Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - Authorities in Utah plan to exhume remains as investigators reopen a cold case dating back to 1970 | Crime Alert 6AM 02.24.26
Episode Date: February 24, 2026Investigators reopen a 1970 cold case in Utah and plan to exhume remains Newly released video shows moments from the day of the fatal Brown University shooting New Jersey man convicted in the deaths ...of his brother and family, then accused of setting fires to conceal the crime FBI found no evidence Jeffrey Epstein ran a sex-trafficking ring for powerful men, records show See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Crime Alert, I'm John Lemley.
We begin this hour with a compelling development out of Hurricane Idaho,
where authorities have taken the rare step of reopening a cold case
that has puzzled investigators for more than half a century.
Police with the Washington County Sheriff's Office say they are preparing to exhum
human remains buried in a local cemetery,
remains belonging to an unidentified woman discovered in 1970 and long-known
only as Jane Doe. At the time of her discovery, the woman's cause of death was ruled undetermined,
and she was laid to rest with a simple marker identifying her as an unknown. The case was investigated
sporadically over the years, including a 2014 attempt to recover her DNA, but that effort
ultimately failed when no remains were found during excavation. Now detectives have petitioned a judge
for a new warrant and are moving forward with plans to exhum the burial site again, this time
with modern forensic science on their side. Advances in DNA technology and access to national
missing person databases give investigators renewed hope that Jane Doe can finally be identified.
Records indicate that prior excavation efforts may not have gone deep enough to reach the actual
burial site, leading authorities to believe the remains may be able to.
may still be intact beneath the surface. With assistance from the National Cold Case Coalition,
law enforcement hopes to collect viable DNA samples that could provide closure for surviving
relatives whose loved ones disappeared decades ago. The Sheriff's Office says the exhumation
will take place in the coming weeks, marking a significant moment in one of the longest-running cold
cases in Utah's history. Thanks, John. For the latest crime and justice
News, go to crimeonline.com, and please join us for our daily podcast, crime stories. More
Crime and Justice News after this. Now with the latest crime and justice breaking news,
Crime Online's John Lemley. In Rhode Island, officials released new video and audio recordings
from the day of the Brown University campus shooting that left two students dead and nine
others wounded in December. The footage, heavily redacted to shield victims and their families from
further trauma includes about 20 minutes of body-worn camera video from responding officers and
radio traffic between campus police and municipal authorities. The suspect in that attack
identified previously as Claudio Nevis Valenti, a former graduate student at the university,
is also believed to have fatally shot an MIT professor Nuno Lareo days after the campus
attack. Valenti was later found dead in a story.
facility in New Hampshire. Providence city officials say portions of the recordings were
withheld to avoid showing more graphic content. But the material release sheds light on the chaotic
police response, including moments when officers mistook a maintenance worker for a potential
suspect. Providence mayor, Brett Smiley, noted the difficult balance between transparency and protecting
those affected by the tragedy, which occurred during a final exam,
period on campus. Authorities continue to urge anyone with additional video or information from the day of the
incident to come forward. In one of New Jersey's most harrowing cases in years, a Monmouth County jury
has convicted a man of killing his brother and four members of his brother's family, then setting fire to
their homes in what prosecutors described as an effort to cover up the crime. Fifty-nine-year-old Paul Canero was
found guilty this week on multiple counts, including four counts of murder, aggravated arson,
and weapons charges for the deaths of his brother, Keith Canero, Keith's wife, Jennifer, and the
couple's two children, ages eight and eleven. Prosecutors told jurors that the killings took place
November 20, 2018, and were driven by a dispute over business finances. After killing his relatives
inside their Coltsneck New Jersey mansion, Canero ignited.
fired at both the family's estate and his own home in Ocean Township, seemingly to mislead
investigators into thinking the deaths were victims of an arson-related tragedy. His defense appealed to
jurors to consider alternate suspects, including a third brother they said may have had a motive. But after
roughly five hours of deliberation, the jury returned a guilty verdict on all counts. Canero faces a
potential life sentence when he is formally sentenced in May.
Finally, in Washington, D.C., newly released federal records are clarifying the government's investigation
into the late finance year, Jeffrey Epstein. According to Internal Justice Department documents,
the FBI found no credible evidence that Epstein maintained a, quote, client list or operated
in a sex trafficking ring involving powerful or prominent men. Investigators say,
views of financial records, seize materials, and witness interviews, did not support claims of an
organized trafficking operation. The files reaffirmed that Epstein committed serious federal sex crimes,
but prosecutors concluded there was insufficient admissible evidence to charge other individuals.
Allegations of third-party involvement could not be independently cooperated. The documents also state
investigators never recovered a secret client list during searches conducted before or after Epstein's
2019 death in federal custody. Thanks, John. For the latest crime injustice news, go to
crimeonline.com, and please join us for our daily podcast, crime stories, where we do our best
to find missing people, especially children, and solve unsolved homicides. With this crime alert,
I'm Nancy Grace.
