These systems, which long predate Trump's election, help "courts and law journals preserve the web pages they cite to," said Jack Cushman, director of the Library Innovation Lab.

    Long used by journalists, researchers and NGOs, web archiving enables a page to be preserved, even if it were to disappear from the internet or be modified later.

    This data is then stored on servers in a large digital library, allowing anyone to consult it freely.

    - Volunteer work -

    Archiving initiatives have multiplied, expanded and coordinated since Trump's return to the White House.

    The Data Rescue Project (DRP) brought together several organizations to save as much data as possible.

    "We were concerned about data being deleted. We wanted to try to see what we could do to rescue them," Lynda Kellam, a university librarian and DRP organizer, told AFP.

    She first launched the project as an online Google doc in February -- a simple word-processing tool listing downloaded PDF files, original dataset titles and archived links.

    It is now maintained by volunteers "who are working after work" to keep it running, said Kellam.

    "We are all volunteers, even myself. We have other jobs so that has been challenging," Kellam added.

    The data collection work, largely carried out by associations and university libraries, is threatened by a lack of resources.

    "Funding is the key issue... as the library and archives community rushes to take on a larger preservation challenges than ever before," Cushman said.

    "We need to fund coordinators for the ongoing effort, new tools, and new homes for the data."

    Harvard is also battling the ire of the Trump administration, which has cut federal grants to the prestigious university and threatened its tax-exempt status after it refused to comply with the president's demands to accept government oversight.

    "Data is the modern lighthouse, helping us plan our lives: it shows where we are so we can plan where we're going," Cushman said.

    "Businesses, individuals, and governments will suffer greatly from any failure to collect and share reliable data on weather and climate, health, justice, housing, employment, and so on."

  • 8 May 2025 1:04 PM | Anonymous

    Leslie Preer, victim 

    A 45-year-old man pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in Montgomery County Circuit Court today for a 2001 homicide that was solved in 2024 through forensic genetic genealogy.

    According to the Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office, “Today in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, MD, before the Honorable David Lease, defendant Eugene Gligor, 45, of Washington D.C., entered a guilty plea to the charge of second-degree murder for the death of Leslie Preer.

    Preer was found deceased in her home in the 4800 block of Drummond Ave. in Chevy Chase on May 2, 2001. Her death was ruled a homicide. DNA belonging to an unknown male was collected at the scene. For 23 years that unknown male had not been identified, but in 2024, due to advances in technology, the Montgomery County Police Department Cold Case Section used forensic genetic genealogical DNA analysis to identify Gligor as the perpetrator. He was known to the victim’s family and had previously dated her daughter.

    Gligor faces up to 30 years in prison, which was the maximum penalty for second-degree murder in 2001 when the incident occurred. A sentencing hearing is scheduled for August 28, 2025 at 9 a.m.

    Assistant State’s Attorney’s Donna Fenton and Jodie Mount are prosecuting this case.”

  • 8 May 2025 1:00 PM | Anonymous

    Middle Peninsula African-American Genealogical and Historical Society (MPAAGHS) will conduct its monthly meeting “virtually” on Saturday, May 10, at 11 a.m. The meeting will feature a talk by Marvin Tupper Jones entitled “Juneteenth Soldiers of Northeastern North Carolina.” Jones’ presentation will take place on the eve of next month’s commemoration of the 160th anniversary of Juneteenth.


    Marvin Tupper Jones is related to members of the United States Colored Troops (USCT) who served in Texas at the time of Juneteenth and he has researched them and others. These include those who marched from Norfolk to North Carolina to conduct Wild’s Raid, a sustained action that freed 2,500 enslaved people and destroyed rebel camps and supplies. 

    Jones is the director of the Chowan Discovery Group, whose mission is to document, research, preserve and present primarily the history of his native Winton Triangle, a 284-year old Black landowning community in northeastern North Carolina. Visit Jones’ website at www.chowandiscovery.org.

    To receive a meeting invitation or get information, email mpaaghs.va@gmail.com or call 804-651-8753.

  • 8 May 2025 12:55 PM | Anonymous

    The public is invited to a presentation, “DNA 101: An Introduction to Genetic Genealogy,” at the Middlesex County Public Library (MCPL) system’s Urbanna branch on Saturday, May 17, at 10:30 a.m. The talk is hosted by local historian and genealogist Bessida Cauthorne White. Refreshments will follow her talk.

