🚨 CHILLING BREAKTHROUGH: For 31 LONG YEARS, she was just “Jane Doe” — a nameless woman brutally mur-dered and dumped along lonely railroad tracks in rural Arkansas, only 16 miles from her home. No ID, no missing report, no answers. Her killer walked free while time erased her face… until NOW. 😱💔
This week, investigators dropped the bombshell: The victim is Jamie Ann Moore, 32, of Conway — a mother, a daughter, someone’s loved one who vanished without a trace in 1994. Her decomposed body was found October 24th near U.S. Highway 64 between Morrilton and Plumerville. Homicide ruled. But who did it? And why was she never reported missing?
The case went cold for decades — even after 2016’s DNA profile and eerie composite sketch from Parabon NanoLabs. Then, in 2024, cutting-edge investigative genetic genealogy (with Othram Labs) cracked it wide open via her daughter’s DNA match.
Sheriff Mike Smith: “This gives long-awaited answers to Jamie’s loved ones.” But justice? Still out there. The killer(s) remain unknown. The investigation is VERY ACTIVE.
Full details:

After more than three decades as an unidentified homicide victim known only as “Conway County Jane Doe,” a woman found along railroad tracks in rural Arkansas has been positively identified as Jamie Ann Moore, 32, of Conway. The announcement, made this week by the Conway County Sheriff’s Office and Arkansas State Police, marks a major advancement in one of the state’s oldest unsolved murders, achieved through modern investigative genetic genealogy.
Moore’s body was discovered on October 24, 1994, near railroad tracks along U.S. Highway 64 between Morrilton and Plumerville — a location roughly 16 miles from her hometown of Conway. A man riding a motorcycle in the area spotted the remains around 4 p.m. that afternoon. By then, the body had significantly decomposed, complicating immediate identification efforts. No personal items, identification, or belongings were found with her to provide clues.
The Arkansas State Medical Examiner ruled the death a homicide, though specific details on the cause or manner have not been publicly released, as the investigation remains active. At the time, no missing persons report matched the description, and extensive searches failed to connect the remains to any known individual. The case gradually went cold as leads dried up and traditional investigative methods reached their limits.
For years, “Jane Doe” became a symbol of unresolved tragedy in Conway County. Clothing items found near the body offered some descriptive details, but without a name or family connection, progress stalled. The passage of time — coupled with advances in forensic technology — eventually reopened the door to resolution.
The turning point began in 2016, when the Conway County Quorum Court allocated funds for the development of a forensic DNA profile from the remains. Parabon NanoLabs was enlisted to create a composite facial reconstruction based on genetic data, providing investigators with a visual approximation of what the woman might have looked like. Despite public distribution of the image and renewed media attention, the identity remained elusive.
In 2024, authorities partnered with Othram Labs, a Texas-based forensic laboratory specializing in advanced DNA analysis and genealogical research. Othram processed the DNA sample using investigative genetic genealogy — a technique that combines forensic DNA sequencing with public genealogy databases, family tree research, and traditional detective work to identify potential relatives and narrow down suspects or victims.
The process yielded a promising lead: a familial DNA match traced through Moore’s daughter. On February 19, 2026, the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory confirmed the match, officially identifying the victim as Jamie Ann Moore. Conway County Sheriff Mike Smith described the breakthrough as “a significant step forward in this investigation and, most importantly, provides long-awaited answers to Jamie’s loved ones.”
Smith emphasized that the identification does not close the case. “The homicide investigation remains active,” he stated, declining to release further details on the cause of death or potential suspects, citing the ongoing nature of the probe. Authorities have urged anyone with information from 1994 — particularly regarding Moore’s activities, associations, or disappearance — to come forward.
The case highlights the transformative role of genetic genealogy in cold cases across the United States. Similar techniques have resolved dozens of high-profile mysteries in recent years, including identifications of victims and perpetrators in decades-old homicides. In Arkansas, this marks one of the longest-running unidentified homicide cases to benefit from the method.
Moore, who would have been 32 at the time of her death, lived in Conway — a city of about 65,000 residents roughly 30 miles southeast of the discovery site. Little public information has been released about her life, family, or circumstances leading up to October 1994. The absence of an initial missing persons report has raised questions among investigators and observers about why her disappearance went unreported or unrecognized for so long.
Family members have not made public statements following the announcement, and authorities have respected their privacy during this sensitive period. The identification brings closure to one aspect of the tragedy — giving Moore her name back after 31 years — but leaves the question of justice unanswered.
Conway County Sheriff Mike Smith and Arkansas State Police officials expressed gratitude to the laboratories involved and to the persistence of investigators who kept the file open. “This case shows that with continued effort and new technology, answers can come even after decades,” Smith said.
The announcement has drawn attention from true crime communities, local media, and online forums dedicated to unsolved cases. Many have shared the Parabon composite alongside recent comparison images of Moore, noting the accuracy of the reconstruction. Supporters have called for renewed focus on the homicide aspect, hoping the identification generates fresh tips.
As the investigation continues, authorities stress that no detail is too small. Tips can be submitted anonymously to the Conway County Sheriff’s Office or Arkansas State Police. For now, Jamie Ann Moore is no longer a nameless victim — but her killer remains at large, and the search for truth in this 1994 homicide presses on.
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