After more than two and a half decades of haunting silence, authorities have finally restored the identity of a young victim whose brutal murder shocked investigators in Massachusetts. On June 3, 2026, officials from the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, FBI Boston, Massachusetts State Police, and Essex County DA announced that “Chelsea Jane Doe” — a name she carried since 2000 — was in fact Tiffany Bradley, a vibrant 16-year-old girl from Allentown, Pennsylvania.

On November 13, 2000, police made a horrifying discovery in the parking lot behind the Soldiers’ Home in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Parts of a young woman’s mutilated body were found — she had been strangled, decapitated, dismembered, and cut in half. Her head and hands were later recovered in a bag buried at Nahant Beach. The brutality of the crime left investigators stunned, and for 26 years, the victim remained unidentified, known only as Chelsea Jane Doe or sometimes “Lisa.”

Tiffany Bradley was reported missing from Allentown on November 8, 2000. A talented athlete who played basketball and participated in ROTC, she was also described by family as a loving girl with dreams for the future. Tragically, within just days of her disappearance, she was allegedly trafficked across state lines to the Boston area. Authorities believe she was exploited before being killed in a room at the Lynn YMCA. The perpetrator, Eugene McCollom (also referred to as McCall in some reports), was convicted and has been serving a life sentence for the murder, but he never provided her true identity.

The breakthrough came through advanced DNA testing and investigative genetic genealogy. Samples from the remains were compared with distant relatives and ultimately confirmed with her brother, bringing closure to a family that had lived with uncertainty for a generation. Tiffany’s aunt and other relatives expressed deep emotion, remembering her as a bright, caring young woman whose life was stolen far too soon.

This case highlights both the darkness of human trafficking and exploitation that preys on vulnerable teens, as well as the power of modern forensic science. For years, law enforcement never gave up, collaborating across agencies to ensure this young victim would not remain nameless forever. Her identification serves as a poignant reminder that even cold cases can find resolution when persistence meets technology.

The restoration of Tiffany Bradley’s name allows her loved ones to grieve properly and honors her memory. No longer just a Jane Doe on a case file, she is remembered as a daughter, sister, athlete, and dreamer whose story now stands as a tragic testament to the need for stronger protections against trafficking and better support for at-risk youth. While her killer remains behind bars, the long journey to give Tiffany back her identity brings a measure of peace to those who never stopped searching.