    This presentation is designed as a beginner’s introduction to DNA testing for genealogical research, and will include an explanation of basic genetic genealogy terms. It will also cover the types of DNA testing that may be used for genealogical purposes and the DNA tests currently on the market, as well as the type of information that they can provide, who should be tested, and the limitations of DNA testing. A DNA resource handout will be provided to attendees.

    White, a genealogist and community historian, as well as retired attorney, and lifelong activist, will discuss these topics in addition to her personal experiences with DNA testing for herself and her family. She has been a genealogist for more than forty years and manages DNA test results for forty of her family members and friends. Her recent genealogy projects include the identification of the enslaved at Menokin and at Stratford Hall (both 18th century homes in Virginia’s Northern Neck), and their present-day descendants. For the past several years she has directed the research and application process for multiple historical markers that reference African American history in Eastern Virginia. She is also co-founder and president of Middle Peninsula African-American Genealogical and Historical Society, and is a founder of the Greater Richmond Chapter of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society.

    Info: 804-758-5717 or email yourmiddlesexlibrary@gmail.com.

  • 8 May 2025 10:18 AM | Anonymous

    MyHeritage is offering free access to all our WWII collections during May 7–11, 2025. That’s over 127 million records across 13 collections. They cover enlistment, draft, casualty, and prisoner of war records from the U.S., Europe, Australia, and beyond. This is a meaningful opportunity for your readers to dig deeper into their family’s WWII stories, and perhaps uncover something they’ve never seen before.

    Search the free records

    WWII VE Day Records

    Here’s just a sample of what’s included:

    • U.S. WWII Draft Registrations, Navy Muster Rolls, and Army Enlistments
    • POW records from France, the U.S., and the former Soviet Union
    • Casualty lists from Ukraine and Finland
    • Nominal rolls from Australia and New Zealand
    • Draft cards from Kansas and Georgia

    One MyHeritage user found a WWII record of her father, Donald Gene Johnson, in one of these collections. On VE Day, as the family anxiously awaited his return from the front, Donald’s father-in-law helped print the headline announcing the end of the war. You can watch their story in this video.

    The full details are in this blog post.

  • 8 May 2025 10:09 AM | Anonymous

    From the Washington Post:

    Eugene Gligor took a seat on the steps outside his apartment building in Washington, D.C. He scrolled through his phone, drank a cup of coffee. It was June 18, 2024, sunny and 80 degrees.

    “Hands up!” came a sudden voice moving toward him with rising volume. “Hands up!”

    “What’s going on?” Gligor responded. “What is this about?”

    Gligor, 45, stood in a courtroom Wednesday and finally acknowledged the dark secret he’d been hiding for half his life, the one that brought police to his doorstep last summer. He pleaded guilty to the 2001 beating and strangulation of Leslie Preer inside her home in the Chevy Chase area of Maryland.

    The case had gone unsolved until last year, when Montgomery County detectives homed in on Gligor, who had dated Preer’s daughter in the 1990s. He’d quietly gone on to a professional career, most recently as an account executive for a nationwide firm operating video surveillance monitoring at commercial properties. To friends he was warm, gregarious, seemingly committed to personal growth and self-improvement — and living in Washington’s trendy U Street Corridor.

    Leslie Preer in 1997 (Montgomery County Police Department)

    Investigators got to Gligor using a relatively new form of DNA analysis that links genetic clues left by suspects at crime scenes to people who have submitted their DNA to ancestry research companies. The method doesn’t so much lead directly to the suspect, but can point investigators to possible relatives, even distant ones. In this case, that meant two women — completely innocent — in Romania, said Sgt. Chris Homrock, head of the Montgomery Police Department’s cold-case unit.

    From there, and over about two years, Detective Tara Augustin built out a traditional family tree, eventually learning there were distantly related American family members with the surname “Gligor.”

    The name caught investigators’ attention. Eugene Gligor had been mentioned by a former neighbor in the case file. The daughter’s ex-boyfriend.

    “That was our aha moment,” Homrock said.

    They needed to get a sample of his DNA but didn’t want to spook him.

    The detectives learned that on June 9, 2024, Gligor would be flying back from London to Dulles International Airport, according to court filings. So they went to Dulles and put together a ruse, getting a U.S. customs officer to divert Gligor into a room for ostensible “secondary screening,” the court filings state.

    On a table waiting for Gligor, positioned there earlier by Montgomery investigators, were several bottles of water. Gligor took the bait. He finished one of the bottles, put it down and left. Detectives entered a short time later, according to court filings, and bagged the evidence. Testing later confirmed the sample was a direct match to DNA found in Preer’s home and under her fingernails.

    The investigation of Preer’s killing dates to the morning of May 2, 2001. When Preer didn’t show up to her job at an advertising production company, a co-worker grew concerned and called her family. A short time later, the co-worker and Preer’s husband, Carl, who’d left for his own job at about 7:30 a.m., walked into the house on Drummond Avenue, according to court filings. They saw dried blood, a knocked-over table, a moved rug.

    “Mr. Preer called out his wife’s name and looked quickly throughout the home but could not find her,” Assistant State’s Attorney Jodie Mount said in court Wednesday.

    Police were called. They eventually concluded that while Preer was alone, someone got inside and attacked her in the front foyer. The assailant strangled her and bashed her head into the floor, according to autopsy findings, before carrying her body upstairs, leaving it inside a shower and disappearing. Forensic investigators collected blood in the home and found the DNA of an unknown male.

    When detectives finally closed in on Gligor last year, they charged him with first-degree murder. His attorneys launched an aggressive defense, filing motions to have key evidence tossed from the case. Their biggest battle — whether the judge would toss out the DNA findings — was scheduled to be argued in August. Gligor’s trial was set for nine days in October.

    Instead, Gligor and his attorneys reached an agreement with Montgomery prosecutors. By pleading guilty to a lesser charge of second-degree murder, Gligor faces a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison, compared to a possible life term for the first-degree murder count. Prosecutors avoided the uncertainty of the DNA challenge and a trial. Sentencing was set for Aug. 28.

    Wednesday’s plea hearing mostly covered previously known basics of the case. But earlier court filings and hearings, taken together, reveal new details, such as body camera recordings that captured Gligor’s arrest and the contentious questioning that followed by two detectives.

    “Well honey, your DNA was in the crime scene,” Augustin told Gligor, leading to more back and forth, with Gligor asking to speak with an attorney.

    “I asked for legal representation and you guys are very smug looking at me like I’ve done something,” Gligor responded. “And of course it’s innocent until proven guilty, right? Am I wrong or right?”

    “You are entitled to your due process, absolutely,” responded Detective Alyson Dupouy.

    “This is insane,” Gligor said.

    Gligor’s attorneys, Stephen Mercer and Isabelle Raquin, wrote in court papers that the scheme at Dulles to collect Gligor’s DNA — given that it wasn’t related to legitimate border security issues — violated his constitutional protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. The evidence collected, they wrote, should thus be barred from the case. But Gligor’s guilty plea came before that argument could be settled by a judge.

    The morning of his arrest last summer, a Montgomery County police surveillance team set up outside his apartment. When they saw him come outside and take a seat on the stairs, they made their move.

    Gligor was taken to a D.C. police station, held in a locked room and given a bologna sandwich, according to Mercer and Raquin’s filings. Some two hours later, he was led into an interview room, where he was soon joined by the two Montgomery County detectives, Augustin and Dupouy. Augustin read Gligor his rights to remain silent and consult a lawyer. Then she began subtly asking questions.

    “So we were working on a case that came from Chevy Chase,” Augustin said, “and when we were going through the case file, your name was in there as someone that was related to the family. We have a big list of people, but friends, family, something like that. So do you recall back in 2001, Leslie Preer?”

    “Yes, that she was murdered,” Gligor said.

    They spoke about him dating Preer’s daughter and how he had spent time at their house. Augustin said someone had left DNA at the crime scene, and asked if he had relevant information for them.

    “I’m just, I’m a little confused,” Gligor said. “So to find out more and talk to me, why not just call me and ask me to come in and talk? … I mean, I feel a little bit trapped here.”

    “Well, you’re under arrest,” the detective said. “You should feel trapped.”

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